[ABOVE:
Exhibit, The National WWII Museum BELOW: “Red Tails”
(Photo: TheWrap.com)]
Museum
offers special programming for Black History Month
NEW
ORLEANS (January 23, 2012) – With George Lucas’ Red Tails
soaring at the box office, The National WWII Museum announces its
acquisition and restoration of a P-51 Mustang, the aircraft depicted
in Hollywood’s drama about the courageous fighter pilots known as
the Tuskegee Airmen.
The Tuskegee Airmen were the first
African-American aviators in the United States military. They
comprised the United States Army Air Forces 99th Fighter
Squadron and 332nd Fighter Group and were trained at
Tuskegee Army Air Field in Alabama.
The Museum’s P-51 D, an
aircraft replete with authentic “Red Tail” markings, will hang in
the new US Freedom Pavilion: The Boeing Center. The 96 ft. tall
structure, built to house the institution’s spectacular collection
of macro artifacts, opens on the Museum’s New Orleans campus
November 11, Veterans Day, this year.
“The P-51 with ‘Red
Tail’ markings should be a symbol of pride for all Americans,”
said Wendell Pierce, actor and spokesperson for the Museum’s
initiative to restore the plane. “But it is of special importance
to black Americans as it embodies the patriotism of these pilots, who
did, indeed, prove that courage has no color. I am proud to help in
the Museum’s efforts to honor all African-Americans who fought for
their country during WWII.”
Pierce’s father, Amos Pierce,
was drafted into the US Army in 1943 and was assigned to the famous
24th Infantry Division – the African American “Buffalo Soldiers”
attached to the US Marines that took Saipan from the Japanese in
1944.
With Black History Month approaching, the Museum is
making a special effort to remind Americans of African-Americans’
contributions in WWII with a series of programs. These include an
opportunity for children to build their own P-51 model plane as well
as a lunchtime lecture about African-American veterans and their
struggle for civil rights. Other highlights include:
· A display
depicting the exploits of the Tuskegee Airmen as well as those of
drivers for the “Red Ball Express,” which at its peak delivered
over 12,000 tons of vital supplies per day to Allied forces rapidly
advancing across France. The display opens January 20 and will be
exhibited throughout the month of February.
· A free
Electronic Field Trip for grades 7-12 called Fighting for a
Double Victory: African Americans in WWII. Students will meet
Pearl Harbor hero Dorie Miller, the Montford Point Marines, and the
Tuskegee Airmen, learning of the struggle for racial equality in war
factories and in the barracks and tracing the historic path from
segregation to integration in the military and beyond.
For
more information on the Museum’s Black History Month programming as
well as lesson plans for educators visit
www.nationalww2museum.org.
Though
restricted by segregationist practices and US military policies
throughout WWII, black servicemen and women performed vital efforts
during the conflict. Their successes helped to spur integration of
the Armed Forces in 1948. Still, widespread recognition of the
contributions of African Americans did not come quickly. Pierce’s
father Amos, for example, did not receive his medals for combat
bravery until 2009, after assistance from the
Museum.
“African-Americans’ experience in World War II was
a fight for two victories,” explains Museum President and CEO Dr.
Gordon H. “Nick” Mueller. “The first was to defeat the Axis.
The second was for equal rights. The Museum feels it must always
convey the story of this double victory so that young generations
know and understand the challenges these Americans faced. Our P-51
will serve as a touchstone for that effort.”
The family of
Museum board member Todd Ricketts, co-owner of the Chicago Cubs, has
committed to donate $500,000 to fund the P-51’s restoration, which
is expected to be finished in early 2013. The Museum needs to raise
another ½ million dollars to complete the project.
“The
P-51 is the iconic aircraft of World War II and the Museum would not
be complete without one,” Ricketts said. “But beyond that, it is
also important to recognize and honor the Tuskegee Airmen who
furthered the American war effort, and civil rights for all
Americans, by doing what they saw as their patriotic duty.”
“We
can’t thank Mr. Ricketts and his family enough for their
generosity,” Mueller says. “Because of this gift, museum-goers
will be able to enter the US Freedom Pavilion: The Boeing Center and
see a real P-51, not one generated by computer graphics. It’s
history made real.”
The
National WWII Museum
tells the story of the American Experience in the war that changed
the world – why it was fought, how it was won, and what it means
today. Dedicated in 2000 as The National D-Day Museum and now
designated by Congress as America’s National WWII Museum, it
celebrates the American Spirit, teamwork, optimism, courage and
sacrifice of the men and women who served on the battlefront and the
Home Front. For more information, call 877-813-3329 or 504-527-6012
or visit www.nationalww2museum.org.
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