Tag Archives: World War II

Breaking the Color Barrier in the Trenches


NMAAHC -- National Museum of African American History and Culture

Lonnie Bunch, museum director, historian, lecturer, and author, is proud to present A Page from Our American Story, a regular on-line series for Museum supporters. It will showcase individuals and events in the African American experience, placing these stories in the context of a larger story — our American story.

A Page From Our American Story

American Soldiers in Korea Fighting with the 2nd Inf. Div. north of the Chongchon River, Sfc. Major Cleveland, weapons squad leader, points out Communist-led North Korean position to his machine gun crew. November 20,1950. Pfc. James Cox.

African Americans have served in every military engagement in our history — from the American Revolution to today’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Even though for years they suffered injustice and inequality in the military, they served, as former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell said, because “by serving, you demonstrated that you were as good as anyone else.”

This past August marked the 65th anniversary of the integration of America’s military. In July 1948, President Harry Truman signed an executive order mandating fair treatment and equality in government and the armed services. It was long overdue. Yet, even with the President ordering the change, integration was a slow process.

In the American Revolution and the Civil War, African Americans fought on both sides. The British promised freedom for enslaved blacks who took up arms against the Colonies. The same promise was offered by some leaders of the colonies. Following the Emancipation Proclamation, newly freed African Americans were permitted to serve in the army and navy. Still, the inequalities that had existed in the military prior to the Proclamation remained as blacks were always segregated and made to serve under under white commanding officers.

Segregation was as institutionalized in the military as it was in American society. Despite serving with distinction in the Spanish-American War and World War I, black servicemen and servicewomen returned to a nation that treated them like second class citizens.

James_DanielChappie.jpg Gen. Daniel R. “Chappie” James Jr. (1920-1978), a Tuskegee Airmen who trained and served during World War II, in 1975 became the first African American to achieve the grade of four-star general. (U.S. Air Force photo)

This was magnified following World War II. Throughout the war, African Americans performed at a high level. They helped free Europe and defeat Imperial Japan, but came home to find that little had changed. The military itself was still operating, in essence, two separate armed forces: one for whites, one for blacks.

In response to political pressure and the growing civil rights movement, in July 1948, President Truman issued executive order 9981 desegregating the armed forces. However, the military’s response was two years of institutional foot dragging. It was not until the Korean War that military commanders, out of necessity, realized they had to accelerate the process to rebuild forces that had been scaled back after WWII. Each branch of the armed forces responded differently.

The Air Force set itself on a path to integration in 1949, and in 1951 Captain Daniel “Chappie” James Jr., became the first black officer to command a fighter squadron. Among James’ many air medals was the Distinguished Flying Cross, one of the armed forces highest honors. James would go on to become the first four-star general in the Air Force. By the war’s end, 25 African American pilots served in fully integrated units.

Ensign Jesse L. Brown.jpg Ensign Jesse L. Brown, USN In the cockpit of an F4U-4 Corsair fighter, circa 1950. He was the first African American to be trained by the Navy as a Naval Aviator, and as such, became the first African American Naval Aviator to see combat. Brown flew with Fighter Squadron 32 (VF-32) from USS Leyte (CV-32). National Archives.

In the Navy, African Americans had long served on ships along with white sailors, but the jobs were menial and advancement was almost non-existent. Ensign Jesse L. Brown became the first African American Navy pilot when he was commissioned in 1948. He was also the first black Naval officer to die in the Korean war, and received the Distinguished Flying Cross posthumously. In March 1972, the Navy christened a Knox-class destroyer the USS Jesse L. Brown in his honor.

In 1952, Second Lieutenant Frank E. Peterson, Jr., became the first Marine aviator, flying 64 combat missions by the end of the Korean war. Peterson, too, received the Distinguished Flying Cross. He rose in the ranks to become the Marine Corps’ first African American general.

LtGenFrankPetersen_USMC.jpg LtGen Frank E. Peterson, USMC. Senior US Military aviator. First African American Marine Corps aviator and General. Photo from official USMC biography.

The Army was the slowest of the branches to respond. Still operating under WWII racial quotas that limited the number of African Americans who could serve, the Army was enlisting black Americans in numbers relative to the nation’s overall population, approximately 10%. Still, the Army faced a massive shortage of troops. When the Army lifted its racial quotas, African American enlistment rose sharply. Even then, however, the Army remained slow to integrate, and morale in black units was dangerously low. The last fully segregated black unit wasn’t disbanded until 1954.

During the Korean War, some of the oldest military racial walls fell. Perhaps the biggest of those barriers was the fear that white troops wouldn’t respond to black officers. This proved not to be the case. Integrated troops did respond to black officers and non-commissioned officers during the war. However, the number of African American officers in the Army was small, numbering less than 3% at the end of the Viet Nam War. Change was taking place, but slowly.

A leading proponent for integration was General Matthew Ridgway. When he was appointed Supreme Commander of United Nations forces in Korea in 1951, he immediately called for the desegregation of the forces under his authority. Ridgway stated, “It has always seemed to me both un-American and un-Christian for free citizens to be taught to downgrade themselves this way as if they were unfit to associate with their fellows or to accept leadership themselves.”

Nearly 600,000 African Americans served in an integrated armed forces during the Korean War. Neither racism nor hatred was extinguished overnight, but integrating the services played an important role in the larger picture of American society. African American servicemen and servicewomen were finally on a path to end their treatment as second class citizens fighting for the American ideals of freedom and equality.

 dd-enews-temp-lonnie-bunch-2.jpg All the best, Lonnie Bunch Director

P.S. We can only reach our $250 million goal with your help. I hope you will consider making a donation or becoming a Charter Member today.

Official Google


Learn about the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on the Google Cultural Institute

Posted: 19 Aug 2013 08:53 AM PDT

This August marks the 68th anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki at the end of World War II. Working together with the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum and the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum, we’ve launched seven new online exhibits on the Google Cultural Institute that help tell the story of the two cities and their tragic fate.
Explore four collections from the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum that illustrate the bombing from different perspectives: a pocketwatch stopped at the exact time of the detonation, diaries of young women cut off abruptly on August 6, and panoramic photos of the hauntingly barren city center days after. While most of the materials document the harrowing devastation of the bomb and its aftermath, the gallery “Recalling the Lost Neighborhoods” helps archive the old Hiroshima that vanished off the map.

Pocketwatch showing 8:15, the time of the atomic bomb drop (from the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum)

The Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum meanwhile curated photos, videos, and drawings in three exhibitions. One collection focuses on the famed Urakami Cathedral—the largest cathedral in East Asia where 15,000 Japanese Catholics once worshipped. The church completely collapsed after the bombing, but thanks to a post-war reconstruction effort, the Urakami Cathedral now stands triumphant as a symbol of the city’s rebirth.

Urakami Cathedral exhibition (from the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum)

Speaking at an unveiling ceremony for the exhibits in Hiroshima today, Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui said, “Through the Google Cultural Institute exhibitions, we hope that people around the world would learn about the terrible experiences of the Hibakusha, or A-bomb survivors, and wish for peace.”
The Cultural Institute was created to help preserve the world’s history and heritage. Given the average age of the Hibakusha is now past 78, we’re honored that our digital exhibit can help keep the memories from both cities alive for the future.
Posted by Toru Kawamura, New Business Development Senior Manager, Google Japan

Airport keeping out WWll Survivors


WWll

Stop the Proposed Fence at the Tulelake Municipal Airport, site of the former Tule Lake Segregation Center, California

  By Satsuki Ina with Stop the Fence at Tulelake Airport
                                                Sacramento, California

During World War II, more than 120,000 men, women, and children of Japanese ancestry were forced from their homes and unjustly imprisoned in ten concentration camps across the United States, solely on the basis of race. The Tule Lake camp in Modoc County, California (near the California-Oregon border) became a maximum-security Segregation Center to incarcerate 12,000 inmates who resisted their imprisonment and branded by the federal government as disloyal. Today, a small airport used primarily by crop dusting planes cuts through the center of the Tule Lake site.

I need your help because the Federal Aviation Administration is proposing construction of an eight-foot high, three-mile long fence around the perimeter of the airport that will cut off our access to the Tule Lake site. Besides being utterly unnecessary in such a desolate place, such a fence would desecrate the physical and spiritual aspects of Tule Lake, which has great historical and personal importance to me and many others.

I am shocked by this insensitive and disrespectful plan. This massive fence will interfere with the desire I and visitors to Tule Lake have — to mourn the unjust imprisonment and to heal the scars of the past. Instead, we will be assaulted with a reminder of rejection, exclusion, and emotional pain.

I was born in the Tule Lake Segregation Center. My parents were American citizens who protested their unjust incarceration and answered “no” to the government-imposed “loyalty questionnaire.” As punishment for their dissidence, the government removed them from the Topaz concentration camp to the maximum-security Tule Lake Segregation Center. From there, my father was taken from us and interned as an “enemy alien” in a Department of Justice camp in North Dakota. Incarcerated for no other crime than having the face of the enemy, my family lived behind barbed wire for 4-1/2 years.

I’m part of a group of survivors, their families, and friends who organize tours and educational events at the Tule Lake Segregation Center. If this fence is constructed, it will send a strong message to Japanese Americans that they are not welcome at the site where they walked long distances to eat meals, attend school, and use the latrines. A fence will prevent all Americans from experiencing the dimension and magnitude of the concentration camp where people experienced mass exclusion and racial hatred.

The FAA has the power to protect Tule Lake, a sacred site. In doing so, it has the power to honor, rather than desecrate, the remembrance of one of the darkest chapters in American history.

According to the FAA, in an effort to be more “sensitive” to our concerns, the proposed fence would not be topped with barbed wire — but that’s just not enough. Our nation’s history of the unjust incarceration of those of Japanese ancestry during WWII is often forgotten. We must be able to remember what happened to our ancestors to be sure this never happens again.

I’m calling on the FAA to respect our community’s needs and wishes and reject this proposal. Please show your support for the most sensitive solution: DO NOT BUILD THE FENCE AT TULE LAKE.

How to steal an election … Judd Legum from – TP


You don’t need a Ph.D. in political science to know that Florida could decide the election this November.

So it caught ThinkProgress’ attention when Florida Governor Rick Scott, a close ally of Mitt Romney, started a massive purge of registered voters from the rolls a few weeks ago.

The national media? They completely ignored it.

Not us. We broke the news that HUNDREDS of fully eligible U.S. citizens, mostly Democrats and Latinos, were being improperly targeted. We even identified two 91-year-old WWII vets who were about to have their voting rights stripped.

It’s not just Florida. We need to raise $30,000 by Monday to expand our coverage to other critical swing states where voting rights are under attack—Ohio, Colorado, and Virginia.

Please chip in $5—or whatever you can—right now so we can get to work before it’s too late. The outcome of November’s election could very well hang in the balance.

After ThinkProgress took the lead, the national media started paying attention. Our reporting was cited extensively on cable news networks like MSNBC and precipitated a powerful editorial in The New York Times.

Late last week, following extensive reporting throughout Florida by ThinkProgress, the Justice Department sent Rick Scott a letter declaring the purge illegal and demanding he put a stop to it.

We are making a difference.

But we can’t stop with Florida. This election, and our democracy, are just too important. We need researchers and reporters on the ground right now, reporting the truth.

Chip in $5 right now so ThinkProgress can investigate and expose voter suppression across the country.

Best,

Judd Legum
Editor-in-Chief, ThinkProgress.org