Stuff You Should Know - Tuskegee Airmen: American Heroes
Episode Date: February 28, 2019The Tuskegee Airmen braved racism and brutally tough training in order to secure their spot in American history as the first African-American military pilots. Listen in today to the story of their det...ermination and heroism. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
and there's Jerry over there.
So this is Stuff You Should Know
about the Tuskegee Airmen.
That's right.
One of our, I know every year we try to do
a Black History Month podcast, at least one.
And it didn't mean to keep everyone
unsuspense this year, here at the end of the month,
but this one, we were getting this one put together.
Yeah, this is a good one.
Yeah, and it's, I mean this is,
we typically like to do stuff
that's like a very little known history.
I would say Tuskegee Airmen does not fall
into the little known category.
Not at all.
It's still undersung, I think,
even after two not very good feature films.
Oh, did you see any of them?
The only one I'm familiar with is,
I think it's just called the Tuskegee Airmen,
and I kept confusing it with Memphis Bell.
Yeah, Tuskegee Airmen was an HBO movie
with Larry Fishburne and others.
Malcolm Jamal Warner, I think.
Yeah, yeah.
Could see in him.
Sure.
Always, but I mean, that one was okay,
but I think better than the Red Tails movie.
Was it?
Yeah, Red Tails just wasn't very good, which is a shame.
Sure.
But speaking of shame,
let's talk about how the Tuskegee Airmen retreated.
Just to get started, we should kind of briefly go over
like the history of African-Americans in the military
because where we really pick up with our story,
the interwar period between World War I and World War II,
the military was very much segregated still officially,
just like America was, it was law.
Segregation was law at the time.
But that's not to say that African-Americans
hadn't served in the military in the US previously
in some pretty substantial roles too.
Yeah, I mean, dating back to like
when they were not even considered Americans,
like when, I mean, I keep wanting to say black Americans,
but they were not considered that,
like during the Revolutionary War on both sides actually,
as you'll learn in a short stuff about black loyalists.
It's interesting that slaves fought for
and against the revolution, really interesting,
all the way up through,
and we should do podcasts on a lot of these things,
but they fought in the War of 1812.
They fought as the Buffalo soldiers
in many of the conflicts against Native Americans,
all the way up through World War I where they joined the army
despite the fact that there was segregation at home
and in the military, notably the Harlem Hell Fighters
who fought with the French.
And even though Americans did not fully recognize that
as an accomplishment, the French government did,
ironically.
Yeah, if that sounds kind of weird to you,
the American military had an all black regiment
and said, here, you take them to France,
and France was like, sure, we'll take them, we'll use them,
and awarded them the quadra-gaire for heroism and combat,
which is like, if you'll remember
our Native American Code Talker episode,
France, especially in World War I,
had kind of a history of awarding and recognizing bravery
among minorities that were just totally shunned
to the United States, you know?
Yeah, and I mean, there was even a study conducted
by the Army War College in 1925
about the fitness and suitability of black soldiers
in the military, and it was just,
it was brutal and racist and, you know,
just said the worst things you could imagine
about the lack of fitness for a black man
to serve for the Americans in the American military.
Yeah, and I think this Army War College study
was basically just an official position paper
that summed up the sentiments
among military officers and most of the military
at the time, that they just wanted to get it down
on paper as like an official position
so that it wouldn't be eroded that they could say
this is the military's official position on black people,
and essentially what it said was black people
are not intellectually capable of receiving
like theoretical training,
they can probably be, you know,
worked into like combat troops,
but it's gonna take a lot more effort
and you really have to dumb it down,
and then maybe you can organize them into a combat troop,
but really we don't have high hopes for this,
so we should probably just not mess with the whole thing
and just keep it in all white military.
Yeah, and that was in 1925,
and despite all of this, there were still black soldiers
who achieved in the military,
most notably in the reason we bring this gentleman up,
Benjamin O. Davis Sr. in 1940 became
the first black general in the U.S. military.
He figures prominently in the Tuskegee Airmen story
in that his son, Benjamin Davis Jr.,
well, we'll tell you what he did,
but he figured very prominently
in the formation and story of the Tuskegee Airmen.
Yeah, he's huge, he's one of the leading figures,
and he gets most of the glory in the press and everything,
but there were plenty of others who served quite valiantly
quite valiantly.
Yeah, so that's like the briefest of summations.
I definitely think we should do one on the Buffalo soldiers
at some point.
Totes agree.
Like, I don't understand why Bob Marley drew that line
between Prostas and Buffalo soldiers.
I'm not kidding.
Like, I know it sounds like a hilarious thing
that Josh would say,
but I have always, always wondered that.
What is he talking about?
Were they Rostas or something like that,
or did they have the spirit of the Rostas or vice versa?
I'd love to get to the bottom of that.
All right, let's do it.
Okay.
All right.
I'm excited.
So that brings us to World War II,
and like you said before,
segregation is still the law in the United States.
Racism was rampant and still is in a lot of places
in this country,
but back then very much rampant.
And despite all that,
there were still plenty of African-Americans
who wanted to be in the army and wanted to fly planes.
And this was pre-Air Force.
It was called the Army Air Corps.
Yes.
And we should say like this was extremely prestigious
to be in the Army Air Corps.
It was far and away the most prestigious branch of the military,
although it wasn't technically its own branch,
it was the most prestigious part of the military
because it was widely considered.
And rightfully so,
you had to be really, really sharp, really smart,
really quick on your toes,
and just really large and in charge basically
to fly planes in the military.
It was still pretty new.
It was a fairly new thing.
And the whole world,
but also the U.S. really looked up to aviators at the time
because this is at a time where if you flew across country,
you just made history kind of thing.
Right.
So to be a part of the Army Air Corps,
that's a sweet plum right there.
Yeah.
And so we move over to Alabama at the Tuskegee Institute
in Tuskegee.
And this was a place where if you were a black American
and you wanted to go to college and get a higher education,
it was a great place to start.
Founded in 1881 by Lewis Adams and Booker T. Washington.
And during this period,
they had something called the Civilian Pilot Training Program,
which is, it was established basically
to get a pool of pilots with experience,
people who could train pilots in the United States.
And there were black colleges participating in this program
and Tuskegee was one of them.
Yeah, Howard University also had a program.
There were also, like by this time,
there was some black aviation history
that had been established.
And it was small, but it was really proud and rightfully so
because if you were an African American
and you said, you know what,
I really look up to all these pilots too.
I want to go be a pilot.
The first door you went to got slammed in your face.
The next door you went to slammed in your face.
And again, like the idea that black people
couldn't learn how to fly a plane.
So how are you going to let one fly a plane
or try to teach them?
What's the point?
It's also probably pretty dangerous and expensive.
Like you could not as an African American
get into a flight school.
And so some of these earliest African American pilots
and aviation history in like the,
say like the 20s, the early 30s,
like some of them were self-taught.
There's a guy named C. Alfred Anderson
who taught himself how to fly and land planes
because no flight school would teach him.
No white pilots would teach him.
He had to save up by his own plane and teach himself.
And he became a legend.
He's known as the father of black aviation in America.
Yeah.
And there's a, like you said, a very small but proud list.
Bessie Coleman was a black woman
who went to France to learn to fly.
She was black and Native American.
Yeah, we should, she should get her on episode two.
In 1932, James Banning and Thomas Allen
became the first black pilots to fly across the U.S.
from L.A. to New York.
And they as well, at least Banning,
could not go to flight school.
So he basically found a white pilot
who would give him private lessons,
which is pretty remarkable.
And the cool thing about this story is
it costs a lot of money to fly across the country
at any point.
Right.
So they would stop in black communities
and raise money basically and say,
hey, get, you know, donate some cash.
You can sign our airplane.
And that will allow us to buy fuel
to get to the next stop as we go across country.
Yeah.
So they became the first black pilots to fly
all the way across the U.S. as a result,
which is, that's pretty great.
But it was like, it was stories like this
and people like these who were profiled
in the black press at the time.
I don't want to say, I guess the press was
pretty much segregated,
at least for all practical purposes.
Yeah.
African America had its own press
and I guess the standard establishment press
was just writing stories about white people only
or things that related to white people.
So African Americans had their own press.
So stories of people like this
spread throughout the country
and inspired like whole new generations of pilots.
And it also inspired, like you said,
the Tuskegee Institute and Howard University
and some other private schools
like one formed by Cornelius Coffee
and Willa Brown in Chicago
to actually start training black pilots.
And so this is already established
by the time the drumbeat,
the earliest drumbeat to World War II started.
And the U.S., led by Franklin Roosevelt said,
we need to get the civilian pilot training program going
because we need a pool of people who already know how to fly
in case we need to turn them into military pilots as well.
Yeah.
And the idea here with these,
with the black journalists and newspapers was,
here's what we want.
You know, there's the V for Victory slogan and campaign.
Let's start up something and get the word out
called the double V campaign,
which is basically victory in Europe,
but also for black soldiers, victory at home
and trying to make a dent in discrimination and racism.
If we go over there and we can fight
and we can fly planes and serve our country,
maybe that might make a difference when we come back home
that we were, you know, distinguished
with our military service.
So that was the double V campaign,
trying to get victory at home against racism
as well as in Europe on the ground with the military.
And none of this might have happened
had it not been for one Eleanor Roosevelt.
And maybe you should take a break there.
Oh, nice cliffhanger check.
Yeah.
What does Eleanor Roosevelt have to do with all this?
We'll find out in just a minute.
We're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars,
friends and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting frosted tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger and the dial-up sound
like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper
because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s,
called on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thanks man.
you through life step by step not another one kids relationships life in
general can get messy you may be thinking this is the story of my life
just stop now if so tell everybody yeah everybody about my new podcast and make
sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye listen to Frosted
tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you
listen to podcasts
alright Chuck so I mean I'm just gonna say it Eleanor Roosevelt give it up yeah
man I mean she was a great lady in a lot of ways but what she did in the case of
the T's eventual Tuskegee Airmen was she visited Tuskegee they had a training
airfield called Motenfield M-O-T-O-N yeah because remember this is like
they're they're they're flying program that they already established yeah so
she visits she's watching the pilots take off fly around land and she was like
could I get in one of those planes that is a bitch in Eleanor Roosevelt man and
they said sure so she went up with an African-American pilot she went up with
that C. Alfred Anderson the self-taught father of aviation yeah and
everything went great and she had a apparently a good time went back home
and got in her husband's ear and was like hey these these guys can fly planes
they're doing a great job they're fit for military service so let's let's get
this thing going in earnest and he did so in January of 1941 so here's the thing
this is what I'm unclear on like it's it's doubtless that Eleanor Roosevelt
played a role in making sure that this this actually happened that that
African-American pilots were eligible to fly for the US military the Army Air
Corps right but the timing of it I can't quite suss out either the the US
military said yeah we're going to establish a black pilots training
program at Tuskegee in January 1941 and then Eleanor Roosevelt showed up a
couple months later to make sure that this actually happened or she showed up
and then they established it I can't quite suss that out but either way she's
a pretty cool lady like she went down and saw for herself and then came back and
said hey we really should make this happen or she knew that this was
happening but also could see people just dragging their feet so she went down to
shine light on the whole process the project and it kind of took off from
there if you'll forgive the pun either way she played some sort of pretty cool
role in getting it going yeah and when it first started there was sort of a
joint affair between Tuskegee and the Army Air Corps as far as providing
funding and equipment personnel they all sort of chipped in a little bit there
were flying a few different planes for training one biplane the Stearman PT-17
eventually they were able to move over to the Tuskegee Army airfield a few
miles away from Moton Field where they had access to the P-40 Warhawk and then
they were like now we're talking right but also I mean the initial primary
training at Moton Field was this kind of quasi-university military training
almost like an ROTC air training program and then once you graduated from
primary you moved over to the Army Field and you were full on on a military base
in military life yeah and this like this this wasn't the first time that black
pilots tried to apply like pre Tuskegee they were applying recruits were
applying and getting rejected every time they tried to get into the Air Corps
eventually the NAACP got involved a lawsuit was filed and even after that
when they started admitting black men into the Air Corps it was 10 cadets
every five weeks so they were you know it looks like they were purposefully just
sort of stymying the process right red tape and bureaucracy to still not allow
them to train yeah and initially so that that lawsuit was by a Howard
University student named Yancey Williams who wanted to be a just straight
up Army Air Corps cadet and the NAACP backed back the lawsuit and the result
was apparently the the military saying okay we'll just start a segregated all
black pilot program where the NAACP and most black leadership wanted just
integration in the Army Air Corps so they were like okay fine we'll take it
but we're not like this is not what we were we're going for but we'll take this
it's better than nothing I guess yeah that's probably a good way to put it but
the program starts up internist however few cadets they were allowing it started
to build up these men are getting trained men from the north came down and
this is you know this is in Alabama during the Jim Crow era and there are
there's one documentary called they fought two wars which basically was
like you know they're getting trained they're serving their country and then
they go out like on the weekend maybe for a little R&R and then they're met by
the southern whites of Alabama who basically you know treated them exactly
how you would expect there was even a petition to end the program just because
they were like there's so many black men in our town now we don't want them in
our community right surely something bad will happen to our community because of
this there was also apparently at least one incident where black military
police were disarmed by white locals around Tuskegee civilians yeah who just
refused to recognize that they had any authority over them whatsoever military
police or not and the the at the time this this happened early on the commander
of the of the base Ellison James Ellison major James Ellison was he
protested very loudly and very vocally and said this is messed up I won't
stand for this and they said hey Ellison yeah we need somebody who is on the side
of the recruits but maybe not quite so much of a true believer so you come over
here with us and we're gonna relieve you of your post and instead they brought in
a guy named Colonel Noel Parrish and he was maybe a little less gung-ho about
civil rights and equality and desegregation he very much withstood
and stood up with the segregationist policies of the military didn't fight
against it but within this framework he's very much credited for being very
fair very even-handed and giving like full-throated legitimately good quality
training to these black recruits at Tuskegee like he wasn't they weren't
getting like sub par or less than adequate training compared to their
white counterparts elsewhere they were getting just as good training to be
trained like he was taking it seriously and he was being fair about it so he's
he's respected for for that to to have overseen this this this project I guess
fairly rather than he very easily could have gone to the other side and dragged
his feet to or put up unnecessary roadblocks and obstacles too but he
didn't yeah and one of the I guess you could call it one of the silver
linings of the segregation in the military was there was already a the
99th pursuit squadron was already established which were black cadets to
get training on maintenance and tech support for for the for the air patrol
so they were already in place so by the time Tuskegee gets rolling and these
cadets are being sent in to learn to fly they were like let's just give them
the 99th pursuit squadron so it was basically an all-black unit from the
maintenance to the to the technical support to the pilots that were training
obviously not the instructors but I get the feeling you know from research that
that lent some sort of a it kind of led to camaraderie and that they had their
own guys on the ground and training you know oh yeah yeah for sure I mean like
it was an all basically an all-black squadron and not all the commanders or
trainers were white like that my favorite guy chief Alfred Anderson he was
the ground commander in chief that self-taught father of aviation yeah he
he was the head of the the ground commanders at Tuskegee so there was a
mix but one of the things I think you kind of hit upon that gets overlooked is
when you talk about Tuskegee and the Tuskegee Airmen you're talking about
400 to 500-ish pilots fighter pilots typically that are thought of as a
Tuskegee Airmen but there were so many more people that made up like this whole
project this whole movement basically that I think there was something like
12,000 like people trained in aviation through the that are really technically
Tuskegee Airmen right there they are considered so and they get overlooked a
lot because the fighter pilots get all the glory sure but I mean these are all
these people played a huge significant role in the whole thing yeah so we
mentioned at the onset the first African-American general Benjamin O. Davis
Sr. and that his son figured prominently yeah so that's Ben Jr. he comes in he
went to he followed in Dad's footsteps he went to West Point where you know
despite it was sort of like a lords of discipline sort of scene there oh man I
forgot about that book yeah man that was good good movie I make brutal to watch
but a really good movie but Davis basically went to West Point didn't give
him a roommate made him eat by himself they say that he was like literally not
spoken to by anybody unless they absolutely had to speak to him yet he
persevered through all this he graduated and went to teach at Tuskegee instead of
going to command for enlisted troops so it was a bit of serendipity that he
ended up there I think kind of right at the same time this Air Corps began which
is really really kind of cool yeah one of the first things he did was as he was
I think he became the commander of the 99th Pursuit Squadron he also was one of
their first graduates he was in the first class to graduate from flight school
there so I I don't know that he had much flight training prior to that but he
went and learned to became pretty distinguished as a pilot either way but
he he was immediately assigned the 99th Pursuit Squadron he was in charge of it
which is pretty cool right so as the as the the Tuskegee Airmen started to
distinguish themselves which we'll talk about more in a minute Davis kind of
became distinguished as well because he was leading the whole show yeah and you
know he he had been through West Point he knew what the deal was he was like he
knew that there was a lot more riding on this than just forming an air squadron
he was like black people all around the country are looking at us they're banking
on our success we have to like we have to be better than the best and so he was
really tough he tough but fair but he would not put up with with anything that
took away from their ultimate goal which was to be the best airmen in the
country black or white apparently there were black pilots who would wash out of
the program that historians say like you know if that was a white pilot he
would have been allowed to keep going like that's how high the standard was
that Davis set for the Tuskegee Airmen right well it wasn't just Davis I think
I think they were saying like they were unfairly not given their wings whereas a
white pilot elsewhere and another base undergoing training wouldn't have washed
out so some of the pilots that that did wash out probably did and because
they were being held to unfair racist standards not necessarily by Davis but
by some of the white commanders and trainers you see what I'm saying yeah
but I saw where Davis was very quick to give someone the ouster if they didn't
think they were living up to their position yeah so the upshot of that
though Chuck was that the the people who graduated from this program at
Tuskegee were really really good pilots yeah I mean really good pilots they were
just held to whether fair or unfair higher standards they had to prove
themselves more than say their white counterparts at other bases and so the
ones who actually did manage graduate were just as good as it got but what
sad is for the people who washed out they might not have washed out of some
of the other programs yeah like if they had been white elsewhere in another
program so that in and of itself is kind of demoralizing but what really
gets is when you step back and realize like the the men who were going through
pilot training program were the face of black America yeah and so not only were
they being watched by you know by racist whites and supportive whites too but
but say from what racist whites to just watch for them to fail I think Henry L
Stimson who was the secretary of war said sure we're gonna give him a shot but
I expect nothing less than disaster to be produced by this and I think he meant
like literal disaster like planes crashing everywhere kind of thing so not
only did you have like that kind of observation going on you at all time you
also carried with you the hopes and dreams and expectations of black America
and not just black America and something big and amorphous and vague like that but
your family and your church group and your community back home were all like
pulling for you but also really expecting everything from you and if you
graduated that was huge and if you washed out I'm sure that was equally huge in
the other direction yeah so March 1942 was when the first class of cadets
graduated it would take another like four months or so five months to get
enough pilots you know graduating through the program that they were a full
fighter squadron and the early results you know they were they were very high
ranking US officials that were pretty impressed early on including that
secretary of war Stimson that you you talked about that predicted disaster
yeah he had a change of heart yeah he visited Tuskegee and said the outfit
looks as good as any I've ever seen major general James Julio said from
results so far obtained is believed that the squadron will give an excellent
account of itself in combat and that it will be a credit to its race and to
Americans everywhere and despite this it still took a long time to get the full
confidence to actually send them into the theater of war in Europe well yeah
and I don't even know if it was confidence I think well I guess it was
confidence in a way but there were other commanders of at the time they
called them air forces where it was like squadrons and groups just put together
like a huge mass of of Air Corps subdivisions were called air forces at
the time so if you were running the show in an Air Force you'd be like I don't
want them I don't want them and all of them were saying I don't want them you
they couldn't give them away so they were just stuck in America while the
United States had already joined World War two and was all fighting in places
like North Africa and the Mediterranean yeah and I think you know I don't know
if this is confirmed but some say that Eleanor Roosevelt it got in her
husband's ear once again and finally in what April 1943 they got their first
orders the 99th to go to North Africa in 1943 which was what is that like two
years after the first graduated class yeah so you know the upshot to this
though is they're still training this whole time right right they're just
getting better and better in training but can you imagine like having to sit
around and wait now I know waiting for the water to get out there yeah so some
of the first assignments they got when they were running sorties off of North
Africa they were there was an island called Panatella I believe in a knee
camp it's Pantelleria Pantelleria wow that was way off thank you for correct
yes Pantelleria was occupied by the Italian army and they gave up they
surrendered the island without any ground forces having to land because the
Tuskegee Airmen were bombing them so bad they were sent on dive bombing
campaigns and that usually consists of attacking a ground position whether it's
like some sort of transport like transport planes and an airfield or
rail cars or you know gas or water infrastructure just stuff to make the
enemy rather uncomfortable or unable to operate in this place that they've
occupied and it very rarely requires any kind of aerial dogfighting like we
think of with fighter pilots it's more just attacking the enemy where they
are rather than trying to battle for domination of the skies that's what a
dogfight is it's what fighter to fighter combat is yeah so this is
different so you're not going to encounter other fighters typically so
you're not going to have as many kills they don't count like blowing up a set
of rail cars as a kill you have to shoot another fighter plane out of the sky
and that's what they really count when you're a fighter pilot but if you're
not being assigned those kind of sorties you're not going to rack up kills
like that so everybody understood this this was fine but apparently somebody
was talking to the press back in America and ended up getting a story out of
Time magazine that questioned the 99th fighter squadrons bravery because
they've been flying all sorts of sorties but where were all their kills all
these other white pilots had all these kills where was the Tuskegee airmen's
kills and the the context of that wasn't put into that that magazine so what the
rest of America read was the Tuskegee airmen are cowards and all of a sudden
Benjamin O. Davis jr. finds himself being called back to Washington to
explain why his squadron are being called cowards in the national press that's
right so let's pick that up right after this message because things changed in
January of 1944
on the podcast Hey Dude the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor
stars of the cult classic show Hey Dude bring you back to the days of slip
dresses and choker necklaces we're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point
but we are going to unpack and dive back into the decade of the 90s we lived it
and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it it's
a podcast packed with interviews co-stars friends and non-stop references to the
best decade ever do you remember going to blockbuster do you remember Nintendo 64
do you remember getting frosted tips was that a cereal no it was here do you
remember AOL instant messenger and the dial-up sound like poltergeist so leave
a code on your best friend's beeper because you'll want to be there when the
nostalgia starts flowing each episode will rival the feeling of taking out the
cartridge from your Game Boy blowing on it and popping it back in as we take you
back to the 90s listen to Hey Dude the 90s called on the iHeart radio app
ample podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts hey I'm Lance Bass host of the
new iHeart podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass the hardest thing can be
knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at
the end of the road okay I see what you're doing do you ever think to yourself
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this
situation if you do you've come to the right place because I'm here to help this
I promise you oh god seriously I swear and you won't have to send an SOS
because I'll be there for you oh man and so my husband Michael um hey that's me
yep we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week
to guide you through life step by step not another one kids relationships life
in general can get messy you may be thinking this is the story of my life
just stop now if so tell everybody yeah everybody about my new podcast and make
sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye listen to frosted
tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you
listen to podcasts
all right so the Tuskegee Airmen are over there doing these you know they're
dropping bombs they did get a little bit of fighter to fighter action but not
enough you know to ward the press off this is despite the fact that they had
virtually you know they were still segregated you know what they usually
did was say here let's mix in these these new guys with some experienced guys
and they can sort of mentor them and help them out because it was segregated
they kept them separate and yet they still persevere through all this like
you said before the break Davis comes home to the US to sort of battle these
reports and then things took a real change in January of 1944 there was a
patrol unit of 12 planes flying over Anzio and they spotted these German
fighters just like like Maverick and Goose in Top Gun although they were just
training right there's never any real battle in Top Gun right no they there
wasn't a battle but they did engage that mig remember he flew upside down and
flipped them off and took a Polaroid so dumb so they're doing a sequel to that
you know like a sequel with Tom Cruise and yeah really yeah yeah and it's
exactly what you think it's Tom Cruise is now the veteran instructor and a
young Maverick comes under his watch no boy young Maverick gonna be I don't even
know I'm not even sure but it's I'm sure it's one of those deals where you know
Cruz gets to say like I was you yeah I'm gonna toss Christian Navarro's hat in
the ring how about that I think they've already cast it but you never know maybe
maybe we've got some pull Chuck and we just influenced yeah Christian if you're
listening we're rooting for you my friend so they see these German fighters
these 12 planes and they're like let's go get them fellas and they get into a
dogfight pretty legendary dogfight and they record five kills in about four or
five minutes no losses no losses that's a big one too yeah and it was a very big
deal for the 99th after that and this was like after these reports had come
into the US they weren't like they were fairly dejected but that made them
hungrier than ever and this is why they sort of flung themselves headlong into
this attack and they made the news and they became known all of a sudden as
these pilots that would really go after the Germans they have a high kill rate
and it was a big deal yeah so there's two other things so not only were they
were they not being assigned missions typically that would rack up high kill
rates so how can you criticize them for that but secondly when they were in
North Africa in their first assignment they were given really old really
obsolete planes and they were when they did engage German fighter pilots they
were out outclassed as far as the planes are concerned and they were still
taking out Germans and dogfights so like they had a lot going against them and
still managed to prove themselves and then something really big changed they
got transferred over to the I believe the 15th Air Force and the 99th the
100th the 301st and the 302nd the four Tuskegee fighter pilot squadrons were
all brought together under the 332nd fighter group under the command now of
Benjamin O. Davis jr. is a colonel at this point yep who and then placed under
the 15th Air Force and the the Benjamin O. Davis jr. and the guy who headed up
the 15th Air Force they they had the same philosophy for the kinds of
assignments that the Tuskegee Airmen would be carrying out from now on which
were bomber escorts and it was don't leave the bomber squadron like when
you're escorting bombers that's the point you don't you don't peel off and
chase after any other jets that are like any German jets that are coming
toward you and there were German jets but German fighter planes and you don't
chase them away you just stay with the bombers that's your point and that's
another thing that's not like you're not gonna rack up a ton of kills in that
respect yeah I'm sure it was tough like especially given their reputation they
wanted to go shoot down German planes exactly and Davis is like no man you
gotta like you got to be disciplined and these these bombers are under threat
and you got to stick with them and so as a result of this they developed like a
really great reputation for for safely escorting bombers to their destination I
mean if you're part of a bomber fleet you're flying behind enemy lines to go
bomb a city or an oil refinery or something like that and the purpose of
these planes is not to shoot other planes out of the sky it's to drop bombs so
you need fighter jets to escort you fighter planes to escort you to these
drop sites and shoot away any other planes that are going to try to shoot you
out of the sky so it's pretty hairy but it's also like you're protecting the
bombers that's the point so the reputation that they developed Chuck would
actually became legendary there was a false a false myth that generated around
it but one that even when you peel away the myth and look at reality it's still
pretty impressive yeah and the other thing that helped too was in 1944 you
know we mentioned that they were flying I mean they weren't obsolete planes they
were just not as good as what they were flying against right they finally get the
P-51 Mustang and they were like now we're talking dudes like this is this is
go time really cool airplane one of my favorites of all time is that 51 Mustang
that's the world war two fighter plane that everybody thinks of yeah I mean
it's it's I want to use words here I can't use on the show to describe it
because I get so excited about it but it's pretty sweet so they now finally had
and you did mention the jet you know the me the me 262 from Germany was the
first jet that used in combat like that and if you look at this thing it looks
like I would rather have the Mustang this thing looks dangerous to me it may
well have been I don't know much about it oh you mean to be like the pilot of
it yeah I mean it was just an early small jet like I can't I don't know it was
probably pretty scary to fly or maybe it was great I don't know I'm sure it's
thrilling but the 332nd now with their P-51s they start painting their you know
we mentioned the movie red tails that came comes from what they did on their
wing they painted their the tail of their plane red and that they became known
for that it was very distinguishable from the air and there were a lot of
bomber pilots who were like we want these red tails because these guys are
awesome and some of them didn't even know that they were black pilots they
just knew that they were red tails right and and again the red tails had
developed a really good reputation for escorting bombers to their bomb sites
and what was their rank what did they lose I know the for many many years they
said they never lost a bomber which is not true they didn't one of the newspapers
in Chicago the Chicago Defender published a story in 1945 that of more
than 200 bomber escort missions the Tuskegee airmen never lost a bomber
yeah they is in people not the right but that was the that was the myth that
developed that they never lost a bomber that is basically impossible over
something like 200 missions yeah but that's the myth that stood for like 50
60 years something like that and then finally in a story in with the Air Force
like actually dug in and did that the shoe leather work on it and found no
actually they did lose some bombers they lost something like I think 26 or 27
bombers but out of like the 200 something missions that is still a
ridiculously small amount yeah and that other squadrons and fighter groups in
the 15th Air Force they average something like 47 so almost double what the
Tuskegee airmen saw in losses so they they had paltry losses but yeah the idea
that they just wouldn't have ever lost a bomber is it's it's impossible you
just couldn't not lose a bomber over that many missions yeah so you know we
all know how world war two ends spoiler alert the the allies the allies did
their job and so the Tuskegee airmen start to get sent home like with other
troops over the years and here's the you know that the double v campaign they
were hoping they come home and they are more accepted and they might even be
revered they might get good jobs they might become commercial airline pilots
none of those things happened very sadly that did not equate to a quality back
home which is one of the true like black eyes on this country's history you know
yeah some of them I mean yeah that was it should have just automatically
triggered well they shouldn't have this should have never happened in the first
place right like dragging feet on segregation and making african-america
jump through these hoops like this rather than just integrating like making a
segregated air air core squadron first and letting them prove themselves like
that and then once they prove themselves still not opening doors or
anything like that it that it should have never happened but the fact that it
didn't happen automatically is pretty pretty shameful it did they it's not
like they weren't successful though oh for sure they laid the groundwork and
they laid the foundation and they began the momentum for a lot of people say the
civil rights movement that the what they the groundwork that they laid the the
way that they changed America's minds about black people in general like oh
they actually can fly planes and oh they can shoot Germans out of the sky and
oh look at this they can actually do better at bomber escorts than white
counterparts right that change in mentality that they were able to take
advantage of in this circumstance in history that changed everything so they
were very much successful in that it's just shameful that that they had to just
keep fighting and keep pressing on it this was really just the first step
rather than the last yeah for sure but I mean I think that wording is is perfect
it was the groundwork absolutely the foundation foundational groundwork was
laid as for Colonel Davis he after the war in 1948 is when Truman ended
segregation in the military Colonel Davis advised on that integration and had a
great career he retired in 1970 and in 1998 very cool was made an honorary
general of the Air Force four-star general so he'd made it to lieutenant
general before he retired yeah and I think a four-star lieutenant general and
then Clinton advanced him to general so he was a four-star general of the Air
Force after retirement that's right yeah pretty great story yeah it is a pretty
great story there is also something called the Freeman Field Mutiny which is
kind of happening in the off to the side the the Tuskegee Airmen also formed a
bombardier group a bomber group of bomber pilots that never saw any action
but saw a lot of racism and segregation in back at home during training and
there was one event that's called the Freeman Field Mutiny where they
basically protested segregated officers clubs segregated and unequal officers
clubs and the way that they protested it through basically civil disobedience but
in the military at a time when you could be executed for disobeying and direct
order which they were given they stood up for their civil rights and that's
another way that that another thing that's pointed to as laying the
foundation for the civil rights movement peaceful civil disobedience and that
actually came out of the Tuskegee Airmen's story as well absolutely good
stuff good stuff check this is a good idea to cover this one yeah I mean this
was long overdue but like I said I don't think we had an article on the House of
Worksite so we just went out and had it commissioned on our own nice work well
let's see if you want to know more about the Tuskegee Airmen apparently go watch
a couple so-so movies there's some documentaries out there one of them is
called they fought two wars which is perfectly titled and there's also I
think an American experience is a lot of stuff start reading go to Tuskegee
Alabama do all that stuff okay yes and since I said do all that stuff it's time
for listener mail I'm gonna call this the tits project hey guys just listen to
the elephant episode and Josh mentioned that typically groups of birds and deer
don't actually know each other like elephants and recognize one from the
other however I just read an article in a recent Audubon magazine I know he said
typically but I wanted to point you towards this study that is really
interesting the with them tits project in Britain it is a very long-running
study where they're looking at the relationships between tits in Britain
and they have found that they run in social groups and appear to have friends
I highly recommend giving it a read apparently these guys must recognize
each other and I actually read it and that's why I'm recommending it because
it's a really great article it's it's called it's from Audubon magazine Audubon
dot com or I'm sorry dot org the surprising connection between birds
Facebook and other social networks huh very cool article so that is from
Miranda and Duluth Minnesota nice you can go read that and have fun fun fun on
the Audubon magazine until daddy takes your laptop away weird that was great
Chuck I don't think we can improve on that so we're just going to say if you
want to get in touch with us you can join us on all of our social media
networks go to stuff you should know calm it's basically the clearing house
for links to find us hanging out on the social meds and you can also send us an
email send it to stuff podcast at that's the at symbol how stuff works dot com
for more on this and thousands of other topics visit howstuffworks.com
on the podcast hey dude the 90s called David Lacher and Christine Taylor
stars of the cult classic show hey dude bring you back to the days of slip
dresses and choker necklaces we're going to use hey dude as our jumping off
point but we are going to unpack and dive back into the decade of the 90s we
lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it
listen to hey dude the 90s called on the I heart radio app Apple podcasts or
wherever you get your podcasts hey I'm Lance Bass host of the new I heart
podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass do you ever think to yourself what advice
would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you
do you've come to the right place because I'm here to help and a different
hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life tell
everybody yeah everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll
never ever have to say bye bye bye listen to frosted tips with Lance Bass on
the I heart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts