Philip D. Hearn
Major Works
- Hurricane Camille: Monster Storm of the Gulf
Coast 2004
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Philip D. Hearn
: A Biography
Born in Laurel, Mississippi, Phil Hearn is the author of Hurricane
Camille: Monster Storm of the Gulf Coast, a painfully
compelling account of what many consider to be the most powerful
storm ever to strike the U.S. mainland, as seen through the
eyes of survivors. Based primarily on the first-person accounts
housed in the oral history archives of the University of Southern
Mississippi, the book was published by University Press of Mississippi
in August 2004.
A former longtime newspaper reporter and editor, Hearn worked
in the Jackson, Mississippi, and Birmingham, Alabama, bureaus
of United Press International from 1968-1980; and his last newspaper
job was as managing editor of the Greenwood Commonwealth
in Greenwood, Miss., from 1983-1984.
Hearn covered a wide variety of breaking stories during his
newspaper career that included the desegregation of Mississippi
public schools, the trial and conviction of Ku Klux Klan terrorist
bomber Thomas Tarrants, the slaying of black high school graduate
Jo Etha Collier in Drew, Mississippi, events surrounding construction
of the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway, the return of American
troops from Vietnam, then-presidential candidate Ronald Reagan’s
1980 campaign speech at the Neshoba County Fair, the Mississippi
Flood of 1979 and Hurricane Frederick, also in 1979.
He also covered four gubernatorial administrations, legislative
sessions, state penitentiary conditions, state College Board
meetings, the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi, college
football games, and state and national elections in Mississippi.
Hearn has served since April 2003 as a research writer in the
University Relations Office at Mississippi State University.
He served for more than eighteen years as news directior for
the University Relations Office at USM. During these years,
Hearn won nine awards from the Council for the Advancement and
Support of Higher Education (CASE)--including three first-place
awards for news and feature writing, and for innovation. He
also has won more than a dozen awards from the College Public
Relations Association of Mississippi, serving two separate terms
on the organization's board of directors. He also served as
an associate member of the Mississippi Press Association for
eighteen years.
Hearn
served for twenty years in military public affairs with the
Mississippi Army National Guard's 102nd Public Information Detachment,
and with the U.S. Army Reserve's 3rd Personnel Command, retiring
from service in 1995 as a commissioned officer. In 1991, he
won the Thomas Jefferson Award, the U.S. Defense Department's
highest award for feature writing, worldwide, in all branches
of active and reserve military service. He has been published
in Army Reserve and Vietnam magazines.
During the late 1970s to early 1980s, Hearn found long-distance
running provided a challenging way to stay fit. He ran eight
marathons over a five-year period, posting a personal best time
of three hours, six minutes and 54 seconds in the 1979 Mississippi
Marathon.
Hearn earned a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University
of Southern Mississippi in 1966 and received a master's degreee
in public relations from USM in 1987. He also has completed
twelve hours toward a master's degree in history. Early in his
newspaper career, he worked for the Meridian Star, Hattiesburg
American and Jackson Clarion-Ledger.
Hearn is married to Brenda Jeansonne Hearn. A daughter, Kathy
Michelle Hearn, resides in Jackson.
Note: Biography courtesy of Philip D. Hearn
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A Review of Hurricane
Camille: Monster Storm of the Gulf Coast
Hurricane Camille: Monster Storm of the Gulf Coast
by Philip Hearn is the history of the hurricane which occurred
on August 17 , 1969. Camille smashed into twenty-six miles of
Mississippi's coastline with winds more than 200 miles per hour
and tidal waves almost 35 feet high. The book relates the memories
of the people who survived, compiled ten years after the storm
and archived at the University of Southern Mississippi. Camille
is one of only three Category 5 hurricanes ever to hit the U.
S. mainland. The storm also hit Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia,
and Virginia and caused major flooding and damage there as well.
In Mississippi, one hundred and thirty-one people died in
the devastation, and another forty-one people were never found.
Hearn's book is a gripping account of the horror of that night
when so many people died. It also tells of the homes, shops,
marinas which were destroyed. Hearn has the ability to put the
experiences of the people who survived in perspective and puts
a human face on the tragic experience. For those who remember
reading about the event or who know people who lived through
it, this book is an especially fascinating book. People interested
in the history of Mississippi and the stories of natural disasters
will also find this book particularly of interest.
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Related
Websites
Danny
McKenzie (Northeast Daily Journal)
includes Hearn's book in reviews of new Mississippi books
for Christmas presents.
BookPage's
Edward Morris interviews Hearn about his book.
Info
about Hearn's appearance on Conversations
on PBS hosted by Gene Edwards.
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