Sunday, November 22, 2009

RI Aviation Hall of Fame inducts 7 with R.I. ties, lauds Tuskegee


Aviation Hall of Fame inducts 7 with R.I. ties, lauds Tuskegee Airmen

01:00 AM EST on Sunday, November 22, 2009

Halton

William P. Armstrong, a member of the famous African-American aviator’s unit called the Tuskegee Airmen, died while piloting his plane in Austria during World War II.

Navy Lt. Cdr. Paul Gurnon played such a vital role in establishing military installations on Antarctica in the 1950s that a peninsula there was named after him.

And Antoine Gazda, an enemy fighter ace for Austria in World War I, switched his loyalty to the United States in World War II when he came to Providence to share his secret blueprints for antiaircraft guns.

They are among a handful who were recognized Saturday night at the seventh-annual induction ceremonies for the Rhode Island Aviation Hall of Fame, held at the Varnum Armory in East Greenwich.

This year, seven with Rhode Island connections were inducted. In addition, the organization recognized 15 Rhode Islanders who participated in the Tuskegee Experiment, the Army Air Corps program that trained African-Americans to fly and maintain combat aircraft from 1941 to 1949.

Four of this year’s inductees are living, including guest speakers Jim Keck, a retired Air Force lieutenant general and former vice commander of the Strategic Air Command, and his son, Tom Keck, also a retired Air Force lieutenant general who commanded the 8th Air Force. They are the only father-and-son team to have each flown at Mach 3, three times the speed of sound, both in an SR-71 Blackbird.

The other living inductees are Gurnon, who received special recognition from the U.S. Geologic survey for his service in Antarctica in Operation Deep Freeze, and George Chakoian, who flew 46 combat missions in the Pacific as a radio operator and gunner and who served as a project engineer specializing in airborne delivery of equipment to war zones.

Three are being inducted posthumously, including Gazda, whose weaponry work was so sensitive that while living at the Biltmore Hotel, he was under guard 24 hours a day and had the door to the suite next door bricked up. The other is Providence-born Army pilot William Halton, who shot down 10 aircraft in World War II and died in action in Korea in 1952.

The ceremony also recognized 15 Rhode Islanders who were part of the Tuskegee air corps, as well as two from Massachusetts with ties to Rhode Island. The Hall Fame continues to work on developing a complete list.

“Despite all the publicity given to the Tuskegee Airmen, no one has yet developed a definitive list of Rhode Islanders who are eligible for that designation,” said Frank Lennon, founder of the hall of fame. “This is the first step in that direction, although we will be the first to admit this is a work in progress.”

In addition to Armstrong, Rhode Islanders include Charles M “Moe” Adams, of Providence, an aviation cadet; Alfred Steward Barclay, of Newport, an aviation cadet killed in a 1945 training crash; Victor Butler, of North Providence, a mechanic; Pedro Carvalho, of Providence, a B-25 gunner; Peter Coelho, of East Providence, an administrative clerk; Ralph H. Davis, of East Providence, a mechanic and instructor; and Walter S. Gladding, of Providence, a flight officer murdered in Virginia while on leave.

Others were Kenneth Gross, of Providence, an armorer and gunner; William E. Hill, of Narragansett, a pilot killed on a 1943 training flight; Andrew L. Jackson, of Providence, a gunner; George S. Lima, of Fall River and Providence, a photographic officer; Benjamin D. Metts, of Providence, a radioman; Oscar Suggs, of Newport, a professional boxer who served at an Army Air Force base at Lockbourne; and Herman Wells, of Providence, a communications specialist.

The two from Massachusetts are Jack D. Bryant, of Boston, an aviation cadet who heads Bryant Associates, a Lincoln engineering firm, and James W. McLaurin, of Weymouth, a flight engineer whose daughter is an associate dean at Brown University.


Saturday, Nov 21, 2009

http://www.projo.com/news/content/TUSKEGEE_AIRMEN_11-22-09_73GH0FD_v18.34616d3.html

Friday, August 28, 2009

William Spaulding Jazz Quintet -Sunday Sept 27


JAZZ in the Afternoon
featuring the William Spaulding Jazz Quintet
is Back by popular demand...
in the CV Club patio..

JAZZ in the Afternoon

the William Spaulding Jazz Quintet (Trumpet, Bass, Piano, Tenor Sax, Drums)

Host:
Black Air Foundation
Type:


Price:
$15 Singles - $25 Couples
Date:
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Time:
2:00pm - 6:00pm
Location:
Cape Verdean Progressive Club
Street:
329 Grosvenor Avenue
City/Town:
East Providence, RI

Phone:
4014518626
Email:

Event description

Sunday, September 27

Help support the Black Air Foundation's Lambert-Lima Flying Squadron.
The Black Air Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that is dedicated to empowering minority youth through education and training. The mission of Black Air Foundation is to introduce inner-city youth ages 13-15 to Aviation, Filmmaking, Radio and Television production.

Click here to RSVP your invitation.
Evite
http://www.evite.com/pages/invite/viewInvite.jsp?inviteId=JVBBNKBYKISDHAEDZXLM

Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/event.php?eid=147500928017&ref=mf



Wednesday, April 22, 2009

PHOTO EXHIBIT OF WORLD WAR II TUSKEGEE AIRMEN SPONSORED BY BLACK AIR FOUNDATION



PHOTO EXHIBIT OF WORLD WAR II TUSKEGEE AIRMEN SPONSORED BY BLACK AIR FOUNDATION

"Black Aviation Historical Expo"

At THE SPOT ON THAYER

To benefit the Lambert-Lima Flying Squadron Cadet program's mission to introduce inner-city youth to Aviation, Filmmaking, Radio and Television production.

The exhibit will take place on Friday, 1 May from 7 p.m.- 9 p.m. in the main gallery of the Spot on Thayer, 286 Thayer Street, Second Floor, Providence, RI (near Brown University). Opening remarks will be made by Tuskegee Airman George S. Lima, President and Founder of the Black Air Foundation. This exhibit features photographs by pilot and photographic officer, Lt. George S. Lima, U.S. Army Air Corps, WWII

During World War II civil rights groups and black professional organizations pressed the government to provide training for black pilots on an equal basis with whites. Their efforts were partially successful. African American fighter pilots were trained as a part of the Army Air Force, but only at a segregated base located in Tuskegee, Alabama. Hundreds of airmen were trained and many saw action.

The exhibition is produced by Black Air Foundation, in cooperation with The Spot on Thayer.


For more information on the exhibition, call Marlene Britto at (401) 451-8626 or visit the web site at www.blackairfoundation.org. For inquiries, send an e-mail to blackairfoundation@cox.net or call (401) 383-7308.

Your $10 donation helps support the cadet program. Public is Invited!

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Ceremony at Quonset honors 7 Tuskegee Airmen

Ceremony at Quonset honors 7 Tuskegee Airmen

01:00 AM EDT on Tuesday, March 10, 2009
By Richard C. Dujardin

Journal Staff Writer

Tuskegee Airman Herman Wells, a Rhode Island native, shakes hands with Rhode Island Air National Guard Col. Peter Sepe, of Warwick, after signing a book for him at Thursday’s event.


The Providence Journal / Glenn Osmundson

NORTH KINGSTOWN — Even now, they proudly identify themselves as Tuskegee Airmen, part of a historic cadre of black aviators, pilots and support crew who helped prove to a skeptical nation during World War II that “black men can fly” and carry the fight to the enemy with impressive results.

As former B-25 bomber pilot Charles W. Diggs put it Thursday, when he and six others black veterans came as invited guests at a reception in their honor on the grounds of the Rhode Island Air National Guard at Quonset Point: “It feels good to have been a pioneer.”

But if the truth be told, being known as a pioneer was the last thing on their minds, they acknowledged. All they really wanted to do was fly.

“I think that’s the attitude of a lot of these men,” said Willie Shellman, a former autopilot design engineer who is now the president of the Tuskegee Airmen’s New England chapter and executive director of Black Archives at the YMCA of Greater Boston. “They didn’t know they were making history. They were training to be the best person they could be, to get the best education they could and to be the best person and soldier they could be. And as a result of that, they made history.”

Of the more than 900 black military men who were trained at Tuskegee, Ala., as part of a “noble experiment” that began in January 1941, there were 7 New Englanders who were honored at the event sponsored by the Rhode Island Air Force Association and the Black Air Foundation.

They included three native Rhode Islanders — former state representative and union leader George Lima of East Providence, Victor Butler of North Providence, and Herman Wells, who after his discharge as a communications specialist at Godman Field in Kentucky studied at the University of Rhode Island and became chief of the civil rights staff for the former Civil Aeronautics Administration.

Of the other four New Englanders, two received certification as B-25 bomber pilots only to be discharged without going into combat because Japan surrendered before they could be deployed: Diggs, who went on to a 31-year career as a mechanical engineer in the Jet Engine Design Group for General Electric in Lynn, Mass., and Jack Bryant, a Chicago native who is CEO of Bryant Engineering of Boston.

Rounding out the group were Harvey F. Sanford, who was an air inspector at the Tuskegee Army Air Field until his discharge in 1946, and became an FAA inspector at Boston’s Logan Airport; and Willie Saunders, who was part of the 615th Ground Support Unit at Army Air fields in Texas and Florida and who is now a retired deputy superintendent of the Boston police.

Despite their historic breakthrough as members the nation’s first black aviation unit — which at the time was known only to readers of black newspapers and magazines, but became more known by the impressive number of German planes they shot down — the airmen were not able to entirely escape the racism of the times.

Lima noted how on a visit to an Officers Club in Indiana for which he had paid dues, he was denied access because of his color. After he returned to the barracks and informed his fellow black officers what had happened, 100 descended on the club and were arrested for refusing to leave. (Those arrests remained on their records until President Bill Clinton met with the airmen and had the charges expunged in the 1990s.)

Asked by one young man how he felt then to be “mixed together with Caucasians” after years of segregation, Lima remarked he couldn’t speak to that because the Air Force didn’t become integrated until six years after he was discharged.

Saunders said some of the most painful moments for him were when he joined the Boston Police Department in 1956.

“I said, ‘Here we go again.’ [The black officers] weren’t allowed to drive in cruisers and we walked the street all night long. What helped me was my family and my memory of what went on when I was in the service. It hurt. My family didn’t know why I wanted to be a policeman, and I didn’t know either.”

When the first wave of black airman arrived in Africa, said Sanford, the blacks were assigned planes rejected by white pilots, but eventually were given planes with Rolls-Royce engines that proved more useful in combat.

Then, too, he said, stories abounded at how German prisoners of war seemed to get better treatment by the Americans than the black airmen got at their bases.

But one thing they all could take comfort in, Sanford said. “As the colonel used to say, when you have your hands on the controls, the plane doesn’t know what color you are.”

rdujardi@projo.com

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

President Barack Obama inauguration day

A Tuskegee airman watches, remembers
01:00 AM EST on Wednesday, January 21, 2009
By Alisha A. Pina
Journal Staff Writer

George Lima, 89, applauds after watching Barack Obama sworn in. Lima took part in the March on Washington, in 1963.

EAST PROVIDENCE — He “never believed this day would come true.”

George S. Lima served in World War II as one of the Tuskegee Airmen, the first group of black fighter pilots and bomber pilots in the history of what then was the Army Air Forces. Their performance — after segregated training in Alabama — dispelled reservations in Washington about the ability of black men to fly in combat.

All the surviving members of the group were invited to attend President Obama’s inauguration, but poor health forced Lima — Rhode Island’s only Tuskegee airman — to stay home.

Lima_06_GE.JPG

“I didn’t want to take that chance ... I can hardly walk across my living room,” said Lima, who turns 90 in April. When television cameras zoomed in on some of the airmen who did attend, he said, “There are my guys.”

Leaning closer toward the television, he said, “Let me see if I can recognize anybody ... If I was 30 years younger, I’d be there.”

Family and friends came by to watch the inauguration with him yesterday. Diana Lima took the bus over to be with her father-in-law and another relative brought coffee and doughnuts. George Lima said it was such a special occasion that he ought to get the fireplace going.

Diana’s husband, Robert, arrived right before the inauguration ceremony started. He raised a fist and exclaimed, “Power to the people. Our time has come.”

He showed off his T-shirt. It bore the faces of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Obama.

George Lima went to the March on Washington, in 1963, where an estimated 250,000 people came together to promote civil rights in a peaceful demonstration.

Yesterday, he listened as Mr. Obama said, “To those who cling to power through corruption and deceit and the silencing of dissent, know that you are on the wrong side of history; but that we will extend a hand if you are willing to unclench your fist.”

Fighting back tears, Lima’s daughter-in-law grabbed his hand and said, “I’m glad you got to see this.”

apina@projo.com

Photo: Gretchen Ertl

Black Air Foundation board members at the President Barack Obama's inauguration day viewing party. A fantastic experience!!!
L-R: Robert Lima, Napoleon X, George S. Lima, Marlene Britto