Advertisement

Everett David “Ted” Oaks Sr.

Advertisement

Everett David “Ted” Oaks Sr. Veteran

Birth
Bernice, Union Parish, Louisiana, USA
Death
26 Jul 2010 (aged 81)
Spavinaw, Mayes County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Spavinaw, Mayes County, Oklahoma, USA GPS-Latitude: 36.4095055, Longitude: -95.0512417
Memorial ID
View Source
August 2, 2010

Evertt David "Ted" Oaks
The Pryor Times Mon Aug 02, 2010, 09:01 AM CDT

Everett David "Ted" Oaks, Sr., was born Nov. 24, 1928 in Bernice, La., Union Parrish, to Henry and Maude (Stivers) Oaks. He died Monday, July 26, at home in Spavinaw. He finished the eighth grade in Bernice, La. He relocated to Memphis, Tenn. in 1944, where he worked for National Harvestor. After World War II he moved to Houston, Texas where he joined the Army Air Corp in 1947.

After basic training and electrical school, Oaks was moved to Berlin, Germany for the Berlin Airlift to help in the off loading of the cargo aircraft, which allowed the city of Berlin to survive. After the airlift, he was sent with a nine man team to Tripoli, Libya to reopen a bombed out base, where he established the electrical grid. While in Tripoli, the nation of Israel was formed by the United Nations and police action was enforced because of military/terrorist uprising. In 1950, he was sent to Seattle, Wash. in charge of a generator site that operated the first early warning radar on the west coast. In 1951, after discharge was stopped due to the Korean War, he relocated the generators with his men to Seoul, Korea; they delivered the generators for the radar to a mountain top in Korea. He was then ordered back to Seattle where he trained new electricians until his discharge in 1952.

He moved to Bakersfield, Calif., where he met his wife, Jeweldean Evans. They married in April of 1952. He worked for Sears and Roebucks while he started his family, later working for Hartman Concrete as a driver and teamster for 20 years. He started his own business, Oak's Appliance and Refrigeration, in 1969. He continued in business until 1975 when he moved to Spavinaw. He worked a short time for Melton's Appliance and Air Conditioning before starting his own business again, working the Grand Lake area, until he retired.

Funeral services are 11 a.m., Monday, Aug., 2, at the Blue Springs Church with Reverends Lorne Beck and Loyd Boney officiating. His grandchildren will serve as casket bearers. Interment will be in the Spavinaw-Strang Cemetery in Spavinaw. The family will receive friends and family at the funeral home from 4 to 6 p.m. on Sunday afternoon. To leave a personal message to his family, see his web memorial at www.shipmansfuneralhome.com. Arrangements are under the direction of Shipman's Funeral & Cremation Service.

Oaks is survived by four children: one daughter, Marla Jones, Brawley, Calif.; sons, Curtis Oaks, Abbottsford, British Columbia, Everett David "Dave" Oaks Jr., Spavinaw, and Michael Oaks, Enid; seven grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; one brother, William Alfred "Bill" Oaks, Mayfield, Ky. and one sister, Vera "Jeannie" Ford, Idaho, and many other relatives and friends.

He was preceded in death by his mother and father, five brothers and six sisters.
August 2, 2010

Evertt David "Ted" Oaks
The Pryor Times Mon Aug 02, 2010, 09:01 AM CDT

Everett David "Ted" Oaks, Sr., was born Nov. 24, 1928 in Bernice, La., Union Parrish, to Henry and Maude (Stivers) Oaks. He died Monday, July 26, at home in Spavinaw. He finished the eighth grade in Bernice, La. He relocated to Memphis, Tenn. in 1944, where he worked for National Harvestor. After World War II he moved to Houston, Texas where he joined the Army Air Corp in 1947.

After basic training and electrical school, Oaks was moved to Berlin, Germany for the Berlin Airlift to help in the off loading of the cargo aircraft, which allowed the city of Berlin to survive. After the airlift, he was sent with a nine man team to Tripoli, Libya to reopen a bombed out base, where he established the electrical grid. While in Tripoli, the nation of Israel was formed by the United Nations and police action was enforced because of military/terrorist uprising. In 1950, he was sent to Seattle, Wash. in charge of a generator site that operated the first early warning radar on the west coast. In 1951, after discharge was stopped due to the Korean War, he relocated the generators with his men to Seoul, Korea; they delivered the generators for the radar to a mountain top in Korea. He was then ordered back to Seattle where he trained new electricians until his discharge in 1952.

He moved to Bakersfield, Calif., where he met his wife, Jeweldean Evans. They married in April of 1952. He worked for Sears and Roebucks while he started his family, later working for Hartman Concrete as a driver and teamster for 20 years. He started his own business, Oak's Appliance and Refrigeration, in 1969. He continued in business until 1975 when he moved to Spavinaw. He worked a short time for Melton's Appliance and Air Conditioning before starting his own business again, working the Grand Lake area, until he retired.

Funeral services are 11 a.m., Monday, Aug., 2, at the Blue Springs Church with Reverends Lorne Beck and Loyd Boney officiating. His grandchildren will serve as casket bearers. Interment will be in the Spavinaw-Strang Cemetery in Spavinaw. The family will receive friends and family at the funeral home from 4 to 6 p.m. on Sunday afternoon. To leave a personal message to his family, see his web memorial at www.shipmansfuneralhome.com. Arrangements are under the direction of Shipman's Funeral & Cremation Service.

Oaks is survived by four children: one daughter, Marla Jones, Brawley, Calif.; sons, Curtis Oaks, Abbottsford, British Columbia, Everett David "Dave" Oaks Jr., Spavinaw, and Michael Oaks, Enid; seven grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; one brother, William Alfred "Bill" Oaks, Mayfield, Ky. and one sister, Vera "Jeannie" Ford, Idaho, and many other relatives and friends.

He was preceded in death by his mother and father, five brothers and six sisters.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement