Obituary
Mr. Edgar "Eddie" Barrett III.
(March 16, 1931 - June 15, 2012)
Edgar
O. "Eddie"
Barrett III, former Marshall University Athletic Director
and West Virginia University Sports Information Director, who became a
leading provider of supplemental retirement plans to teachers and non-profit
workers, died June 15 in Huntington surrounded by his beloved wife of 56
years and his five children. He was 81.
Born March 16, 1931 to the late Edgar O.
Barrett, Jr. and Jessie Church
Barrett, he grew up in Fairmont. At
thirteen, he began writing sports for The Fairmont Times. He turned his
early experience in sports writing into a storied career in college
athletics. Following his father to West Virginia University,
Barrett became the University's Sports
Information Director at the age of twenty in 1951. In that capacity, he
helped bring WVU into the modern era of sports publicity and promoted many
iconic WVU athletes, including Jerry West, Sam Huff, Hot Rod Hundley, and
Rod Thorn. He earned a BS in English from WVU in 1952. He left W VU from
1954-56 to serve in the United States Air Force in Milwaukee as public
relations officer, where he met Betty.
In 1967, Barrett moved across the state to
Huntington to become Marshall University's Athletic Director at the age of
thirty-six, at the time the nation's youngest major college athletic
director ever.
After three years at Marshall, Barrett
became the General Manager of Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Huntington
before finally entering the insurance and then the tax sheltered annuities
businesses. For thirty-five years, he operated Tax Shelter Benefits, Inc., a
provider of retirement (403b) plans to teachers and employees of non-profit
organizations.
Barrett received national recognition and
numerous awards throughout his varied career. His 1961 WVU basketball
brochure was recognized nationally by the United States Basketball Writers
Association with their first-ever award. He served on the NCAA Public
Relations Committee from 1963-67. The West Virginia Sportswriters
Association gave Barrett the Gene Morehouse
Award, their highest award recognizing distinguished service and outstanding
contributions to sportswriting. WVU honored
Barrett and his wife in 2009 as Most Loyal West Virginians and the
2007 Outstanding Volunteer Philanthropists.
Barrett also received the WVU Alumni Association's award for
promoting the spirit and traditions of West Virginia. He received the WVU
English Department's Alumnus Achievement award in 2008. In 2010, he was
elected to the WVU Sports Hall of Fame.
Known for his encyclopedic knowledge of WVU sports,
Barrett was recognized as WVU's unofficial
sports historian.
Barrett was also widely recognized and
honored in the insurance and tax sheltered annuities businesses. He was a
life member of the insurance industry's Million Dollar Roundtable and Top of
the Table since 1998. He led six different companies in sales. He was sales
leader of the year four times for Northern Life/Reliastar, and received
their Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997.
Eddie Barrett was outgoing, entertaining,
and enthusiastic about his state. He loved college sports, Broadway
musicals, travel, ballroom dancing, chocolate desserts, good friends, and
above all his family. He loved the work he did helping "his teachers" and
other clients to a more secure retirement.
Barrett is survived by his wife, Betty
Heistad Barrett, five children and their
spouses – Kevin and Laura Barrett of Port
Chester, New York, Richard and Genevieve Barrett
of San Antonito, New Mexico, Ned and Christy
Barrett of Spartanburg, South Carolina, John and Cynthia
Barrett of Charleston, and Ann and Dr.
Stanley Tao of Barboursville. He is also survived by eleven grandchildren –
Christopher, Lydia, Julia, Andy, Quinn, Sam, Anna, Hollyn, Lily, Ned, and
Jane; by his niece, Valerie Childs of Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania; nephew Dr.
Barrett Childs and wife Leslie of
Riverdale, New York, and their three children. He was preceded in death by
his parents and his sister Beverly Barrett
Childs.
The family will welcome friends on Tuesday, June 19 from 5 to 8 p.m. at
Klingel-Carpenter Mortuary in Huntington. A funeral service will be held 2
p.m. Wednesday, June 20 the First Presbyterian Church in Huntington,
conducted by Dr. Rick Wilson and Rev. Skip Seibel.
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Cabell-Huntington Coalition
for the Homeless, 627 Fourth Avenue, or WVU Alumni Association.
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