DUNCAN —
A Doyle man was medi-flighted to the burn center in Oklahoma City early Friday morning after he and his wife awoke to find their home engulfed in fire.
Rodney Hall and his wife, Gena, woke at 4:30 a.m. to discover their home on fire, said Stephens County Sheriff Wayne McKinney.
The couple have three young children, one of them is deaf, McKinney said, and in the panic, Mr. Hall went back in the house several times to make sure all his children were out of the burning home.
He suffered second and third degree burns from the waist down.
“We’re investigating with the State Fire Marshal, but it doesn’t appear anything was suspicious,” McKinney said. The home was a complete loss, he said. “We did call American Red Cross for this family.”
The home location is 17 mile road, 1 1/2 mile south on State Highway 29, on Route 1, the sheriff said.
Responders included volunteer fire departments from Doyle, Bray and Velma, along with Velma EMS.
Integris Paul Silverstein Burn Center at Baptist Medical Center is only one of two burn centers in Oklahoma.
Earlier this month, Clinton Montgomery, 41, of Oklahoma City, ran for his life from a fire that erupted in his semi-truck.
Montgomery remains in a coma at the burn center, said Duncan Police Chief Dan Ford.
A house fire also kept Duncan firefighters busy Wednesday night at 403 Lester.
The homeowner was out of town when the fire occurred.
Firefighters remained on the scene through the night.
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