the tuskegee airmen where better beacause they never drop one of their bobmers
They were black @ a white flight camp.
I think this is write but it says in my textbook that later looking back we realized our trail breaking role. I believe that this means that they broke the trail of just white air pilots since they were black and they flew planes.
Due to racial discrimination, black servicemen were not allowed to learn to fly until 1941, when a group of black college graduates were selected for what the Army called "an experiment"-- the creation of the segregated Fighter Squadron, which trained at an airfield adjacent to Alabama's Tuskegee Institute. The experiment involved training black pilots and ground support members. The squadron, quickly dubbed the Tuskegee Airmen, was activated on March 22, 1941, and redesignated as the 99th Fighter Squadron on May 15, 1942. Legend has it that because of their courage white bomber pilots preferred these pilots as their escort air support.
The Tuskegee Airmen were racially discriminated against both within the army and without. The Tuskegee Airmen were tagged as trainees despite some having served in the army for several years and some with hundreds of flight hours. They were not permitted to mingle with white soldiers and were denied access to most officer's clubs. Many local businesses would not server the airmen and they were not permitted to hold command posts until the war was nearly over.
they trained in Tuskegee University because it is in Tuskegee, Alabama. Also since they still had to face segregation, Tuskegee University only had Black, African-Americans there to train them. i believe maybe a few white people that were against segregation helped along to because in the movie "Red Tails" some whites helped train them.
They were black @ a white flight camp.
I think this is write but it says in my textbook that later looking back we realized our trail breaking role. I believe that this means that they broke the trail of just white air pilots since they were black and they flew planes.
Little effect on total war effort although they performed outstandingly. It had an impact on race because before the black airmen the armed forces deemed blacks not fit for combat and considered them to dumb for anything other than support troops. The Tuskegee guys proved that idea flawed as they performed their duties as pilots just as good as the white pilots and in many instances better.
Due to racial discrimination, black servicemen were not allowed to learn to fly until 1941, when a group of black college graduates were selected for what the Army called "an experiment"-- the creation of the segregated Fighter Squadron, which trained at an airfield adjacent to Alabama's Tuskegee Institute. The experiment involved training black pilots and ground support members. The squadron, quickly dubbed the Tuskegee Airmen, was activated on March 22, 1941, and redesignated as the 99th Fighter Squadron on May 15, 1942. Legend has it that because of their courage white bomber pilots preferred these pilots as their escort air support.
The Tuskegee Airmen were racially discriminated against both within the army and without. The Tuskegee Airmen were tagged as trainees despite some having served in the army for several years and some with hundreds of flight hours. They were not permitted to mingle with white soldiers and were denied access to most officer's clubs. Many local businesses would not server the airmen and they were not permitted to hold command posts until the war was nearly over.
they trained in Tuskegee University because it is in Tuskegee, Alabama. Also since they still had to face segregation, Tuskegee University only had Black, African-Americans there to train them. i believe maybe a few white people that were against segregation helped along to because in the movie "Red Tails" some whites helped train them.
they trained in Tuskegee University because it is in Tuskegee, Alabama. Also since they still had to face segregation, Tuskegee University only had Black, African-Americans there to train them. i believe maybe a few white people that were against segregation helped along to because in the movie "Red Tails" some whites helped train them.
The US military has been intermittently integrated and segregated. Following the Civil War, some Army units were integrated until the time of World War One; President Woodrow Wilson did not believe that Negro Americans were capable of military service in any combat role. When World War II began, many African-Americans wanted to join the military and fight; since the Nazis hated blacks only slightly less than they hated Jews, this was a normal reaction. At the beginning of World War II, blacks were allowed only in "servant" roles; cooks and stewards. As a test, the "Tuskegee Airmen" were African-Americans trained to fly high-performance fighters. The "Tuskegee Airmen" were spectacularly successful. While it's true that black fighter pilots had a lower kill ratio against Germans than white pilots did, the difference is easily explained. The "Tuskegee Airmen" squadron was primarily assigned to the bomber escort role; in that role, their primary responsibility was to DEFEND THE BOMBERS, not to go shoot down Germans. Too many white pilots would break formation and engage the German fighters; doing so left the bomber formations vulnerable to attack by other German fighters. The black pilots were less aggressive (or perhaps, it would be better phrased as "less glory-seeking") than the average white pilot; they stayed with the bombers, engaging the Germans only long enough to chase the German fighters away. Bomber wings escorted by black pilots were less likely to suffer heavy losses from the Germans. Bomber squadrons were delighted with the escort, and came to request that the Tuskegee squadron be assigned to their formations. The end result of the "experiment" was that it demonstrated that there was no reason why African-Americans couldn't do any job that a Caucasian could do.
Blacks were opposed to it because they were often segregated into their own "color units." For example, the Tuskegee airmen, an all black airsquad with white officers.
Im not sure an exact number, but definently more then the Tuskegee Airmen...also world war 2 was a similar scenario of world war 1 , except world war 1 was near the great depression so supplies were low. world war 2 had more resources and more people were healthy enough and able to enter in the armed forces, so there were probably more pilots than in world war 1?
It ended when the war ended; a number of military units (including white units, as well as black ones) were disbanded when combat ceased and there was no longer any need for them. The Tuskegee Airman had performed their job with distinction and now (by 1946), that job was finished. But many remained in the military. After President Truman desegregated the armed forces in the late 1940s, a number of the Airmen were hired by the U.S. Air Force, where they served as flight instructors or trainers.
At first they were segragated but then they were combined with another flight crew. They combined before D-Day the black and white fighter crew won over 100 missions.