On July 19, 1941, the US Air Force created a project to train African Americans as battle pilots in Alabama (Tuskegee Airmen 1). The basic flight training was done by the Tuskegee Institute, a school founded by Booker T. Washington (Tuskegee Airmen 1) in 1881. Participants will complete the basic training at Tuskegei's Motown Field and then proceed to the Tuskegei Army Air Force Base to complete the transition from training to fighter aircraft. The early Tuskegee team was taught to cooperate with the famous ninety-ninth battle corps, recruited for battle in North Africa.
Tusky Air Force is the first African-American military pilot of the US military. They officially founded 332 combat units and the US Army Air 477 bombing unit. The Taskade Air Force was discriminated against inside and outside the military. All black army pilots trained in the United States are trained at the Tasmanje Army Air Force Base at Moton Field and are trained at Tuskegee University near Tuskegee, Alabama. This name also applies to pilots, bombers, mechanics, coaches, captains, nurses, chefs, other pilot support staff.
The Tuskegee campus is the training ground for Tuskegee Air Force, the first African-American military pilot in World War II. This school is one of the few black schools chosen by one of over 1,000 schools chosen for the private pilot training program by the federal government. Tuskey prepared more than 1,000 soldiers from 1941 to 1945. In 1985, it was known as the Tuskegee Institute for the major part of the 20th century, and the school gained the status of the university. Today, the University of Tuskey has more than 3,000 people and diverse and diverse student organizations. In 2011, "US News and World Report" ranked Taskiji as the 6th best regional university in the south
In 1941, to train a black pilot, the US Army Air Corps established a training program at the Tuskegee Institute using Moton Field, about 4 miles (6.4 km) from the center of the campus. Graduates are known as Tuskegee Air Force. The Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site of Motton Field was registered in the National Historic Register in 1998. The Army, Air Force, Navy is opening a course of R.O.T.C. on campus today. Many presidents including Franklin Roosevelt visited Tuskegee. Eleanor Roosevelt is also interested in laboratories and aviation schools. In 1941, she visited the Tuskegei Army and worked hard to give African Americans the opportunity to become an army pilot. She and P. D., Tuskegee Institute's third executive, Patterson often provide assistance to the program.