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Philip Arnold Moore

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Philip Arnold Moore

Birth
Lake Wales, Polk County, Florida, USA
Death
4 Nov 2021 (aged 80)
Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado, USA
Burial
Cremated Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Phil was raised in Central Florida and Aiken, South Carolina as the middle son of three boys by his father Edgar Arnold Moore, a salesman/engineer and Elizabeth Cody Moore, a public librarian.

A teenage rebel who confounded his high school teachers, Phil was the first of his family to graduate college when he earned his bachelor's degree in business administration and continued graduate studies in economics at the University of Georgia (Go Dawgs!).

His membership in Civil Air Patrol as an adolescent inspired a life-long passion for airplanes and flying which included serving four years in the US Air Force from frigid Goose Bay Labrador to sweltering Lake Charles, Louisiana and, later, obtaining his pilot's license which he used to fly solo, with colleagues, and family. He was a proud member of the Airline Pilots and Owners Association (AOPA) and one could always find flying magazines and newsletters amidst his workspace.

After marrying his high school sweetheart, Hope Hatfield Moore, and relocating from the South to Colorado, Phil helped raise three children and later spoil five grandchildren with rides in his souped-up Mazda Miata and occasional trips to Dairy Queen.

Phil started his career in accounting with Westinghouse, advised large companies as a management consultant with Pete, Marwick, Mitchell, and worked for several mid-market enterprises as a controller before hanging out his own shingle as a small business accountant, tax software distributor, tax preparer, and financial advisor for three decades.

In his profession, Phil was an early adopter of computing technology, using some of the first portable computers, and commissioning accounting software for an IBM workstation he acquired. A confident tinkerer, Phil designed and built his own PCs to support his business and for the family.

When not hard at work, Phil could be found either in his home office, listening to classical music while consuming the latest news, or on the open road in his Miata named "Effie." Phil loved works by Beethoven, Tchaikovsky and Mozart and often took the family to outdoor concerts for the Fourth of July to hear the 1812 overture while the nation celebrated HIS birthday. A life long learner, Phil had a penchant for circulating marked-up articles to family members in person or by mail to help inform or inspire their thinking. In addition to road trips across the Rockies with Hope with their Miata club, Phil famously drove solo cross-country and back again, with the top down, to a family reunion in Myrtle Beach. It was a sad day for us all when his impaired vision required him to relinquish his drivers license.

Phil will always be remembered as a fiercely independent, private, humble, family man who always put the concerns of others above his own and encouraged us all to offer "hugs and kisses" to one another as he signed off on weekly phone calls with family.

Phil is survived by his wife of 59 years, Hope Hatfield Moore, three children: Rick Moore, Dwight Moore (Maricel Mojares-Moore), Dianna (Moore) Fricke (Brian Fricke); five grandchildren: Ryan Moore, Brandon Moore, Mirabelle Moore, Coen Fricke, Bryce Fricke; and two brothers: Edgar Moore, Mark Moore.
Phil was raised in Central Florida and Aiken, South Carolina as the middle son of three boys by his father Edgar Arnold Moore, a salesman/engineer and Elizabeth Cody Moore, a public librarian.

A teenage rebel who confounded his high school teachers, Phil was the first of his family to graduate college when he earned his bachelor's degree in business administration and continued graduate studies in economics at the University of Georgia (Go Dawgs!).

His membership in Civil Air Patrol as an adolescent inspired a life-long passion for airplanes and flying which included serving four years in the US Air Force from frigid Goose Bay Labrador to sweltering Lake Charles, Louisiana and, later, obtaining his pilot's license which he used to fly solo, with colleagues, and family. He was a proud member of the Airline Pilots and Owners Association (AOPA) and one could always find flying magazines and newsletters amidst his workspace.

After marrying his high school sweetheart, Hope Hatfield Moore, and relocating from the South to Colorado, Phil helped raise three children and later spoil five grandchildren with rides in his souped-up Mazda Miata and occasional trips to Dairy Queen.

Phil started his career in accounting with Westinghouse, advised large companies as a management consultant with Pete, Marwick, Mitchell, and worked for several mid-market enterprises as a controller before hanging out his own shingle as a small business accountant, tax software distributor, tax preparer, and financial advisor for three decades.

In his profession, Phil was an early adopter of computing technology, using some of the first portable computers, and commissioning accounting software for an IBM workstation he acquired. A confident tinkerer, Phil designed and built his own PCs to support his business and for the family.

When not hard at work, Phil could be found either in his home office, listening to classical music while consuming the latest news, or on the open road in his Miata named "Effie." Phil loved works by Beethoven, Tchaikovsky and Mozart and often took the family to outdoor concerts for the Fourth of July to hear the 1812 overture while the nation celebrated HIS birthday. A life long learner, Phil had a penchant for circulating marked-up articles to family members in person or by mail to help inform or inspire their thinking. In addition to road trips across the Rockies with Hope with their Miata club, Phil famously drove solo cross-country and back again, with the top down, to a family reunion in Myrtle Beach. It was a sad day for us all when his impaired vision required him to relinquish his drivers license.

Phil will always be remembered as a fiercely independent, private, humble, family man who always put the concerns of others above his own and encouraged us all to offer "hugs and kisses" to one another as he signed off on weekly phone calls with family.

Phil is survived by his wife of 59 years, Hope Hatfield Moore, three children: Rick Moore, Dwight Moore (Maricel Mojares-Moore), Dianna (Moore) Fricke (Brian Fricke); five grandchildren: Ryan Moore, Brandon Moore, Mirabelle Moore, Coen Fricke, Bryce Fricke; and two brothers: Edgar Moore, Mark Moore.

Inscription

US Air Force

Gravesite Details

Dec 23, 2021 planned interment date at Pikes Peak National Cemetery
which did not occur.


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