In 1941, the formation of the first group of Black military pilots and mechanics was underway in Tuskegee, Alabama where ...
"Black Angels Over Tuskegee," a historical drama about the Tuskegee Airmen by Layon Gray, will have a free public performance ...
Tuskegee Airmen Detroit Chapter President Arthur Green, left, holds a P-51D model as Lt. Col. Harry Stewart, Jr., center, and ...
In her book "Small Town, Big Secrets," historian Sally J. Ling shares how 28 Black cadets came to Boca Raton to be trained on radar, some of whom would become Tuskegee Airmen.
A Montgomery man who fired his gun during the November mass shooting at Tuskegee University has pleaded guilty to a federal ...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has abruptly paused a college scholarship program for students from rural or underserved ...
In a 10-minute film from 1945, future-President Ronald Reagan tried to convince America why it needed flyers like the Tuskegee Airmen.
Retired Lt. Col. Harry Stewart Jr., who was in the 301st Fighter Squadron of the 332nd Fighter Group, also known as the ...
He died in 1915 and was buried at Tuskegee University in a brick tomb made my students with a view of the campus.
The Cleveland School of the Arts has partnered with the North Coast Chapter of Tuskegee Airmen Inc. to share the stories of ...
(Todd McInturf/Detroit News via AP) First organized as a “racial experiment,” a contingent of Black Americans began training to be aviators at Tuskegee, Alabama, during World War II.