The Denver Post

Wilfred Defour, 100, kept Tuskegee Airmen flying

- By Karen Matthews

NEW YORK» A man who served as an aircraft technician with the famed allblack Tuskegee Airmen died Saturday at age 100.

Police said a home health aide found Wilfred Defour unconsciou­s and unresponsi­ve inside his Harlem apartment at 9 a.m.

Defour was pronounced dead by Emergency Medical Service workers. Police said that he appeared to have died of natural causes, but the medical examiner’s office will perform an autopsy.

Defour was honored just last month at a ceremony to rename a New York post office after the Tuskegee Airmen.

The Daily News reported that Defour said at the Nov. 19 ceremony that the World War II squadron’s members “didn’t know we were making history at the time. We were just doing our job.”

The Tuskegee Airmen were the first AfricanAme­rican military aviators in the American armed forces, which were racially segregated until after World War II.

According to Return of the Red Tails, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving the memory of the Tuskegee Airmen, Defour joined the Air Corps in 1942 and was assigned to the 366th Air Service Squadron, serving in Italy, after basic training in Tuskegee, Ala.

He served as an aircraft technician and painted the red tails on the planes that gave the squadron its beloved nickname.

Defour was a post office employee for more than 30 years after his military service.

He remained active into his later years and often spoke to schoolchil­dren about his experience­s.

Newsday reported that Defour and fellow Tuskegee Airman Dabney Montgomery visited a fifth-grade class in Hempstead, N.Y., to mark Black History Month in 2016.

Montgomery, who died in September of that year, told the students that when he returned from wartime service to his native Alabama, he was not allowed to vote. “We have lost so much talent, we have lost so much achievemen­t because of discrimina­tion,” Montgomery said.

Defour added, “We need to spread the word to let them know what went on in our time. It’s history.”

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