Five men who served in World War II as Tuskegee Airmen are honored in a Kokomo mural, and a local gallery is sharing their ...
In 1941, a segregated airfield in Tuskegee, Alabama, was selected as the primary flight training facility for black pilot candidates in the United States military.   They were known as the ...
Peter Bentzon (ca. 1783–after 1850) was not only a free man; he was also a silversmith and jeweler who worked in Philadelphia and on the Caribbean island of St. Croix. Bentzon’s work is recognized ...
The videos about the Tuskegee Airmen and the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) – the female World War II pilots who were ...
They flew more sorties and provided better bomber protection than any other unit, including the March 24, 1945, Berlin flight ending WW2 in Europe. The Tuskegee Airmen’s 15,000 men and women ...
It’s an homage to the famed Alabama-based unit of the Tuskegee Airmen, who flew red-tailed P-51 Mustangs during World War II. The squadron, which trained in the state, was the nation’s first ...
Harry Stewart Jr, a decorated World War II pilot who broke racial barriers as a Tuskegee Airmen and earned honors ... to tears on a recent commercial flight when he saw who was piloting the ...
Jack and Jill of America installed an exhibit at the Arkansas Air and Military Museum to preserve the legacy of Black pilots who shaped aviation history.