The Tuskegee Airmen were the nation's first Black military pilots who served in a segregated World War II unit.
The historic, all-Black unit included more than 15,000 Black pilots, mechanics and cooks from throughout the nation, ...
The Avro Lancaster was definitely the most famous British bomber of WWII, but was it the best? When one thinks of the Royal ...
The Museum’s collection of 30 World War II-era American military aircraft ranges from propeller-driven trainers, fighters, flying boats, and bombers to the nation’s first generation of jet-powered ...
Following widespread concern, the U.S. Air Force has reversed its decision to remove a training video highlighting the ...
The Air Force will no longer teach about the Tuskegee Airmen or the WASPs, thanks to Trump's executive order against ...
The videos about the Tuskegee Airmen and the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) – the female World War II pilots who were ...
It had a crew of seven from the pilot ... bombers faced little resistance and around 20,000 civilians were killed. Six Lancasters were destroyed. The spitfire is the most famous plane of WW2.
World War II bomber pilot Donald R. Brooks, 98, of Poland, with a wartime portrait of himself. Brooks, who served June 1942 to December 1945 in the U.S. Army Air Forces, flew a Consolidated B-24 ...
An F-15C Eagle is sporting a badass World War II-era paint job in honor of a fallen bomber pilot who gave everything to ensure his men survived a deadly crash By James Clark Updated on Nov 22 ...
The decision has sparked backlash from advocacy groups, particularly Tuskegee Airmen Inc., a nonprofit dedicated to ...
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.