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  2. Code talker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_talker

    Code talker. Choctaw soldiers in training in World War I for coded radio and telephone transmissions. A code talker was a person employed by the military during wartime to use a little-known language as a means of secret communication. The term is most often used for United States service members during the World Wars who used their knowledge ...

  3. Choctaw code talkers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choctaw_Code_Talkers

    The Choctaw code talkers were a group of Choctaw Indians from Oklahoma who pioneered the use of Native American languages as military code during World War I . The government of the Choctaw Nation maintains that the men were the first American native code talkers ever to serve in the US military. They were conferred the Texas Medal of Valor in ...

  4. Philip Johnston (code talker) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Johnston_(code_talker)

    Glendale, California, U.S. Alma mater. University of Southern California. Philip Johnston (September 14, 1892, in Topeka, Kansas – September 11, 1978, in San Diego, California) [ 1] was an American civil engineer who is credited with proposing the idea of using the Navajo language as a Navajo code to be used in the Pacific Theater during ...

  5. Tobias W. Frazier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias_W._Frazier

    Ordre National du Merite. Purple Heart. Tobias William Frazier, Sr. (1892–1975) was a full-blood Choctaw Indian who was a member of the famous fourteen Choctaw Code Talkers. The Code Talkers pioneered the use of American Indian languages as military code during war. Their initial exploits took place during World War I, and were repeated by ...

  6. Joseph Oklahombi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Oklahombi

    Joseph Oklahombi (May 1, 1895 - April 13, 1960) was a Choctaw soldier in the United States Army during the First World War. [1] He was the most-decorated World War I soldier from Oklahoma. One of the Choctaw code talkers, he served in Company D, First Battalion, 141st Regiment, Seventy-first Brigade of the Thirty-sixth Infantry Division during ...

  7. Charles Chibitty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Chibitty

    Charles Joyce Chibitty (November 20, 1921 – July 20, 2005) was a Native American and United States Army code talker in World War II, who helped transmit coded messages in the Comanche (Nʉmʉnʉʉ) language on the battlefield as a radio operator in the European Theater of the war. In 2013, Native American Code Talkers of World War I and II ...

  8. R. C. Gorman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._C._Gorman

    Rudolph Carl Gorman was born in Chinle, Arizona, to Adele Katherine Brown [3] and Carl Nelson Gorman.His father, Carl, was one of the original twenty-nine Navajo Code Talkers, who, along with his colleagues, developed the unbreakable code American forces used in the Pacific Theater during World War II.

  9. Alfred K. Newman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_K._Newman

    Children. 5. Other work. Ammunition inspector. Alfred K. Newman (July 7, 1924 – January 13, 2019) was a United States Marine, best known for serving as a Navajo code talker during World War II . Born in Rehoboth, New Mexico, [1] on the Navajo Nation, Newman and his fellow native students were not allowed to speak the Navajo language in school ...