Former Monongah High teacher Brenda Winston Skeen passes away
Brenda Winston Skeen, Monongah High home
economics teacher in the 1960s-70s, passed away July 23. She was 74.
She was living in McMurray, Pennsylvania,
which is south of Pittsburgh off U.S. 19.
The Clarksburg native was a graduate
of Clarksburg’s Washington Irving High School and Fairmont State.
Brenda’s obituary:
Brenda Skeen (Winston) Age 74, of McMurray, passed away on Thursday, July
23, 2020. Brenda was the beloved wife of Samuel Skeen; loving mother of Judd
Skeen, and Whitney (JP) Sanders; and sister of Randall Winston. All services
private. Funeral arrangements by BEINHAUERS, 2828 Washington Rd., McMurray, PA 724-941-3211.
Please add or view tributes at www.beinhauer.com .
The West Virginia News article about Brenda:
McMURRAY, Pa. (WV News)
— Brenda Winston Skeen of McMurray, PA, formerly of Clarksburg and Fairmont,
West Virginia, passed July 23, at the age of 74.
She was born in
Clarksburg, the daughter of the late Francis "Red" Winston and
Genevieve Harper. She graduated from Washington Irving High School, where she
served as Homecoming Queen, and Fairmont State College, where she earned a
Bachelor's Degree (cum laude) in Education. It was there she met and married
Samuel, her husband of 52 years, after she asked him to take a walk around
campus — it was love at first sight. Their first real date almost did not
happen when Sam found that someone had let the air out of each of the tires on
his car. He then used a friend's car and the date was saved. They were engaged
three months later.
Brenda was a teacher at
Monongah High School, Wilsonburg Junior High and and Wyatt Elementary School in
Marion and Harrison Counties. She was an extremely artistic and creative person
and an accomplished seamstress who designed and made a line of clothing for
private clients in the Clarksburg area and also gave sewing lesson for the
former W.T. Grant Department Store in Fairmont. However, her fist love was
decorating and design and upon relocating to the Pittsburgh area, she joined
with a good friend to form One-Day Decorating, later Habitat Interior Design, a
residential and commercial design and decorating firm whose success was
featured on KDKA TV's Morning Show and in local newspapers.
She loved bringing
beauty and happiness to the surroundings of her family, friends and clients.
She later merged her sewing and design skills to create a line of artistic
Quilted Wall Hangings, which she called "Puffins", that were marketed
through Kaufmann's Department Store at South Hills Village Mall. She was also a
self taught artist who sold many of her paintings through galleries and art
auctions in Western Pennsylvania. Brenda was fascinated by the history of art
and decided to make Floor Cloths, reproductions of painted canvas rugs as used
in colonial times. They were so well received by the art community that she was
asked to show her works at the well known Yankee Peddler Colonial Festival in
Ohio.
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