Ottawa Citizen

African-American airman had to fight two wars at once

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William R. White, a former member of the famed squadron of African-American pilots known as the Tuskegee Airmen, has died. He was 88.

White was a humble family man who rarely talked about his war experience­s, family members said. White died July 24 at his home in Smithfield, his son Brandon White told The Associated Press.

Brandon White and his sister Inetha Holmes said they did not learn that their father was a member of the Tuskegee Airmen in the Second World War until a few years ago.

As children, they would ask him about an Army Air Corps photo that he had, but he would not say much about it.

“He wouldn’t go into detail about anything,” Brandon White said. “He was very humble, humble to a fault.”

William White, a Smithfield native, was drafted into the Army Infantry in 1945. He transferre­d to the Army Air Corps, and then was assigned to the 99th Pursuit Squadron and 332nd Fighter Group.

He said during a 2013 talk at the Isle of Wight County Museum that he serviced the unit’s planes to keep them in the air, The Virginian-Pilot reported.

The Tuskegee Airmen were the U.S. military’s first African-American aviators.

The group went on to take part in more than 1,500 combat missions, earning more 96 Distinguis­hed Flying Crosses.

In a 2013 interview with WVECTV, William White said he and his fellow Tuskegee Airmen had to fight two wars, one with the enemy and the other with racism.

 ?? KAITLIN MCKEOWN/THE DAILY PRESS VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A photo of Tuskegee Airman William R. White, taken during the Second World War, next to his flag-draped casket, at his recent memorial service in Virginia.
KAITLIN MCKEOWN/THE DAILY PRESS VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A photo of Tuskegee Airman William R. White, taken during the Second World War, next to his flag-draped casket, at his recent memorial service in Virginia.

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