EPISODE · May 18, 2022 · 44 MIN
Chauncey Spencer-Pioneer in Aviation and Civil Rights
from Saint Louis In Tune · host Arnold Stricker
After seeing the flight of an aircraft at an early age, Chauncey Spencer never looked back. He helped bring about the formation of the pilot group that would become the Tuskegee Airmen. In 1939, his father and another pilot, Dale White, were part of a pilot training program in Chicago. At that time, black pilots were denied the opportunity to fly for the military. Spencer and White flew on a 10-city tour intended to show Americans the skills of black pilots. They met with then-Senator Harry Truman who later was responsible for integrating the military. His mother, Anne Spencer was an American poet and activist during the Harlem Renaissance. Chauncey Spencer II discusses his father, grandmother, and the Chauncey Spencer Educational Services whose mission is to tell the story of African American Aviators and the major role they played in American and Military aviation. [00:39] BackgroundChauncey Spencer Educational ServicesArmy Air Corps[03:04] Back to the beginningChallenger Aero GroupJohn RobinsonCurtiss Wright Flight SchoolNational Airmen Association of AmericaEdgar Brown, the flight to Washington D.C., Dale White, and Harry Truman[09:40] Funding black colleges in the southCoffey School of Aeronautics and Cornelius CoffeyBessie ColemanTuskegee Army AirfieldWilla Brown
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Chauncey Spencer-Pioneer in Aviation and Civil Rights
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