News

The all-Black 332nd Fighter Group, based at Tuskegee Army Air Field in Alabama, shattered the race barrier during World War II. The unit had as many as 14,000 airmen 1,000 of them pilots.
At a time when many white people thought that Black Americans were incapable of flying an airplane, Eleanor Roosevelt went on her own to the Tuskegee Army Air Field in Alabama to show support for ...
Inside the College Park Aviation Museum, Herb Jones looks at the pictures of the planes, of the pilots, of his father, Herb ...
The successful cadets then transferred to the segregated Tuskegee Army Air Field to complete pilot training, according to TAI.
On the ground, 14 Tuskegee veterans made their way gingerly around the airfield, stopping to gaze ... Later that year, the Army Air Corps opened Moton Field, four miles from the college, as ...
Admission is free. The airmen trained at the Tuskegee Army Airfield in Alabama and flew both fighter and bomber planes in more than 15,000 individual sorties during World War II in Africa and Europe, ...
The story of the Tuskegee Airmen’s struggle at an Army airfield in Indiana near the end of WWII has been commemorated with a historical marker.
A bill introduced in the Michigan House of Representatives would rename a section of highway in Jackson County after a ...