The Tuskegee Airmen were legendary. This year, the program takes off again.

Atlanta native Damon Benson knew he wanted to be a pilot the first time he flew on an airliner as a kid. “When [the pilot] put the thrust in before takeoff, and I was pushed back into the seat, that was thrilling to me,” Mr. Benson says with a smile. “I fell in love with it then, and that’s what carried me to this point.

“I just knew that I wanted to be the person that was in the cockpit, flying [around] a kid like me that was somewhere in the back. Being able to tell them, ‘Hey, you can do this, too.’”

Mr. Benson is one of 46 aviation science students at Leadership in Flight Training (LIFT) Academy at Tuskegee University in Alabama, where training resumed this year for the first time since 1946. The training center is based at Moton Field, named for Tuskegee’s second president, Robert Russa Moton. It is where the early airmen’s skills were honed before they served as the first African American military aviators in World War II.

Why We Wrote This

Some might think that the legacy of the Tuskegee Airmen is all in the past. But there is a generation of students at famed Tuskegee University, a historically Black university, who are poised to rise to the standard of their predecessors.

One of the last members of that storied cohort, Lt. Col. George E. Hardy, who flew combat missions in World War II, died at the age of 100 last month. The organization’s national office said in a statement that his legacy is “one of courage, resilience, tremendous skill and dogged perseverance against racism, prejudice and other evils.”

Titus Sanders, the aviation science program director at Tuskegee, notes the challenges involved with the program’s triumphant return.

“For decades, Tuskegee has been wanting to return to the skies. … One of the challenges with aviation is funding, not having the appropriate amount of dollars to get the program started, to include airplanes and the infrastructure that needs to be in place,” Mr. Sanders says in a Zoom interview. “It costs about $120,000 to train a student from private pilot to commercial license in the United States, in addition to their tuition that they have to pay at the university. So a lot of individuals and agencies went into the planning and launching of the program.”

Senior Airman Malcolm Mayfield/U.S. Air Force/File

The late U.S. Air Force retired Lt. Col. George E. Hardy, a Tuskegee Airman, stands next to his former P-51D Mustang at Royal Air Force Lakenheath, England, Oct. 4, 2016. The Tuskegee Airmen were an all African American fighter group during World War II consisting of more than 900 pilots who maintained and flew combat missions while overseas.

Upon completion of the program, students – made up of both men and women – will have both a bachelor’s degree in aviation science from Tuskegee University and a commercial multi-engine pilot license through LIFT Academy. It is a four-year program that can be completed in three years, and aside from the legacy of the Airmen, its focus on academic and military excellence has enticed individuals with military experience like Columbia, South Carolina, native Myles White.

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