The Day

WWII Navajo Code Talker Samuel Tom Holiday dies at 94

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St. George, Utah — Samuel Tom Holiday, one of the last surviving Navajo Code Talkers, died in southern Utah Monday surrounded by family members who raised money through a crowdfundi­ng campaign to be by his side. He was 94. Holiday was among hundreds of Navajos who used a code based on their native language to transmit messages in World War II. The Japanese never broke it.

He was 19 when he joined the Marine Corps and became a part of operations in several locations across the Pacific during the war, according to The Spectrum. A mortar explosion left him with hearing loss, but he would later tell family that he always felt safe during battle because of a pouch around his neck holding sacred stones and yellow corn pollen.

He received a Congressio­nal Silver Medal, a Purple Heart and other recognitio­n for his action during the conflict.

After the war, Holiday returned to the Navajo reservatio­n and worked as a police officer, a ranger and later started his own equipment company. He married Lupita Mae Isaac and had eight children.

In 2013, Holiday co-wrote a book about his experience as a Code Talker called “Under the Eagle.”

Fewer than 10 Code Talkers are believed to be alive today. The exact number is unknown because the program remained classified for several years following the war.

Holiday spent his later days living at the Southern Utah Veterans Home in Ivins, Utah.

Shortly before his death, family members turned to the crowdfundi­ng site GoFundMe to raise $4,000 to be able to visit him in hospice care. The Navajo Nation said he was surrounded by friends and family when he died.

There will be a viewing at the Hughes Mortuary in St. George, Utah, today and funeral services in Monument Valley on Friday, according to the Navajo Nation Council.

Holiday will be buried at a veterans’ cemetery in the Navajo community of Kayenta, Ariz., next to his wife.

The library at the Kayenta Middle School is named for Holiday.

He is survived by six children, 35 grandchild­ren, 30 great-grandchild­ren and two great-great-grandchild­ren.

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