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 Tuskegee Airmen
U.S. Army Air Corps

New York Times 

January 28, 2010

Pilot Considered the Only Ace Tuskegee Airman Dies

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 11:50 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (AP) -- Retired Air Force Lt. Colonel Lee A. Archer, a Tuskegee Airman considered to be the only black ace pilot who also broke racial barriers as an executive at a major U.S. company and founder of a venture capital firm, died Wednesday in New York City. He was 90.

His son, Roy Archer, said his father died at Cornell University Medical Center in Manhattan. A cause of death was not immediately determined.

The Tuskegee Airmen were America's first black fighter pilot group in World War II.

''It is generally conceded that Lee Archer was the first and only black ace pilot,'' credited with shooting down five enemy planes, Dr. Roscoe Brown Jr., a fellow Tuskegee Airman and friend, said in a telephone interview Thursday.

Archer was acknowledged to have shot down four planes, and he and another pilot both claimed victory for shooting down a fifth plane. An investigation revealed Archer had inflicted the damage that destroyed the plane, said Brown, and the Air Force eventually proclaimed him an ace pilot.

Archer, a resident of New Rochelle, N.Y., ''lived a full life,'' said his son. ''His last two or three years were amazing for him.''

Archer was among the group of Tuskegee Airmen invited to attend President Barack Obama's inauguration in 2009. The airmen, who escorted bomber planes during the war fought with distinction, only to face bigotry and segregation when they returned home, were also awarded the Congressional Gold Medal for their service in 2007 by President George W. Bush.

Archer was ''extremely competent, aggressive about asserting his position and sometimes stubborn,'' Brown said.

''He had a heart of gold and treated people with respect. He demanded respect by the way he carried himself.''

Brown estimated that about 50 or 60 of the 994 Tuskegee Airmen pilots are still alive.

Born on Sept. 6, 1919, in Yonkers and raised in Harlem, Archer left New York University to enlist in the Army Air Corps in 1941 but was rejected for pilot training because the military didn't allow blacks to serve as pilots.

''A War Department study in 1925 expressly stated that Negroes didn't have the intelligence, or the character, or the leadership to be in combat units, and particularly, they didn't have the ability to be Air Force pilots,'' said Brown.

Archer instead joined a segregated Army Air Corps unit at the Tuskegee, Ala., air base, graduating from pilot training in July 1943.

After he retired from the military in 1970, Archer joined General Foods Corp., becoming one of the era's few black corporate vice presidents of a major American company.

He ran one of the company's small-business investment arms, North Street Capital Corp., which funded companies that included Essence Communications and Black Enterprise Magazine, according to his son and Brown.

Archer was an adviser to the late Reginald Lewis in the deal that created the conglomerate TLC Beatrice in 1987, then the largest black-owned and -managed business in the U.S.

After retiring from General Foods in 1987, Archer founded the venture capital firm Archer Asset Management.

Archer is survived by three sons and a daughter. His wife, Ina Archer, died in 1996. Services have yet to be announced.



Note from War Antiques author: My father and mother knew this man for 65 years....





 

I met a Tuskegee Airman in physical therapy, Monday.

 He trained as a bombadier in Mitchell B-25's and then became a B-25 pilot. They were gearing up for the Pacific Theatre when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and Nagisaki and the war ended! My mother met many in NYC when she worked at the Stagedoor Canteen. She says the tall men went into bombers and the shorter men became fighter pilots!
Anyway, while we were doing our therapy, he was nice enough to describe how one takes off and lands a B-25. He also described how to land on one engine. Glad I met the gentleman and had a chance to shake his hand!




TUSKEGEE, Ala. -- Maj. James A. Ellison returns the salute of Mac Ross as he passes down the line during review of the first class of Tuskegee cadets. (U.S. Air Force photo)



 
Pilots of the 332nd Fighter Group, "Tuskegee Airmen," the elite, all-African American unit, pose at Ramitelli, Italy: (from left to right) Lt. Dempsey Morgan, Lt. Carroll Woods, Lt. Robert Nelson Jr., Capt. Andrew D. Turner, and Lt. Clarence Lester.



 

1st Lt. Ramon F. Noches, a Tuskegee Airman assigned to the 477th Bomb Group Godman Field at Fort Knox, Ky. Lieutenant Noches was killed in a B-25G aircraft accident June 6, 1945, during night-flying training at Gunter Army Air Field.



 

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