The U.S. Air Force has removed training courses for service members that included historical videos of its storied Black ...
The historic, all-Black unit included more than 15,000 Black pilots, mechanics and cooks from throughout the nation, ...
In 1945, she was accepted into the Army Nurse Corps as a reservist with the rank of second lieutenant ... She was the sister of one of the famous Tuskegee Airmen, the first Black airmen who fought ...
The first Black woman to join the U.S. Army Nurse Corps after the military was desegregated in the 1940s has died ...
The Tuskegee Airmen were founded in 1941 in Tuskegee, Alabama when the U.S. Army Air Corps began a program to train Black servicemembers as Air Corps Cadets.
An instructional film that depicts the World War II Black aviators as proof that diversity strengthens the military is not back in classroom use.
The Airmen consisted of 15,000 men and women in total, of which approximately 1,000 were pilots. Serving in combat for the U.S. Army ... Tuskegee Airmen, no Black American had been a United States ...
The Air Force said it would no longer teach about the Tuskegee Airmen or WASPs after Trump issued an executive order barring ...
Material related to the Tuskegee ... the United States during the war years" from 126 bases across the country, according to the Air Force Historical Support Division. Tuskegee Airmen Inc ...
The Tuskegee Airmen are often and correctly credited with influencing President Harry Truman to direct the United States military ... be no discrimination in the Army Air Force from that time ...