A Canton McKinley student became a member of the famed all-Black Tuskegee Airmen World War II Army Air Force unit. Here's the ...
Trump's executive order halting DEI means the Air Force no longer teaches recruits about WWII's Tuskegee Airmen and the Women ...
From a crumbling pill box in the UK to a derelict rail line in Hawaii, these are the abandoned World War II places that the ...
After 80 years of uncertainty, a 93-year-old San Francisco woman is overwhelmed as her brother, Sergeant Yuen Hop, a World War II airman declared missing in action, is finally brought home to the Bay ...
The move is a complete reversal of the Air Force's decision to no longer teach the history of the first Black and women ...
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.
As part of World War II’s strategy to liberate Italy from the Nazis, the Allies sent an invasion force of 36,000 troops with ...
He was one of two of the last surviving members of the Tuskegee Airmen, the famed combat pilots of World War II.
Harry S. Stewart Jr., a fighter pilot with the Tuskegee Airmen who earned the Distinguished Flying Cross for three kills in a ...
The story of the Tuskegee Airmen’s service in World War II is inspiring: When skilled African American pilots, grounded because of their race, finally won the opportunity to serve their country, they ...
The Air Force quickly moved to reinstate a course for new recruits, which includes videos on the World War II-era Tuskegee Airmen and Women's Airforce Service Pilots, after the class was pulled ...
Harry Stewart Jr. recorded three victories in one day and won the first-ever 'Top Gun' contest for military pilots.