The Standard (St. Catharines)

Tuskegee Airman, 96, dies

- ERRIN HAINES WHACK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHILADELPH­IA — John L. Harrison Jr., who served as a Second World War pilot with the famed allblack Tuskegee Airmen, has died. He was 96.

Harrison died March 22 at a hospice in Philadelph­ia, according to the Murphy Ruffenach Funeral Home. A funeral with military honours was held Friday.

Harrison was 22 when he became one of America’s first black military airmen, one of nearly 1,000 pilots who trained as a segregated unit with the Army Air Corps at an airfield near Tuskegee, Ala.

“We were Americans, we were young, and we wanted to defend our country, just like everyone else,” Harrison said in a 2009 oral history.

Fellow Tuskegee airman Eugene Robinson said that becoming a pilot was a childhood dream of Harrison’s after seeing airplanes in Omaha, Neb., where he grew up, and reading in a magazine about black men being trained as pilots. Robinson said it was a big dream for a black child during segregatio­n.

“He wanted to fly an airplane, like so many young people,” Robinson said.

Harrison saw combat in Italy during the Second World War and remained in the service until his retirement as an Air Force major after two decades.

His family said Harrison crossed the Pacific Ocean more than 50 times, and the Atlantic Ocean 35 times as a pilot for the Military Air Transport Service. He also served as an officer and a director for the Peace Corps, based in East Africa.

In 2007, the Tuskegee Airmen were awarded the Congressio­nal Gold Medal, the nation’s highest civilian honour. Then-President George W. Bush saluted the then300 surviving airmen at a ceremony in the Capitol, and apologized for “all the unreturned salutes and unforgivab­le indignitie­s” they had endured.

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