COMPOUND OBJECT (6 Items)

Philip H. Red Eagle Item Info

Philip H. Red Eagle,...
Philip H. Red Eagle, portrait
IMAGE
Jordan Woolston, essay
Jordan Woolston, essay - application/pdf
PDF
Philip H. Red Eagle,...
Philip H. Red Eagle, transcript - application/pdf
PDF
Philip H. Red Eagle,...
Philip H. Red Eagle, interview 1 - audio
AUDIO
Philip H. Red Eagle,...
Philip H. Red Eagle, interview 2 - audio
AUDIO
Project bibliography
Project bibliography - application/pdf
PDF
Title:
Philip H. Red Eagle
Creator:
Woolston, Jordan
Date Created:
2017
Description:
Philip H. Red Eagle was born in 1945 in Tacoma, Washington. His mother, Marian Steilacoom, of Salish decent, was born near Port Angeles, Washington. Philip's father, Philip Red Eagle, a member of the Dakota Tribe, was born near the Missouri River on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation in Montana. Phillip spent the first fourteen years of his life in Tacoma, attending Stanley and McCarver schools before moving to Sitka, Alaska with his family in 1959. Philip joined the Navy shortly after graduating from high school, serving in Vietnam for five years from 1969-1973. After Vietnam, Philip returned to Washington and began undergraduate studies at the University of Washington where he earned two bachelor's degrees. The return to civilian life after the war affected Philip and he struggled with PTSD and related issues like depression and insomnia. Philip found that art, writing, and taking part in the revival of his culture helped him confront his PTSD and over the last 30 years Philip has contributed greatly to the revival and expansion of Indigenous culture in the Pacific Northwest.
Subjects:
Tacoma Seattle Indigenous peoples Social aspects Military Education Vietnam War 20th century Veterans Artists
Location:
Fort Peck Reservation
Source:
Tacoma Community History Project
Type:
record
Format:
compound_object
Source
Preferred Citation:
"Philip H. Red Eagle", Tacoma Community History Project, University of Washington Tacoma Library
Reference Link:
https://erika-b.github.io/tchp/items/chp201707.html
Rights
Rights:
Individuals may use project materials for scholarly or research purposes, according to the provisions of fair use, but reproducing, publishing, or broadcasting any oral history project materials requires permission. For more information, see http://content.lib.washington.edu/tacomacommweb/using-projects.html
Standardized Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/