Barbara Comfort Has Passed Away

Author Barbara Comfort

We are so sad to hear that Barbara Comfort has passed away last month at the age of 95. We will miss her writing. We encourage all of her fans to go to the Legacy.com obituary page and sign the Guestbook. Here is the link: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/nytimes/obituary.aspx?n=barbara-comfort&pid=157339145. We have added the article from the Times on the ABOUT page.

We will keep this website going in honor of our favorite author. Keep coming back. Over the next couple of months, we hope you will send us your suggestions on some articles we could write, story suggestions for our favorite Tish McWhinney characters or anything that comes to mind in keeping with the theme of this Fan Page.

BARBARA COMFORT Obituary

COMFORT–Barbara. Barbara Comfort, 95, died peacefully on April 22. Known to all as Bobby, she was the sister of Carol Comfort Felker of Mountain Lake, Florida, and the late Walter Rockefeller Comfort III of Tampa, and beloved Auntie Mame to nieces and nephews John Comfort of New York City, Jane F. Matz and Charles J. Felker of Washington, DC, and Stephen C. Felker of Chicago. Bobby lived in New York City, Landgrove, VT, and North Branford, CT. She was born in Nyack, NY, grew up in Engelwood, NJ, and studied painting at the National Academy of Design and at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts at Fountainebleau in Paris. A landscape and portrait painter, Bobby also engaged in many other enterprises: during WWII, she ran a welding factory for Electrons, Inc. that made electronic tubes for the Navy; in the 70’s, having started a lucite design company, she invented the first Cuisinart blade holder; in the 80’s she became a mystery writer, creating a series of murder mysteries based in Vermont that are still sold throughout the state. Bobby built the first modern house in Landgrove, which was on the cover of American Home in 1949. A bon vivant and world traveler, she would occasionally burst into French songs after dinner. She will be missed greatly by her family and many friends.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by New York Times on Apr. 29, 2012.

Author: webmistress

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