Historians Question Record of Tuskegee Airmen
MONTGOMERY, Ala.
Two historians are disputing the claim that America’s first Black fighter pilots never lost a bomber to enemy fire during World War II.
U.S. Air Force records show that at least a few bombers escorted by the red-tailed fighters of the Tuskegee Airmen were shot down by enemy planes, according to William F. Holton, a historian of Tuskegee Airmen Inc., and Dr. Daniel Haulman, a historian at the Air Force Historical Research Agency.
Haulman says the group’s combat mission reports clearly show that U.S. bombers were lost while being escorted by Tuskegee Airmen in Europe. One mission report, dated Aug. 31, 1944, praises group commander General Benjamin O. Davis Jr. by saying he “so skillfully disposed his squadrons that in spite of the large number of enemy fighters, the bomber formation suffered only a few losses.”***image1:right888
Another report on Sept. 12, 1944, says: “Ten Me-109s attacked the rear of the bomber formation from below and left one B-17 burning, with 6 chutes seen to open.”
Holton told the Montgomery Advertiser that “well-meaning and highly placed speakers have beguiled audiences with the phrase ‘the Tuskegee Airmen flew 200 bomber escort missions without losing a single bomber to enemy aircraft gunfire.’”
Dr. Alan Gropman, a professor at the National Defense University and a decorated Air Force veteran, says the historians have “not done enough homework.”
“Right now anyone who is disputing [the airmen’s record] is wrong,” he told Diverse. “The Tuskegee Airmen were damn good at what they did.”