Due to racial discrimination, African American servicemen
were not allowed to learn to fly until 1941, when
African American college graduates were selected
for what the Army called "an experiment" the
creation of the segregated 99th Fighter Squadron,
which trained
at an airfield adjacent to Alabama's Tuskegee Institute.
The experiment involved training black pilots
and
ground support members who originally formed the
99th Pursuit Squadron. The squadron, quickly dubbed
the
Tuskegee Airmen, was activated on March 22, 1941
and redesignated as the 99th Fighter Squadron on
May
15,
1942. For every black pilot there were 10 other black
civilian, officer and enlisted men and women on
ground
support duty.
Charles Alfred Anderson, the first African American
to earn his pilot's license, became the first flight
instructor when the Civilian Pilot Training Program
(CPTP) was organized at Tuskegee Institute in October
1939. The army decided to model its training program
on the CPTP and hired Anderson to teach the Tuskegee
pilots.
When Eleanor Roosevelt visited Tuskegee Army Air
Field in 1941, she insisted on taking a ride in an
airplane with a black pilot at the controls. ER's
pilot was Charles Anderson. ER then insisted that
her flight with Anderson be photographed and the film
developed immediately so that she could take the photographs
back to Washington when she left the field. ER used
this photograph as part of her campaign to convince
FDR to activate
the participation of the Tuskegee Airmen in North
Africa and in the European Theater.
In June 1943, the Tuskegee Airmen entered into combat
over North Africa. The airmen exemplified courage,
skill and dedication in combat. They flew P-39-, P-40-,
P-47- and P-51- type aircraft in more than 15,000
sorties, completing over 1,500 missions during the
war. They never lost an escorted bomber to enemy fighters.
No other escort unit could claim such a record. When
the war ended, the Tuskegee Airmen returned home with
150 Distinguished Flying Crosses, Legions of Merit
and the Red Star of Yugoslavia. The group was deactivated
in May 1946 but its success would contribute to the
eventual integration of the United States military.
The fruit of the efforts of the airmen would be harvested
in the eventual 1948 desegregation of the U.S. Armed
Forces.
Sources:
Boyer, Paul, et al. The Enduring Vision: A History
of the American People. Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 2000, 774.
Estell, Kenneth, ed. The African American Almanac.
8th ed. Detroit: Gale Group, 2000, 1218.
Hoyt, Davina. "Tuskegee Airmen of World War
II. Internet on-line. Available From http://history.acusd.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/Tuskegee.html.
"Eleanor Roosevelt with 'Chief' Charles Alfred
Johnson." In Through These Eyes: The Photography
of P. H. Polk. Internet on-line. Available
From http://www.museums.udel.edu/art/past/polk/gif/eleanor.html