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Jonathan Thomas Hoag

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Jonathan Thomas Hoag

Birth
Washita, Caddo County, Oklahoma, USA
Death
18 Nov 2014 (aged 94)
Binger, Caddo County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Anadarko, Caddo County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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ANADARKO Jonathan Thomas Hoag, 94, of Anadarko, passed away peacefully Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2014, in Binger.
Funeral will be at 10 a.m. Monday, Nov. 24, 2014, at Comanche Nation Funeral Home, Lawton, with the Rev. Milton Otis and Duke Tsoodle Jr. officiating.
Burial with military honors will follow at Memory Lane Cemetery, Anadarko, under direction of Comanche Nation Funeral Home.
Prayer service will be at 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 23, 2014, at the funeral home in Lawton.
Mr. Hoag was born Oct. 23, 1920, to Clarence Enoch and Edith Keechi Hoag, at Washita. Jonathan attended Washita Elementary, St. Patrick's Mission and graduated from Riverside Indian School in 1942. He attended Southeastern Teacher's College in Durant in 1946, attended L.P.N. nursing classes at Memorial Hospital in Lawton from Jan. 11, 1954 to March 24, 1954, and basic CHR training in Tucson, Ariz., from January through February 1972. He was a member of the Delaware Nation of Oklahoma.
Jonathan served in the United States Army through 1945 and the United States Navy through 1962, with an honorable discharge from both. During his military career, Jonathan served in World War II and the Korean War. His battles and campaigns were: Rome-Arno Rhineland, Central, Europe, Sicily Naples-Foggia and Southern France. Mr. Hoag was a highly decorated soldier, with his awards and decorations including: Purple Heart and 2 Bronze Oak Leaf Clusters, Two Silver Services Star, One Bronze Service Star and One Bronze Star.
In 1963, Jonathan went into the ministry with the American Indian Full Gospel Assembly and was licensed for ministry. In 1964, he held evangelistic services in Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, Montana and in mid-state in California. He did not make it to Canada due to a death in the family. Mr. Hoag returned to California and accepted the position of pastor of the Hot Creek Full Gospel Church, where he served for six years, and remained open to the calling of God. He returned to Oklahoma shortly after he accepted the pastorate of the Cache Creek Full Gospel Church, south of Carnegie.
In 1972, Mr. Hoag was employed by the Delaware Tribe of Western Oklahoma and selected to be trained for and received certification as a community health representative, providing home nursing and first aid. He retired on Dec. 17, 2001. During his employment as a CHR, Jonathan also work as an LPN at the Indian Health Service Hospital in Lawton.
Jonathan was preceded in death by: parents: Clarence and Edith Hoag: brother, Elmer Hoag; two sisters: Mary Eckiwaudah and Velma Codynah; three nieces: Catherine Moore, Elizabeth Gowens and Carol Codynah; five nephews: Nathaniel Eckiwaudah, Larriel Eckiwaudah, Gene Eckiwaudah, Milton Codynah and Robert Subieta Sr.
He is survived by: brother, Vern Spencer Hoag; four nieces: Doris Oliver, Nathalene RedElk, Geraldine Blue and Merideth Austin; two nephews: Fred Codynah and Jackie Codynah; great-nephews: Carl Moore, Garrell Moore and Jonathan Moore; great-nieces: Sharon Gomez and Linda McCabe; numerous other great-nieces and nephews; and one great-great-nephew, Darian Moore.
Pallbearers: Carl Moore, Chris Gomez, Randal Subieta, Dustin Moore, Larriel Eckiwaudah Jr. and Matthew Meeks.
Honorary pallbearers: Garrell Moore, Curtis Poafpybitty, Robert Subieta Jr. and Matthew Drobot.
ANADARKO Jonathan Thomas Hoag, 94, of Anadarko, passed away peacefully Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2014, in Binger.
Funeral will be at 10 a.m. Monday, Nov. 24, 2014, at Comanche Nation Funeral Home, Lawton, with the Rev. Milton Otis and Duke Tsoodle Jr. officiating.
Burial with military honors will follow at Memory Lane Cemetery, Anadarko, under direction of Comanche Nation Funeral Home.
Prayer service will be at 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 23, 2014, at the funeral home in Lawton.
Mr. Hoag was born Oct. 23, 1920, to Clarence Enoch and Edith Keechi Hoag, at Washita. Jonathan attended Washita Elementary, St. Patrick's Mission and graduated from Riverside Indian School in 1942. He attended Southeastern Teacher's College in Durant in 1946, attended L.P.N. nursing classes at Memorial Hospital in Lawton from Jan. 11, 1954 to March 24, 1954, and basic CHR training in Tucson, Ariz., from January through February 1972. He was a member of the Delaware Nation of Oklahoma.
Jonathan served in the United States Army through 1945 and the United States Navy through 1962, with an honorable discharge from both. During his military career, Jonathan served in World War II and the Korean War. His battles and campaigns were: Rome-Arno Rhineland, Central, Europe, Sicily Naples-Foggia and Southern France. Mr. Hoag was a highly decorated soldier, with his awards and decorations including: Purple Heart and 2 Bronze Oak Leaf Clusters, Two Silver Services Star, One Bronze Service Star and One Bronze Star.
In 1963, Jonathan went into the ministry with the American Indian Full Gospel Assembly and was licensed for ministry. In 1964, he held evangelistic services in Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, Montana and in mid-state in California. He did not make it to Canada due to a death in the family. Mr. Hoag returned to California and accepted the position of pastor of the Hot Creek Full Gospel Church, where he served for six years, and remained open to the calling of God. He returned to Oklahoma shortly after he accepted the pastorate of the Cache Creek Full Gospel Church, south of Carnegie.
In 1972, Mr. Hoag was employed by the Delaware Tribe of Western Oklahoma and selected to be trained for and received certification as a community health representative, providing home nursing and first aid. He retired on Dec. 17, 2001. During his employment as a CHR, Jonathan also work as an LPN at the Indian Health Service Hospital in Lawton.
Jonathan was preceded in death by: parents: Clarence and Edith Hoag: brother, Elmer Hoag; two sisters: Mary Eckiwaudah and Velma Codynah; three nieces: Catherine Moore, Elizabeth Gowens and Carol Codynah; five nephews: Nathaniel Eckiwaudah, Larriel Eckiwaudah, Gene Eckiwaudah, Milton Codynah and Robert Subieta Sr.
He is survived by: brother, Vern Spencer Hoag; four nieces: Doris Oliver, Nathalene RedElk, Geraldine Blue and Merideth Austin; two nephews: Fred Codynah and Jackie Codynah; great-nephews: Carl Moore, Garrell Moore and Jonathan Moore; great-nieces: Sharon Gomez and Linda McCabe; numerous other great-nieces and nephews; and one great-great-nephew, Darian Moore.
Pallbearers: Carl Moore, Chris Gomez, Randal Subieta, Dustin Moore, Larriel Eckiwaudah Jr. and Matthew Meeks.
Honorary pallbearers: Garrell Moore, Curtis Poafpybitty, Robert Subieta Jr. and Matthew Drobot.


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