Two Tuskegee airmen visit Lopez School

On Nov. 10 Lopez Island School District and Lopez School Music Advocacy Foundation will welcome two members of the Tuskegee Airmen. The assembly will be held in the multi-purpose room in the elementary school building at 10:30 a.m. We are fortunate to have them come to our school to further the history education of our students. All veterans are invited. We would like our veterans to stay for lunch to mingle with the students, staff and airmen after the assembly. If you would like to stay for lunch please call the district office at 468-2202 extension 2300.

The Tuskegee Airmen were dedicated, determine young men who enlisted to become America’s first black military airmen, at a time when there were many people who thought that black men lacked intelligence, skill, courage and patriotism.

Those who possessed the physical and mental qualifications were accepted as aviation cadets to be trained initially as single-engine pilots and later to be either twin-engine pilots, navigators or bombardiers. Most were college graduates or undergraduates. Others demonstrated their academic qualifications through comprehensive entrance examinations.

No standards were lowered for the pilots or any of the others who trained in operations, meteorology, intelligence, engineering, medicine or any of the other officer fields. Enlisted members were trained to be aircraft and engine mechanics, armament specialists, radio repairmen, parachute riggers, control tower operators, policemen, administrative clerks and all of the other skills necessary to fully function as an Army Air Corps flying squadron or ground support unit.

From 1941 through 1946, 994 pilots graduated at Tuskegee Army Air Field, receiving commissions and pilot wings. Black navigators, bombardiers and gunnery crews were trained at selected military bases elsewhere in the United States. Mechanics were trained at Chanute Air Base in Rantoul, Illinois until facilities were in place in 1942 at TAAF.

After the war in Europe ended in 1945, black airmen returned to the United States and faced continued racism and bigotry despite their outstanding war record.