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Jan Louise (Wurtz) Agosta

Posted 2021-12-30 by mhenderson
Published by The Daily Courier on Dec. 29, 2021 -
Prescott, Arizona -

Jan Louise Wurtz Agosta was a retired nurse and five-year resident of
Homer, Alaska. She died unexpectedly December 12, 2021, at the age of 68
at South Peninsula Hospital.

Jan is survived by her daughter Angela (Wesley) Head (nee Agosta) and
grandchildren William James, Wesley Townsend, and Isabel Mae Head of
Homer, AK; her sister Phyllis Ann Herston of Fort Worth, TX; her brother
John Paul Wurtz of Hazlet, TX; and her cousin Linda Barrett of Fort
Worth, TX. She is preceded in death by her son Lucas Agosta and her
parents, John Paul Wurtz Sr. and Doris Zinn Wurtz (Smith). Jan was born
October 11, 1953, in Fort Worth, TX. She was voted as one of the
“Friendliest Seniors” of her graduating class at Paschal Highschool — a
distinction that remained with her to the end of her life.

Jan attended nursing school at University of Texas Austin and graduated
with her BSN in 1979. Shortly after she married Joseph Agosta and moved
to Arizona where they began a life in Tucson, Arizona. Their two
children were born there, Angie in 1980 and Luke in 1983.

Some of the happiest years of Jan’s life were spent when they moved to
Prescott, AZ in 1987. Jan was involved with her children’s elementary
PTA at Miller Valley Elementary and also the Prescott Unitarian
Universalist Fellowship. She continued her nursing career at Yavapai
Regional Medical Center and Yavapai Department of Public Health where
she was instrumental in some of the first public health information
campaigns about HIV/AIDS. Jan was a gifted and compassionate caretaker
and particularly loved her nursing assignments in pediatrics and
hospice.

In 2003, Jan moved back to Texas and reconnected with old and new
friends, starting in Austin, then relocating to Irving to be close to
her aging parents. She finally settled in Kerrville, TX for nine years
and retired from nursing. In 2017 she moved to Homer, AK to be near her
daughter and new grandson. She found a wonderful group of women who
shared her passions for social justice and began to spend time painting
rocks and enjoying the natural beauty of Alaska. Everywhere Jan went she
delighted people with her enormous smile, infectious laughter, and big
heart. She was a doting grandmother, and “Neena” will be sorely missed.

If you feel led to make a donation in her honor to one of the
organizations that Jan loved, please consider The Alzheimer’s
Association (https://www.alz.org/), The Arthritis Foundation
9https://www.arthritis.org/), or The League of Women Voters
(https://www.lwv.org/).

Information provided by Memoriams Support.





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