The Tuskegee Airmen: First African-Americans Trained As Fighter Pilots |
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The excellent work of the Tuskegee Airmen during the Second
World War led to changes in the American military policy of racial
separation.Transcript of radio broadcast: |
VOICE
ONE:
I’m
Steve Ember.
VOICE
TWO:
And I’m
Barbara Klein with Explorations in VOA Special English. Today, we tell
about the Tuskegee Airmen who served in World War Two. They were the first
group of
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The first class of Tuskegee cadets |
African-Americans
ever trained as fighter pilots.
(MUSIC)
VOICE
ONE:
It was
July second, nineteen forty-three. It was foggy near the ground.
But the sky was clear. The airplanes flew upward, over the Mediterranean
Sea. The water was calm and very blue. The planes were part
of the United States Army Air Forces, the Ninety-Ninth Pursuit Squadron.
They were responsible for guarding bomber airplanes flying to Italy.
The
pilots tested their guns. When they were satisfied that their weapons
were in firing condition, they flew the planes into position to guard the
bombers. The bombers began to unload their cargo at the target
area. Clouds of smoke rose from the explosions on the ground.
VOICE
TWO:
A group
of enemy fighter planes immediately appeared. The pilots of the
Ninety-Ninth attacked them. In the battle that followed, Lieutenant
Charles Hall shot down a German plane. It was the first time a pilot from
the Ninety-Ninth defeated an enemy aircraft. He was the first
African-American fighter pilot in the United States armed forces to shoot down
an enemy plane. Charles Hall and the other pilots of the Ninety-Ninth Pursuit
Squadron had come a long way from Tuskegee, Alabama to fight for their country
during World War Two.
(MUSIC)
VOICE
ONE:
In
nineteen forty, African-Americans made up about one and one-half percent of the
United States army and navy. But they were not permitted to join the Army
Air Forces and fly planes. They had begun campaigning for the right to be
accepted into military pilot training during World War One. In nineteen
seventeen, African-Americans who requested acceptance into military pilot
training were told that black air groups were not being formed at the time.
Civil
rights leaders denounced the belief expressed by many white people that black
people could not fight. In nineteen thirty-one, Walter White and Robert
Moton requested that the War Department accept blacks in the Army Air Corps for
pilot training. Mister White was an official of the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People, a civil rights organization. Mister
Moton was president of a respected college for black students, the Tuskegee
Institute.
The War
Department refused. It said the Air Corps chose men with technical
experience. The department also said that blacks were not interested in
flying. And it said that so many educated white men wanted to enter the
Air Corps that many of them had to be refused acceptance.
VOICE
TWO:
The War
Department’s refusal led many to feel that blacks would only be guaranteed acceptance
into the Air Corps through legislation by Congress. Black leaders used
the United States’ preparation for entry into World War Two to pressure
Congress. They criticized the unfair treatment of African-Americans in
the armed services.
In
nineteen thirty-nine, Congress approved a bill guaranteeing blacks the right to
be trained as military air pilots. It was proposed that a pilot training
camp for blacks be established in Tuskegee, Alabama.
VOICE
ONE:
Black
leaders praised the signs of change within the military. Yet they
continued to work against the military policy of racial separation. The
War Department answered these critics by making plans to form several new black
fighting groups.
It also
promoted a black colonel, Benjamin O. Davis, Senior, to Brigadier
General. And the War Department appointed a black judge, William Hastie,
as civilian aide on African-American affairs. Judge Hastie was the head
of Howard University Law School in Washington, D.C.
Judge
Hastie first opposed the establishment of a flight training school in
Tuskegee. He wanted blacks to be trained along with whites, not separated
from them. The Air Corps said there was no space in other programs.
And it said establishing a school at Tuskegee would be the fastest way to start
the training. So Judge Hastie withdrew his formal opposition, although he
was not satisfied with the plan.
Fred
Patterson was the president of the Tuskegee Institute. He also objected
to separate training of black pilots. He said it was necessary to denounce
forced racial separation. But he finally accepted the program at
Tuskegee. He recognized that blacks would be trained separately from
whites any place in the United States. He saw Tuskegee as a
beginning. At least blacks would now become military pilots.
(MUSIC)
VOICE
TWO:
The
Civilian Pilot Training Program at Tuskegee trained black pilots for difficult
and dangerous flying. The first group of African-Americans completed the
training as fighter pilots in March, nineteen forty-two.
General
Davis’s son, Benjamin O. Davis, Junior, was among the first graduates.
Blacks finally had won the right to fly with the Army Air Corps, now known as
the Army Air Forces. After the war, the Army Air Forces would become the
United States Air Force.
Many of
the men trained at Tuskegee served in Europe with the Ninety-Ninth Pursuit
Squadron. It was organized in October, nineteen forty-two. Its
commander was Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin O. Davis, Junior.
VOICE
ONE:
The
Ninety-Ninth was sent to the Mediterranean area in April, nineteen
forty-three. The pilots gained fighting experience flying over Sicily and
Italy. In June of that year, the fighter pilots successfully attacked the
Sicilian island of Pantelleria. It was the first time air power alone
completely destroyed all enemy resistance.
The
Tuskegee Airmen took part in the most famous battles in Italy. These
included the battles over the Monte Cassino
monastery between Rome and Naples and the invasions of Salerno and Anzio.
At Anzio, in the first months of nineteen forty-four, the pilots of the
Ninety-Ninth shot down eighteen enemy airplanes. Later, in July, they shot down
thirty-six enemy planes. Their record led the Army Air Forces to decide to use
more black pilots in the war.
VOICE
TWO:
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Pilots with
the 332nd Fighter Group in Ramitelli, Italy |
In
September, nineteen forty-three, Colonel Davis became commander of the Three
Hundred Thirty-Second Fighter Group. The Ninety-Ninth Squadron became a
part of that group. Four hundred fifty black pilots were in the
group. They flew more than fifteen thousand five hundred flights in
Europe.
The
Tuskegee Airmen guarded bomber airplanes. They destroyed more than one
hundred enemy airplanes in the air, including German fighter planes. And
two of the Tuskegee Airmen each shot down four enemy planes.
VOICE
ONE:
Nine
hundred ninety-six black pilots were trained at Tuskegee Airfield before World
War Two ended. For black Americans during World War Two, the Tuskegee
Airmen represented both honor and inequality. Members of the group
received almost one thousand military awards during the war. Yet their
separation from white troops was a powerful sign of the military’s racial
policy.
History
experts say the Tuskegee airmen proved that black men could fly military airplanes
in highly successful combat operations. And the group’s success helped
end the separate racial policy of the American military. In nineteen
forty-eight, President Harry Truman ordered the armed forces to provide equal
treatment for black servicemen. The next year, the Air Force announced
that black and white airmen no longer would be separated.
(MUSIC)
VOICE
TWO:
In
civilian life, many of the Tuskegee airmen became lawyers, doctors, judges,
congressmen and mayors. Their fighting spirit had helped them survive
battles and unequal treatment. At home, their spirit helped lead the way
to civil rights progress in the United States.
In
March, two thousand seven, the United States Congress honored the Tuskegee
Airmen at a ceremony in Washington, D.C. The group received the country's
highest civilian honor, the Congressional Gold Medal.
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President
Bush with Tuskegee airmen Roscoe Brown, center, and Alexander Jefferson
during the Congressional Gold Medal ceremony |
President
Bush spoke to the surviving airmen and their families. He praised their
bravery to fight in the face of the unequal treatment they suffered at
home. Retired Army general and former Secretary of State Colin Powell
also spoke to the group. He thanked them for leading the way to equal racial
treatment in the United States. He said the Tuskegee Airmen showed
America that there was nothing a black person could not do.
(MUSIC)
VOICE
ONE:
This
program was written by Nancy Steinbach. It was produced by Mario
Ritter. I'm Steve Ember.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm
Barbara Klein. You can read and listen to this program on our Web site,
voaspecialenglish.com. Join us again next week for Explorations in VOA
Special English.