Tuskegee Airman recounts experience in World War II and the struggles faced by first African-American pilots
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A day after the 75th anniversary of D-Day, 94-year-old Tuskegee Airman Lt. Col. Harry Stewart appeared on "Fox & Friends" to discuss the significance of being one of the first African-American army pilots in World War II.
Lt. Col. Stewart told host Steve Doocy on Friday morning the tale of his first mission with the U.S. Army - a "huge armada" of 500 B-24 and B-17 bombers traveling from Italy to northern Europe. African-American pilots were allowed to fight for the first time in World War II under the condition that they trained in a segregated unit, dubbed the Tuskegee Airmen.
"It was really rare because just before then, African-Americans were not accepted for pilot training into the Army Air Corps," said Lt. Col. Stewart, who dreamed of being a pilot since he was 18.
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These memories are particularly vivid for him now because of the anniversary of D-Day, he said. Stewart added that when he returned safely from the war, the recognition of the service of African-American pilots was not widely appreciated.
D-DAY VETERAN, 97, PARACHUTES INTO NORMANDY 75 YEARS LATER
"It was the same old, same it was before we went into World War II," he said. "Recognition was long-coming, and it didn't start coming until maybe the 1970s. And it is still coming along now."
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When he came back from the war, Stewart attempted to become an airline pilot but was not permitted because he was African-American.
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Fortunately, he had a "backup plan," and attended New York University where he graduated with a degree in mechanical engineering, then entered the corporate workforce.
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The World War II veteran, who will celebrate his 95th birthday on Independence Day, expands more on his military service in his new book "Soaring to Glory."