On this date in 1942, the Tuskegee Airmen were initiated into the armed forces. The Tuskegee Airmen were Black servicemen of the U. S. Army Air Forces who trained at Tuskegee Army Air Field in Alabama during World War II. They constituted the first African American flying unit in the U. S. military. In response to pressure from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Black press, and others, the War Department in January 1941 formed the all-Black 99th Pursuit Squadron of the U. S. Army Air Corps (later the U. S. Army Air Forces), to be trained using single-engine planes at the segregated Tuskegee Army Air Field at Tuskegee, Ala. The base opened on July 19, and the first class graduated the following March. Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin Oliver Davis, Jr., became the squadron's commander. The Tuskegee Airmen received further training in French Morocco, before their first mission, on June 2, 1943, a strafing attack on Pantelleria Island, an Italian island in the Mediterranean Sea. Later that year the Army activated three more squadrons that, joined in 1944 by the 99th, constituted the 332nd Fighter Group. It fought in the European theatre and was noted as the Army Air Forces' only escort group that did not lose a bomber to enemy planes. The Tuskegee airfield program expanded to train pilots and crew to operate two-engine B-25 medium bombers. These men became part of the second Black flying group, the 477th Bombardment Group. Shortages of crew-members, technicians, and equipment troubled the 477th, and before it could be deployed overseas, World War II ended. Altogether 992 pilots graduated from the Tuskegee airfield courses; they flew 1,578 missions and 15,533 sorties, destroyed 261 enemy aircraft, and won over 850 medals. The American army’s 100th pursuit squadron a group of Black aviators fought valiantly over Britain and other European countries. Tuskegee Institutes Daniel "Chappie" James Memorial Hall houses the Black Wings aviation exhibit, which focuses on the Tuskegee Airmen, who trained near Tuskegee during World War II.

#BlackHistoryMonth #BlackHistory Elijah McCoy(1843-1929) was born in Colchester, Canada in 1843. He was born in a family of 12 children of a runaway slaves who had used underground railroad to escape from Kentucky. It had long been considered a problem that railroad engines were unable to lubricate themselves. Elijah McCoy invented a "lubricating cup," for steam engines as a result. Lubricating Cup was essential to industries throughout the world and those in possession of the valuable cup were said to have "the real McCoy." During that time a lot of other inventors tried to copy McCoy's oil-dripping cup. But none of the other cups worked as well as his, so customer started asking for "the real McCoy." In Fact that's where that expression came from. Elijah McCoy received his patent for his lubricating device in 1872. McCoy did not stop from there, he also obtained patents for an automatic sprinkler and an ironing table eventually acquiring 58 patents in his lifetime.

The Rat Pack: Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., & Dean Martin. Picture of the three best friends in the world - and everybody knows their names.

Accurate portrayal of how their system doesn't provide us the same advantages but we still continue to defy their expectations and soar to heights unimaginable.