Title: All Blood Runs Red The Tuskegee Airmen
1All Blood Runs RedThe Tuskegee Airmen
Presentation by Robert L. Martinez Primary
Content Source American Greats, edited by R.
Wilson S. Marcus. Images as cited.
2- The Germans called them Schwartze
Vogelmenshen, Black Birdmen.
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rmen1.jpg
3- The all-white American bomber crews whom they
escorted with courage and distinction during WWII
referred to them as the Black Redtail Angels
after their P-51s stabilizers, which were painted
bright red.
http//www.flickr.com/photos/kensaviation/12497365
5/
4http//www.dailyaviator.com/images/2007-02/p-51-c-
tuskegee.jpg
5- History has come to know these black pilots as
the Tuskegee Airmen, 926 men who earned their
wings at Tuskegee Army Airfield from March 1942
through June 1946.
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318/
6- They flew more than two hundred bomber escort
missions without losing a single bomber to the
enemy.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/USPics34/1944tuske
gee-p51.jpg
7- Sixty-six Tuskegee Airmen were killed in
action, another thirty-two shot down.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
8- Theirs is the story of black men fighting for the
right to fly in a segregated military, for a
country still reluctant to grant them certain
freedoms, especially freedom of opportunity.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
9- We were fighting two battles I flew for my
parents, for my race, for our battle, for
first-class citizenship and for my country.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/USPics34/1944tuske
gee-p51.jpg
10- We were fighting for the 14 million black
Americans back home. We were there to break down
barriers, open a few doors, and do a job. - Maj. Joseph P. Gomer, USAF (ret) and
member of the Tuskegee Airmen
Maj. Joseph Gomer
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
11- African Americans had shown their ability to
fly before WWII. During WWI, Georgia-born ace
Eugene Jacques Bullard flew for France. Known as
the Black Swallow of Death.
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0/normal_Eugene_Jacques_Bullard.jpg
12- Bullard earned the highest French medals for
valor.
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13- Following WWI, black citizens had earned
pilots licenses, owned planes, and made
record-breaking cross-country flights.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/USPics34/1944tuske
gee-p51.jpg
14- Yet, in 1939, when President Roosevelt started
the Civilian Pilot Training Program to train
20,000 college students a year for private
flight-level licenses, not a single black was
allowed to participate.
http//www.nasm.si.edu/museum/pubs/pubDetail.cfm?p
ubID102
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lt_FiresideChats.gif
15- It took the efforts of Americas most
prominent African-American leaders and a
little-known senator from Missouri (Harry S.
Truman) to persuade the Congress to accept and
train black pilots.
Senator Harry S. Truman of Missouri.
http//www.trumanlibrary.org/photographs/97-2081.j
pg
16- The Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, a black
vocational college founded by Booker T.
Washington, was selected as one of the training
sites.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
17- First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt visited the
institute and flew with Tuskegees black flying
instructor Charles Chief Anderson.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
18- What she saw and that flight convinced her that
the school deserved the governments full support.
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19http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
20http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
21- President Roosevelt declared Tuskegee an official
training site for African-American pilots and the
99th Pursuit Squadron was established.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/USPics34/1944tuske
gee-p51.jpg
22http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
23Barracks inspection at Randolph Air Force Base,
Texas.
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ee2.html
24http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
25http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
26- In March 1942, the Tuskegee Airmen began
flying combat missions.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
27- Four hundred and fifty of the 926 pilots who
earned wings at Tuskegee would participate in the
battles to control the sky during WWII.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/USPics34/1944tuske
gee-p51.jpg
28http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
29- On July 26, 1948, Truman, by then president,
desegregated the military. The Tuskegee Airmens
performance helped accelerate the decision.
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
30http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/tuskeg
ee2.html
31- It was a wondrous sight to see those escort
fighter planes coming up to take care of usThey
were flown by men with enormous skill and
coordination and competence. - WWII Veteran, Former Senator, and
presidential candidate George McGovern
http//history.sandiego.edu/gen/USPics34/1944tuske
gee-p51.jpg