Leonard Eugene Hegele's Obituary
Leonard Eugene Hegele passed away at his residence in St. Helens, Oregon on Wednesday, August 17th, 2022, at the age of 75. He was born October 15th, 1946, to Mark Hegele and Annie Griffiths (Duris), and had two younger sisters.
Leonard graduated from St. Helens High School in 1965 and worked at Crown Zellerbach prior to being drafted into the Army in 1966. He served in the third US Army Hospital Detachment US Army Garrison, received the National Defense Service Medal, Sharpshooter Badge (Rifle M-14), High Score Physical Training trophy, and an honorable discharge in 1968.
As a youth in St. Helens, he was a rockhound and petrified wood collector, grinding and polishing pieces and making jewelry for family and friends. Residing in Saint Helens for most of his life, he also enjoyed wide open spaces of Montana collecting rocks, taking photographs, fishing, and hunting. He bagged a 280#, 5-point buck which made local papers.
Leonard enjoyed woodworking, making wall clocks, jewelry boxes, and display cases. He collected Indian artifacts; arrowheads, beads, cutting tools, and displaying them in cases. He read books about Native American culture, the use of the pieces he’d collected, and learned the technique to create those tools. Many artifacts were displayed in cases he made and donated to the Columbia County historical museum.
He loved panning for gold in Oregon and Montana. Although no fortune was made, he displayed his finds in small vials and gifted them to family members.
One of his last works of art was two belt buckles from a set of elk horn buttons, finished with turquoise stones in the center. He was an avid fisherman, hunter, camper, and outdoorsman. His most recent outing was a clamming trip with his son, Mike, and his grandchildren, Chayanne and Owen, to Long Beach.
He was preceded in death by both parents.
He is survived by sisters, Joan and Donna; children, Traci (Ed), Toni, Mark (Jennifer), Mike (Carrie); eight grandchildren, Brooks (Andrea), Davis (Ashley), Dorian (Taylor), Jay Cie, Tristan, Trevor, Chayanne, and Owen; and three great-grandchildren, newborns Beau, Carson, and Amelia. He cherished all his grandchildren and spoke fondly of them.
Services will be at Columbia Funeral Home September 2, at 2:00 p.m., and a Patriot Guard procession to Columbia Memorial Garden. All are invited. In lieu of flowers, contributions to Wounded Warrior Projects or St. Jude Hospital in his name would be appreciated.
What’s your fondest memory of Leonard?
What’s a lesson you learned from Leonard?
Share a story where Leonard's kindness touched your heart.
Describe a day with Leonard you’ll never forget.
How did Leonard make you smile?

