chakita1
chakita sharnise (17)
RP @blackhistory. Air Corps School graduation portrait of Howard A. Wooten, December 1944.
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Tuskegee Airman Howard Adolphus Wooten was born on April 20, 1920 in Lovelady, Texas.
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In 1937, he entered Prairie View College on a football scholarship. His main interest, however, was in aviation and he attempted to enroll in flight training programs.
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Wooten dropped out of Prairie View College in 1940 and enlisted in the U.S. Army as a private assigned to a Field Artillery unit. By January 1942, he became a Staff Sergeant in the 46th Field Artillery Brigade.
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Now 24, he applied to the Army Flight School at Tuskegee, Alabama in 1944 and graduated in December of that year.
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After graduation he was assigned to the 15th USAAF Brigade as a fighter pilot, in the 332nd Fighter Group.
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In January 1945 he was reassigned to the 477th Bombardment Group, where he was one of a select group of Tuskegee pilots who would train to fly North American B-25 Mitchell bombers; Yet Wooten and the other men training on bombers would never see combat, as the war ended before they were sent overseas.
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Wooten was mustered out of the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1946. He then decided to become an attorney and moved to Seattle, Washington, so as to get as far away as possible from “Jim Crow” Texas.
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Soon after he arrived, he was hired as a production worker at the Boeing Airplane Company and joined the Aeronautical Machinists Union.
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In 1948 the Machinists Union went on strike at Boeing. Since and his wife had an infant, Wooten joined the Painters Union and took work painting bridges around Seattle.
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He died on August 20, 1948, at the age of 28, after he fell 70 feet from a scaffold while painting the 12th Avenue Bridge at the base of Beacon Hill.
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Long after his death, Howard A. Wooten was memorialized by the U.S. Air Force when his World War II pilot’s photograph was chosen by an advertising agency to represent the famed Tuskegee Airmen.
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His photo was first seen on Air Force recruiting posters in the 1990s and was later adopted as the official image of the Tuskegee Airmen Foundation.#changingthenarrative #inclusion #love - #diversityandinclusion #nashvilleteacher #antiracism #highereducation #blackhistory #ally #teachershare #blackintheivory #whitefragility #changingthenarrative #ushistory #socialstudies #historyteacher #teacherproblems
chakita sharnise (17)
RP @blackhistory. Air Corps School graduation portrait of Howard A. Wooten, December 1944.
...
Tuskegee Airman Howard Adolphus Wooten was born on April 20, 1920 in Lovelady, Texas.
...
In 1937, he entered Prairie View College on a football scholarship. His main interest, however, was in aviation and he attempted to enroll in flight training programs.
...
Wooten dropped out of Prairie View College in 1940 and enlisted in the U.S. Army as a private assigned to a Field Artillery unit. By January 1942, he became a Staff Sergeant in the 46th Field Artillery Brigade.
...
Now 24, he applied to the Army Flight School at Tuskegee, Alabama in 1944 and graduated in December of that year.
...
After graduation he was assigned to the 15th USAAF Brigade as a fighter pilot, in the 332nd Fighter Group.
...
In January 1945 he was reassigned to the 477th Bombardment Group, where he was one of a select group of Tuskegee pilots who would train to fly North American B-25 Mitchell bombers; Yet Wooten and the other men training on bombers would never see combat, as the war ended before they were sent overseas.
...
Wooten was mustered out of the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1946. He then decided to become an attorney and moved to Seattle, Washington, so as to get as far away as possible from “Jim Crow” Texas.
...
Soon after he arrived, he was hired as a production worker at the Boeing Airplane Company and joined the Aeronautical Machinists Union.
...
In 1948 the Machinists Union went on strike at Boeing. Since and his wife had an infant, Wooten joined the Painters Union and took work painting bridges around Seattle.
...
He died on August 20, 1948, at the age of 28, after he fell 70 feet from a scaffold while painting the 12th Avenue Bridge at the base of Beacon Hill.
...
Long after his death, Howard A. Wooten was memorialized by the U.S. Air Force when his World War II pilot’s photograph was chosen by an advertising agency to represent the famed Tuskegee Airmen.
...
His photo was first seen on Air Force recruiting posters in the 1990s and was later adopted as the official image of the Tuskegee Airmen Foundation.#changingthenarrative #inclusion #love - #diversityandinclusion #nashvilleteacher #antiracism #highereducation #blackhistory #ally #teachershare #blackintheivory #whitefragility #changingthenarrative #ushistory #socialstudies #historyteacher #teacherproblems