San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Georgia Mary Harbour

February 5, 1943 - December 20, 2022

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Georgia Mary Harbour, 79, passed away on December 20, 2022 from heart complicati­ons with her beloved son John Peter (JP) Harbour at her side. Georgia Mary Wagner was born on February 5, 1943 in Fond du Lac, WI to Arthur and Helen Wagner, the fifth of ten children. The family moved to Phoenix, AZ where she spent her childhood, attended Camelback High School, and began college at Arizona State University. Soon after, she followed two brothers to California to explore San Francisco, and she discovered the City she would adore for the rest of her life. She met and married Antony Harbour, and they joyfully welcomed their son JP a few years thereafter. During a brief relocation to Houston, TX to support Antony’s successful career in architectu­re, Georgia was passionate to learn about beauty, design, art, and its perception­s, and attended Rice University to complete her degree, earning a BA in Art History. Georgia moved back to San Francisco and the marriage later ended in divorce, although it provided her the independen­ce to raise her son in the midst of San Francisco’s cultural richness and to follow her own life path.

A truly devoted mother, Georgia enthusiast­ically encouraged her son’s academic, athletic, and cultural pursuits, and she was grateful for his loyal companions­hip and support throughout her life. She made frequent trips to Lake Tahoe and Carmel, enjoyed skiing and tennis, and loved traveling to new destinatio­ns across the country, to Europe, and on internatio­nal cruises. She loved the arts, music, nature, humor, and delicious food, all of which she celebrated throughout her life. She developed her own real estate investment and property management business and was particular­ly pleased to work for herself. Georgia was a loyal friend, a loving family member, and a faithful Catholic. She cherished spending time with loved ones to celebrate holidays, family reunions, birthdays, weddings, and special occasions together. She laughed easily, loved to sing and dance, and conveyed a spirit of goodwill to everyone she met, although always confident to stand her ground. A lifelong sports fan, she loved the 49ers and her son’s alma mater Cal, and never gave up on the Green Bay Packers of her early childhood. She spent many happy dinners at the Olympic Club, where she also enjoyed volunteeri­ng at the US Open golf tournament. As a true San Franciscan, she loved eating fresh Dungeness crab, dark chocolate from Ghirardell­i, warm sourdough bread, and local Italian, Mexican, and Chinese favorites. In her later years, she would recount memories such as moving to the City in the 70s and experienci­ng the 1989 earthquake while at home in the Marina, and cultural highlights such as seeing Paul McCartney’s farewell to Candlestic­k Park concert, watching the America’s Cup in the Bay, and rooting on the Giants to win the World Series. She was fond of listening and singing along to Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, and Tony Bennett and never tired of a great love song. Georgia’s independen­t spirit, tenacity, smile, and her innate kindness will be truly missed.

Over the course of her life in San Francisco, Georgia found a spiritual home at St. Dominic’s Catholic Church, where she will be interred. She was a regular attendee of services and truly appreciate­d the sense of community it offered to all, including its musical and spiritual offerings. Georgia is survived by two brothers, two sisters, many nieces and nephews, and her adored son JP. Friends and family are invited to a Service of Remembranc­e on Friday, February 4 at 3pm at St. Dominic’s Church, at Bush and Steiner, followed by a reception nearby.

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