- Tuskegee Airmen Mark 60th Anniversary
- U.S. National - AP
- By BRUCE SMITH, Associated Press Writer
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- In an era of Jim Crow when the Army brass didn't think they were
capable of flying, a group of pilots changed the way the military looked
at blacks. The Tuskegee Airmen, their ranks thinning as the World War II
fighter pilots age, hold a reunion in South Carolina that begins Friday.
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- This year marks the 60th anniversary of the creation in 1944 of the
advanced combat training program for the black airmen at a small Army
Air Force base in Walterboro, S.C.
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- The program had started three years earlier in Tuskegee, Ala. In
all, almost 1,000 pilots would be trained, 450 deployed overseas and 150
would lose their lives in training or combat.
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- The pilots deployed to North Africa and Europe flew support missions
including strafing enemy ammunition dumps, rail lines and highways.
Later, the airmen flew escort for bombers.
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- Including ground support personnel, there were about 14,000 Tuskegee
Airmen, said 85-year-old Hiram E. Little, Sr., a retired school teacher
from Atlanta.
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- To the military, the program at first was simply "an experiment to
prove the Negro could not fly and fight," said Herbert Carter, of
Tuskegee, who went on to a 25-year career in the military.
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- "We were just determined that all we wanted was an opportunity," he
says.
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- But even after the pilots of the first squadron were trained, the
Army delayed deploying the unit for months.
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- "No commander from Burma to England wanted this all-black squadron,"
said Carter, 85. "They said it would create problems. They were firmly
convinced no white personnel would take orders from black officers. The
Negro press and other organizations and sympathizers brought pressure on
the War Department to do something about this unit."
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- The airmen then proved they could handle anything asked of them.
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- None of the bombers escorted by Tuskegee Airmen fighters were
lost during World War II, although 66 of the fighter pilots lost
their lives and 33 other fighter pilots were shot down and taken
prisoner, Carter said.
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- At war's end, the airmen returned to a nation where little had
changed.
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- "We were not so naive as to think America was going to change that
much," he said. "When we returned after V-E Day things were as biased
and racist as they were before World War II."
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- It wasn't until the late 1970s that the airmen began to receive
recognition for what they had done.
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- Now, through conventions and meetings, the group wants to pass its
story to future generations. People with an interest in the history and
in getting young people involved in aviation can join the airmen.
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- "The Buffalo Soldiers were with Teddy Roosevelt in the late 1800s
but their organization is still living," Little said. "We're trying to
bring new people in as we die there will be someone to keep the Tuskegee
Airmen going for the future."
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- The reunion, which runs through Sunday, will include a breakfast,
banquet and visits with school children in Columbia. The airmen will
also appear at the Celebrate Freedom Festival air show in Camden, S.C.
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- Looking back, Carter says he feels sorry for those officers all
those years ago who could not see beyond the color of a soldier's skin.
He said he feels "pure pity for the people who are so biased and
prejudiced in their ways that they can't accept a person on their own
individual merits."
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- Little says the airmen helped open doors for those who followed.
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- "We are proud of the fact that maybe the record those pilots made
overseas paved the way for the young people of all races who volunteer
for military service," he said.