Today in History – May 22, 1959 – Benjamin O. Davis, Jr. becomes 1st African-American general-major in the USAF.

22 May 1959 – Benjamin O. Davis, Jr. was the first black Brigadier general in the United States Air Force. “On December 9, 1998, he was advanced to four-star general by President Bill Clinton. During World War II, Davis was commander of the 99th Fighter Squadron and the 332nd Fighter Group, which escorted bombers on air combat missions over Europe. Davis flew sixty missions in P-39, Curtiss P-40, P-47, and P-51 Mustang fighters. Davis followed in his father’s footsteps in breaking racial barriers, as Benjamin O. Davis, Sr. was the first black general in the United States Army.

Benjamin Oliver Davis Jr. was born in Washington, D.C. on December 18, 1912, the second of three children born to Benjamin O. Davis Sr. and Elnora Dickerson Davis. His father was a U.S. Army officer, and at the time he was stationed in Wyoming serving as a lieutenant with an all-white cavalry unit. Benjamin O. Davis Sr. served 41 years before he was promoted to brigadier general in October 1940. Elnora Davis died from complications after giving birth to their third child (Elnora) in 1916.

At the age of 13, in the summer of 1926, the younger Davis went for a flight with a barnstorming pilot at Bolling Field in Washington, DC. The experience led to his determination to become a pilot himself.

After attending the University of France, he entered the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York in 1932. He was sponsored by Representative Oscar De Priest (R-IL) of Chicago, at the time, the only black member of Congress. During the four years of his Academy term, Davis was racially isolated by his White classmates, few of whom spoke to him outside the line of duty. He never had a roommate. He ate by himself. His classmates hoped that this would drive him out of the Academy. The “silent treatment” had the opposite effect. It made Davis more determined to graduate. Nevertheless, he earned the respect of his classmates, as evidenced by the biographical note beneath his picture in the 1936 yearbook, the Howitzer:

The courage, tenacity, and intelligence with which he conquered a problem incomparably more difficult than plebe year won for him the sincere admiration of his classmates, and his single-minded determination to continue in his chosen career cannot fail to inspire respect wherever fortune may lead him.[1]

He graduated in 1936, 35th in a class of 276. He was the academy’s fourth black graduate after Henry Ossian Flipper (1877), John Hanks Alexander (1887), and Charles Young (1889). When he was commissioned as a second lieutenant, the Army had only two black officers who weren’t chaplains – Benjamin O. Davis Sr. and Benjamin O. Davis Jr.[2] After graduation, he married Agatha Scott.

At the start of his junior year at West Point, Davis had applied for the Army Air Corps but was rejected because it did not accept blacks. He was instead assigned to the all-black 24th Infantry Regiment (one of the original Buffalo Soldier regiments) at Fort Benning, Georgia. He was not allowed inside the base officers’ club.

He later attended the U.S. Army Infantry School at Fort Benning, and then was assigned to teach military tactics at Tuskegee Institute, a historically black college in TuskegeeAlabama. This was something his father had done years before, as a way for the Army to avoid having a black officer in command of white soldiers.

Captain Benjamin Oliver Davis Jr. of Washington, D.C., climbing into an Advanced Trainer. Tuskegee, Alabama. January 1942

Early in 1941, the Roosevelt administration, in response to public pressure for greater black participation in the military as war approached, ordered the War Department to create a black flying unit. Captain Davis was assigned to the first training class at Tuskegee Army Air Field (hence the name Tuskegee Airmen), and in March 1942 earned his wings as one of five black officers to complete the course. He was the first black officer to solo an Army Air Corps aircraft.

Letter from Dr. O. A. Childress of Cleveland, Ohio, Chairman of the Civil Liberties Committee of the Mi-Ty Majestic Lodge of Elks No. 934, to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, commending the appointment of Benjamin O. Davis to Brigadier General. Record Group 319: Records of the Army Staff, 1903 – 2009 Series: Official Military Personnel Files, 1912 – 1998 File Unit: Official Military Personnel File of Benjamin O. Davis Item: Letter from Dr. O. A. Childress of Cleveland, Ohio, Chairman of the Civil Liberties Committee of the Mi-Ty Majestic Lodge of Elks No. 934, to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt., 11/4/1940

In July that year, having been promoted to lieutenant colonel, he was named commander of the first all-black air unit, the 99th Pursuit Squadron.

The squadron, equipped with Curtiss P-40 fighters, was sent to Tunisia in North Africa in the spring of 1943. On June 2, they saw combat for the first time in a dive-bombing mission against the German-held island of Pantelleria as part of Operation Corkscrew.[3] The squadron later supported the Allied invasion of Sicily.

In September 1943, Davis was deployed to the United States to take command of the 332nd Fighter Group, a larger all-black unit preparing to go overseas. Soon after his arrival, there was an attempt to stop the use of black pilots in combat. Senior officers in the Army Air Forces recommended to the Army chief of staff, General George Marshall, that the 99th (Davis’s old unit) be removed from combat operations as it had performed poorly. This infuriated Davis as he had never been told of any deficiencies with the unit. He held a news conference at The Pentagon to defend his men and then presented his case to a War Department committee studying the use of black servicemen.

Marshall ordered an inquiry but allowed the 99th to continue fighting in the meantime. The inquiry eventually reported that the 99th’s performance was comparable to other air units, but any questions about the squadron’s fitness were answered in January 1944 when its pilots shot down 12 German planes in two days while protecting the Anzio beachhead.”(1)

To read more about Brigadier General Davis read the book Benjamin O. Davis Jr.: American: An Autobiography.

 

Source:(1) Wikipedia

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