Tuskegee Airmen Pictures
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| Tuskegee Airmen show they still have the "right stuff" at Fantasy of Flight aviation-themed attraction in Central Florida (l to r): Lt. Col. Hiram Mann, Lt. Col. Leo Gray, Lt. Col. Lee Archer and Dr. Roscoe Brown. | Just over one thousand men earned their pilot's wings at the all African-American Tuskegee Army Air Base in Alabama during WWII. Florida resident Dr. Yenwith Whitney (third from right) learns to fly the P-40 in early 1944. |
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| Kermit Weeks, owner, Fantasy of Flight, welcomes the Tuskegee Airmen to the aviation-themed attraction in Central Florida (l to r): Dr. Roscoe Brown, Col. Hiram Mann, Kermit Weeks, Lt. Col. Leo Gray and Lt. Col. Lee Archer. | In the P-51, Lt. Col. Lee Archer (USAF Retired) scored a total of five kills — three on one engagement on October 12, 1944. He flew a total of 169 missions and also destroyed six aircraft on the ground. |
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| Lt. Col. Lee Archer (USAF Retired) is the only ace of the famed Tuskegee Airmen, the first African Americans to be trained as WWII military pilots. | President George W. Bush presents the Congressional Gold Medal to Dr. Roscoe Brown, Jr., during ceremonies honoring the Tuskegee Airmen Thursday, March 29, 2007, at the U.S. Capitol. Dr. Brown commanded the 100th Fighter Squadron of the 332 Fighter Group during World War II. Photo by Eric Draper, Courtesy of the George W. Bush Presidential Library. |


