Acee Blue Eagle

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Acee Blue Eagle (Alex McIntosh; Chebon Ah Bu Lah, Laughing Boy; Lumhee Holattee, Blue Eagle) Creek-Pawnee, 1907 - 1959

Studied at Chilocco Indian School;Bacone College; University of Oklahoma,Norman; Oklahoma State Technical School, Okmulgee; Haskell Institute, Lawerence,Kansas.

In 1935, Blue Eagle was invited to give a series of lectures on American Indian art at Oxford University in England, and he took Europe by storm. Returning to the United States, he established the Art Department at Bacone College in 1935, and directed the program until 1938. A former Bacone student, he also studied at the University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State University School of Technology, and at Haskell Institue at Lawerence,Kansas., where a buisness administration building is named Blue Eagle Hall in his honor. Blue Eagle gained worldwide fame during his lifetime, and his two-dimensional paintings hang in private and public galleries all over the world. Acee was well known for painting large interior murals, some of which are still preserved in Oklahoma. One of Acee's murals were in the dining hall of the U.S.S. Oklahoma. He was elected into the Indian Hall of Fame, Who's Who of Oklahoma, and the International Who's Who. He was chosen "Outstanding Indian in the United States" in 1958. Born near Anadarko,Oklahoma., into the Mcintosh family, a family which has given the Creek tribe of Oklahoma many of it's Cheifs, Blue Eagle served in the United States Air Corps during World War II. He died in 1959, and is buried in the National Cemetery at Fort Gibson, Oklahoma.