"Tuskegee Airmen at Oscoda Army Air Field, Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site, 2016." by U.S. National Park Service , public domain
Tuskegee AirmenBrochure |
Official Brochure of Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site (NHS) in Alabama. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Tuskegee Airmen
i
Tuskegee Airmen
National Historic Site
Alabama
x
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Taking to the Sky
On a warm July day in 1941,13 young African American men arrived at Tuskegee
Institute in Alabama to begin their training as Army Air Corps pilots. They were a
long way from earning their wings, and not all would make it, but the chance to try
was itself a victory, something for which African Americans had long fought. Though
they had exhibited ability and courage in military conflicts from the Revolutionary
War to World War I, most African Americans were either denied the chance to serve
or assigned menial noncombatant roles with no chance for advancement.
Aviation cadets from the first class at Moton Field, with PT-17 trainers.
The idea that they could meet the high standards of military aviation generated the
fiercest resistance of all. In their training at Moton Field, however, and in combat during World War II, the Tuskegee Airmen conclusively demonstrated the skill, bravery,
quick thinking, and coolness under pressure demanded of a combat pilot. As they had
done so many times before, when finally given the opportunity, African Americans
flew in the face of assumptions, proving they were equal to the task.
"Our mantra was that we dared not fail..."
The booming field of aviation in America was mostly
closed to African Americans in the early 1900s, and they
were entirely excluded from military aviation. Then in
1939, in response to growing international tensions,
Congress passed the Civilian Pilot Training (CPT) Act,
designed to turn out large numbers of pilots who could
move quickly into military aviation if needed. CPT programs were established at colleges around the country.
Through the efforts of the National Airmen's Association
of America, an organization of African American pilots,
six black colleges, among them Tuskegee Institute, and
one private flying school were included. In May 1940 the
first class of CPT pilots completed their elementary flight
training at Kennedy Field, near Tuskegee. The program
332nd Fighter Group armorers load .50 caliber wing guns, 1945
During World War II more and more Moton Field mechanics were womeib.
was so successful that it expanded to include more
advanced CPT programs, becoming the center
of African American flight training in the South.
The U.S. Army Air Corps (AAC) still refused to allow
African Americans to apply for flight training. Two important developments helped overcome its resistance:
Public Law 18 of April 1939 required the AAC to contract with civilian flight schools for primary training of
military pilots, and one of the schools had to train African Americans. The Selective Training and Service Act of
1940 prohibited discrimination in training for military
service. This legislation, along with pressure from the
black press and civil rights organizations and support
from Eleanor Roosevelt, led to the establishment of the
segregated 9 9 t h Pursuit Squadron in January 1941.
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Charles Qcvden, student abMoton in 1942
Tuskegee was chosen because of its success in the CPT
program, its climate suitable for year-round flying, and
the school's experience in conducting education in a segregated environment. The squadron would be made up
primarily of African Americans training at two new air
fields: Tuskegee Institute's Moton Field for primary training and Tuskegee Army Air Field (TAAF) for basic and
advanced training. Since both of these facilities were
segregated, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) opposed the plan.
Others countered that segregated training was the best
that could be hoped for at that time. Moton Field and
TAAF were the sole training facilities for African American
pilots throughout the war. They achieved what they did
against a background of continuing racism and segregation in Tuskegee and at overseas bases.
omnssiai AIRFIELDS
Kennedy Field • Tuskegee Civilian Pre-Flight Training • 1940
Moton Field • Military Primary Training • 1941
Tuskegee Army Air Field • Basic & Advanced Training • 1941
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The first graduating class; Capt. Benjamin O. Davis, Jr. is 2nd from left.
RED TAIL ANGELS
jJDf the first class of 13 candidates who began training in
july 1941, five survived the rigorous programs at Moton and TAAF to earn
their wings on March 7, 1942. Four received
their commissions as 2nd lieutenants. Benjamin
O. Davis, Jr., already an Army captain when he
arrived at Tuskegee, was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel and given command of the 99 th . As
the nation stepped up the war effort and new
classes rapidly completed the Tuskegee program
its success spurred the AAC to form two more
segregated units, the 332 nd Fighter Group (ini-
tially made up of the 100 th , 301 st , and 302 nd
fighter squadrons) and the 477 th Bombardment Group B-25 Medium. By the end of the
war 992 pilots—later known as the Tuskegee
Airmen—had been trained. About 17,000
African American men and women were
trained for service in the AAC, including mechanics, communications and electrical system
specialists, armament specialists, medical technicians, cooks, administrative clerks, parachute
riggers, air traffic controllers, flight instructors, bombardiers, and navigators. ,
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Mechanics of the 99 Fighter Squadron, which shot
down 12 German fighter planes in two days, 1944.
Pilots of the 332nd in front of a P 51-Mustang.
Cadets at Tuskegee Army Air Field, 1941
332nd Fighter Group's P-47 Thunderbolts in Italy, 1944.
NATIONAL ARCHIVES
HOMAN S REILLY DESIGNS
In April 1943 the 99 th Fighter Squadron (the
AAC "Pursuit" designation now "Fighter") was
sent to North Africa to fly P-40s on patrol and
bomber escort missions. The squadron shot
down its first enemy aircraft in July, but also lost
two pilots—the first of 66 Tuskegee Airmen
killed in action or in accidents. The pilots proved
their skills in bombing and strafing raids and
providing air support over Italy, downing 12
German planes in two days. The 332 nd Fighter
Group, sent to Italy in early 1944, shot down
at least 17 enemy aircraft during the Anzio
campaign. The squadrons of the 332 nd , now
commanded by Colonel Davis, quickly gained a
reputation as excellent escort units—along with
the 99 th the only ones to never lose a bomber.
Bomber crews called them the "Red Tail Angels"
because of their planes' distinctive red tail sections and because they were known to never
abandon bombers in their care.
In July 1944 the 99 th joined the 332 nd and
the expanded group began flying the P-51 —
the best U.S. fighter plane of the war. Their
primary duty was to escort bombers to oil refineries and other strategic targets in Europe.
During a bombing run in 1945, three pilots
downed three of Germany's fast new Messerschmitt jet fighters. The war with Japan ended before the 477 th Bombardment Group
had a chance to see combat. But in April
1945, at Freeman Field in Indiana, pilots from
the 477 th were arrested for peacefully protesting the segregated officers' club. Their
stand, along with the superb performance of
the fighter squadrons, helped convince President Harry Truman to sign Executive Order
9981 in 1948 calling for "equality of treatment and opportunity for all persons in the
armed services without regard to race, color,
religion, or national origin."
o
Moton Field 1941-1945
While still in his teens,
Charles A. Anderson (left
in photo) taught himself
to fly. In 1932 he and Dr.
Albert E. Forsythe became
the first African American
pilots to make a round-trip
transcontinental flight. Admired and respected by his
students, "Chief" Anderson
oversaw the primary flight
training of the majority of
the Tuskegee Airmen.
The rugged, dependable PT-17 "Kaydet" was the primary trainer at Moton Field.
O R L A N D - S P I N G A R N RESEARCH CENTER, H O W A R D UNIVERSITY
Intense classroom sessions on navigation and gunnery
complemented the cadets' training flights.
Parachute Rigger Alice Gray explains to cadets how their parachutes are
folded and deployed.
TUSKEGEE E T C :
H O W A R D UNIVERSITY
This was the place where we learned to fly, we became pilots, we became officers
~
—Randolph Edwards, 2003
In 1939 Tuskegee Institute was using a borrowed field to train pilots
in the Civilian Pilot Training Program. When the Army Air Corps
(AAC) awarded Tuskegee Institute a contract to provide primary
flight training to African Americans, the need for a new field grew
more pressing. Funding the field, however, remained an obstacle.
Dr. Frederick Douglass Patterson, president of Tuskegee, asked the
Julius Rosenwald Fund to hold its annual meeting at the school,
hoping to pursuade the foundation to lend Tuskegee the money.
Fortunately for Tuskegee, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt was on the
foundation board.
From 1942 the Cadet House
housed the cadet ready room
and offices for the Flight
Surgeon and Air Dispatcher. It
later was headquarters for the
civilian flight instructors.
Army Supply Building This
structure was the distribution center for aircraft parts
and supplies. From 1942 it
was occupied by the Army
Supervisor's staff.
Hangar No. 1, completed
in 1941, was the center of
operations. Around the open
hangar area were briefing
rooms, administrative offices,
and maintenance shops.
While at Tuskegee in March 1941, Mrs. Roosevelt met Charles
"Chief Anderson, head of pilot training at Tuskegee. Noting that
some people believed African Americans "can't fly airplanes," she
asked Anderson for a ride. Her post-flight remark "Well, you can
fly all right!" and the photo of the smiling Roosevelt in the airplane
with Anderson provided a great boost to African American aviation. The Rosenwald Fund agreed to lend Tuskegee the money to
construct their new airfield, named Moton Field after the school's
second president Robert R. Moton. The AAC also designated it
Tuskegee Army Primary Flying Field.
Auxiliary Storage Shed
This wood frame storage
locker held ground maintenance equipment and nonflammable items used by
Moton Field personnel.
Bath and Locker House
Completed in 1944, this
building provided improved
lavatory, bath, and locker
facilities for the men and
women serving at Moton
Field.
G.L. Washington, director of Tuskegee's Department of
Mechanical Industries, and Tuskegee architect Edward C.
Miller designed the structures, while African American
architect Archie A. Alexander built the airfield. The landing
strip was completed by fall 1941, but bad weather and drainage
problems often forced the first class of cadets to use another field.
To speed completion, student laborers and skilled workers from
Tuskegee Institute pitched in. Throughout the war every African
American AAC pilot received his primary training at Moton, bused
here daily from cadet barracks on the Tuskegee campus.
The Skyway Club was built in Hangar No. 2 was com1945 as a recreational facility
pleted in 1944 in response to
serving all military ranks and
expanding operations. Here
civilians. It provided food service were the field's control tower
and had a large hall for leisure and a parachute packing
and social gatherings.
area. It burned in 1989.
From the Control Tower
dispatchers controlled flight
operations using loudspeakers
and a system of light signals.
It doubled as a parachute
drying tower.
Physical Plant This building
housed offices for the Plant
Engineer and staff. Special
equipment and parts for
climate, water, and electrical
systems were stored here.
Warehouse This concrete
block structure, built at the
same time as Hangar No. 2,
housed non-aviation supplies
and offices for the Construction Supervisor and staff.
Visiting Moton Field Today
Tuskegee Airmen National Historic
Site is open daily 9 am to 4:30 pm
CST except Thanksgiving, December
25, and January 1. There are no entrance fees. For groups of 10 or
more, please make reservations at
least one week in advance. Call
334-724-0922.
W h a t To D o A temporary visitor
center houses exhibits, a bookstore,
and a theater where five historic films
are shown. Hangar No. 1 also contains
exhibits and historic airplanes.
If you visit the weekend before Memorial
Day you can watch the annual Tuskegee
Airmen Fly-In, sponsored by the Negro
Airmen International and the City of
Tuskegee. The Fly-In is open to the
public and features visits by original
Tuskegee Airmen of WWII, historic aircraft, military fly-bys and aerobatics,
exhibits, and vendors.
Directions From Montgomery, Ala.,
follow I-85 North to exit 38 (TuskegeeNotasulga). Turn right on Hwy. 8 1 ; travel
one mile. Turn left on Chappie James
Ave. (alternative route 81); travel % mile
to the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic
Site parking lot on the left.
From Atlanta, Ga., follow I-85 South to
exit 38 (Tuskegee-Notasulga). Turn left
on Hwy. 8 1 ; travel one mile. Turn left
on Chappie James Ave. (alternative
route 81); travel 3A mile to the Tuskegee
Airmen National Historic Site parking lot
on the left.
Accessibility Groups with specialneeds visitors should contact the park
at least three weeks in advance.
Tuskegee U n i v e r s i t y is a historically
African American university founded by
Booker T. Washington in 1881. Called
Tuskegee Institute until 1985, the school
was behind the creation and civilian
operation of Moton Field. Flight cadets
slept in school dorms and received preflight training here. Visit Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site for exhibits,
films, and ranger-led tours of The Oaks,
home of Booker T. Washington.
Tuskegee A i r m e n Inc. is dedicated
to preserving the memory of America's
first African American military airmen.
The organization honors the accom-
More Information
Tuskegee Airmen
National Historic Site
1616 Chappie James Ave.
Tuskegee, AL 36083
334-724-0922
www.nps.gov/tuai
plishments of all African Americans who
participated as air crewmen, ground crew,
and operations support personnel in the
Army Air Corps during World War II.
Congressional G o l d M e d a l
In 2007 the Tuskegee Airmen received the
highest civilian award bestowed by the
nation, the Congressional Gold Medal of
Honor. At the award ceremony in the U.S.
Capitol rotunda, a Congressional Gold
Medal was awarded " o n behalf of the
Tuskegee Airmen, collectively, in recognition of their unique military record, which
inspired revolutionary reform in the Armed
Forces." Surviving Tuskegee Airmen or their
heirs received a bronze replica of the medal. The original is displayed in the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space
Museum.
Tuskegee Airmen NHS is one of
over 390 parks in the National Park
System. To learn more about parks
and National Park Service programs
in America's communities, please
visit www.nps.gov.
AGPO:2008—339-126/80120
Printed on recycled paper.
MEDAL PHOTO BY MARK AVINO