Delaware 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Delaware House Bill HCR22 Draft / Bill

                    SPONSOR:      Rep. Dorsey Walker & Sen. Brown       Reps. Harris, Chukwuocha, Bolden, Cooke, K. Johnson, Lambert, Minor-Brown, S. Moore, Neal, Parker Selby, Phillips, Wilson-Anton, Carson, Bush; Sens. Lockman, Pinkney, Buckson, Gay, Hansen, Hocker, Hoffner, Huxtable, Lawson, Mantzavinos, S. McBride, Paradee, Pettyjohn, Poore, Richardson, Sokola, Sturgeon, Townsend, Walsh, Wilson           HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES   152nd GENERAL ASSEMBLY       HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 22       RECOGNIZING THE 4TH THURSDAY IN MARCH AS NATIONAL TUSKEGEE AIRMEN COMMEMORATION DAY.      

     

     SPONSOR:      Rep. Dorsey Walker & Sen. Brown       Reps. Harris, Chukwuocha, Bolden, Cooke, K. Johnson, Lambert, Minor-Brown, S. Moore, Neal, Parker Selby, Phillips, Wilson-Anton, Carson, Bush; Sens. Lockman, Pinkney, Buckson, Gay, Hansen, Hocker, Hoffner, Huxtable, Lawson, Mantzavinos, S. McBride, Paradee, Pettyjohn, Poore, Richardson, Sokola, Sturgeon, Townsend, Walsh, Wilson     

SPONSOR: Rep. Dorsey Walker & Sen. Brown
Reps. Harris, Chukwuocha, Bolden, Cooke, K. Johnson, Lambert, Minor-Brown, S. Moore, Neal, Parker Selby, Phillips, Wilson-Anton, Carson, Bush; Sens. Lockman, Pinkney, Buckson, Gay, Hansen, Hocker, Hoffner, Huxtable, Lawson, Mantzavinos, S. McBride, Paradee, Pettyjohn, Poore, Richardson, Sokola, Sturgeon, Townsend, Walsh, Wilson

 SPONSOR:  

 Rep. Dorsey Walker & Sen. Brown 

 Reps. Harris, Chukwuocha, Bolden, Cooke, K. Johnson, Lambert, Minor-Brown, S. Moore, Neal, Parker Selby, Phillips, Wilson-Anton, Carson, Bush; Sens. Lockman, Pinkney, Buckson, Gay, Hansen, Hocker, Hoffner, Huxtable, Lawson, Mantzavinos, S. McBride, Paradee, Pettyjohn, Poore, Richardson, Sokola, Sturgeon, Townsend, Walsh, Wilson 

   

 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 

 152nd GENERAL ASSEMBLY 

   

 HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 22 

   

 RECOGNIZING THE 4TH THURSDAY IN MARCH AS NATIONAL TUSKEGEE AIRMEN COMMEMORATION DAY. 

   

   WHEREAS,  the Tuskegee Airmen were a group of Black pilots, aircrew, ground crew, and support personnel of the U.S. Army Air Corps who fought in World War II. As the first African American flying units in the U.S. military, their many successes paved the way for the desegregation of the U.S. military, which started in 1948 when President Harry S. Truman signed Executive Order 9981; and    WHEREAS,   the history of the Tuskegee Airmen dates back to World War I, when African American men attempted to serve in U.S. air units but were denied entry. Early African American Aviators like Eugene Bullard, Cornelius Coffey, James Banning, and Delawarean, Louis R. Purnell, Sr. had to persevere beyond the unjust race-based policies in the U.S. military and discrimination in civilian aviation;  and     WHEREAS,  by 1939, only 25 African Americans were licensed pilots in the United States.     This stark inequity finally forced Congress to act. On June 27, 1939, Congress passed the Civilian Pilot Training Act, which prohibited exclusion based on race from federally funded pilot training programs;  and     WHEREAS,  six Black colleges participated in the program: Howard University, Delaware State College, Hampton University, North Carolina A&T, Tuskegee Institute and West Virginia State College. These necessary advancements in Black aviation laid the groundwork for the extraordinary achievements of African American Aviators in World War II;  and    WHEREAS,  the illustrious service record of the   Tuskegee Airmen began on March 19, 1941, when the United States Army Air Corps officially constituted the 99  th   Pursuit Squadron as the first all-Black combat squadron in the United States Armed Forces.     The squadron was trained at the newly constructed Tuskegee Army Air Field in Tuskegee, Alabama, a few miles away from the Tuskegee Institute;  and     WHEREAS,  by June 1943, the renamed 99  th   Fighter Squadron was flying combat missions over Sicily and the Mediterranean, supporting Allied bombers, naval formations, and other offensives. The Tuskegee Airmen scored several aerial victories against German FW-190s, BF-109s, and ME-262s, eventually earning three Distinguished Unit Citations in combat missions over the Mediterranean and Central Europe;  and     WHEREAS,  by World War IIs end, three other all-Black Fighter Squadrons were activated, all under the 332  nd   Fighter Group, as well as the 477th Bombardment Group flying B-25 medium bombers.     Despite their successes, the Tuskegee Airmen endured extreme adversity, including notably prejudiced and unsuccessful attempts to disband the 332  nd   Fighter Group.     The Tuskegee Airmen would fly over 15,000 combat sorties in World War II and receiving 744 air medals, including 96 Distinguished Flying Crosses, 14 Bronze Stars, and 8 Purple Hearts;  and      WHEREAS ,   As World War II ended, the Tuskegee Airmen in the 477  th   Bombardment Group staged a nonviolent demonstration to desegregate the officers club at Freeman Field, Indiana. Their demonstration for racial equity, staged between April 5-6, 1945, would prove to be a catalyst for the eventual desegregation of the U.S. Armed Forces. After the war, the Tuskegee Airmen won one last aerial victory in 1949 when they won the first ever U.S. Air Force Aerial Gunnery Competition (propeller), now known as Top Gun, beating the best pilots in the U.S. Air Force. By July of 1949, the 332  nd   Fighter Group, the 477  th   Bombardment Group, and all other all-Black Aviation units of the U.S. Air Force were deactivated as the U.S. military finally moved toward full racial integration; and    WHEREAS , The Tuskegee Airmen achieved unparalleled success, not just for their martial excellence but for their grit and determination as a trailblazing unit that would prove segregation a failed and unjust policy.    NOW, THEREFORE:    BE IT RESOLVED by the House of Representatives of the 152  nd   General Assembly of the State of Delaware, the Senate concurring therein, that the General Assembly hereby supports Congressional efforts to proclaim the 4  th   Thursday in March as National Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day.      

  WHEREAS,  the Tuskegee Airmen were a group of Black pilots, aircrew, ground crew, and support personnel of the U.S. Army Air Corps who fought in World War II. As the first African American flying units in the U.S. military, their many successes paved the way for the desegregation of the U.S. military, which started in 1948 when President Harry S. Truman signed Executive Order 9981; and 

  WHEREAS,   the history of the Tuskegee Airmen dates back to World War I, when African American men attempted to serve in U.S. air units but were denied entry. Early African American Aviators like Eugene Bullard, Cornelius Coffey, James Banning, and Delawarean, Louis R. Purnell, Sr. had to persevere beyond the unjust race-based policies in the U.S. military and discrimination in civilian aviation;  and  

  WHEREAS,  by 1939, only 25 African Americans were licensed pilots in the United States.     This stark inequity finally forced Congress to act. On June 27, 1939, Congress passed the Civilian Pilot Training Act, which prohibited exclusion based on race from federally funded pilot training programs;  and  

  WHEREAS,  six Black colleges participated in the program: Howard University, Delaware State College, Hampton University, North Carolina A&T, Tuskegee Institute and West Virginia State College. These necessary advancements in Black aviation laid the groundwork for the extraordinary achievements of African American Aviators in World War II;  and 

  WHEREAS,  the illustrious service record of the   Tuskegee Airmen began on March 19, 1941, when the United States Army Air Corps officially constituted the 99  th   Pursuit Squadron as the first all-Black combat squadron in the United States Armed Forces.     The squadron was trained at the newly constructed Tuskegee Army Air Field in Tuskegee, Alabama, a few miles away from the Tuskegee Institute;  and  

  WHEREAS,  by June 1943, the renamed 99  th   Fighter Squadron was flying combat missions over Sicily and the Mediterranean, supporting Allied bombers, naval formations, and other offensives. The Tuskegee Airmen scored several aerial victories against German FW-190s, BF-109s, and ME-262s, eventually earning three Distinguished Unit Citations in combat missions over the Mediterranean and Central Europe;  and  

  WHEREAS,  by World War IIs end, three other all-Black Fighter Squadrons were activated, all under the 332  nd   Fighter Group, as well as the 477th Bombardment Group flying B-25 medium bombers.     Despite their successes, the Tuskegee Airmen endured extreme adversity, including notably prejudiced and unsuccessful attempts to disband the 332  nd   Fighter Group.     The Tuskegee Airmen would fly over 15,000 combat sorties in World War II and receiving 744 air medals, including 96 Distinguished Flying Crosses, 14 Bronze Stars, and 8 Purple Hearts;  and  

   WHEREAS ,   As World War II ended, the Tuskegee Airmen in the 477  th   Bombardment Group staged a nonviolent demonstration to desegregate the officers club at Freeman Field, Indiana. Their demonstration for racial equity, staged between April 5-6, 1945, would prove to be a catalyst for the eventual desegregation of the U.S. Armed Forces. After the war, the Tuskegee Airmen won one last aerial victory in 1949 when they won the first ever U.S. Air Force Aerial Gunnery Competition (propeller), now known as Top Gun, beating the best pilots in the U.S. Air Force. By July of 1949, the 332  nd   Fighter Group, the 477  th   Bombardment Group, and all other all-Black Aviation units of the U.S. Air Force were deactivated as the U.S. military finally moved toward full racial integration; and 

  WHEREAS , The Tuskegee Airmen achieved unparalleled success, not just for their martial excellence but for their grit and determination as a trailblazing unit that would prove segregation a failed and unjust policy. 

  NOW, THEREFORE: 

  BE IT RESOLVED by the House of Representatives of the 152  nd   General Assembly of the State of Delaware, the Senate concurring therein, that the General Assembly hereby supports Congressional efforts to proclaim the 4  th   Thursday in March as National Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day. 

   

  SYNOPSIS   This Concurrent Resolution supports Congressional efforts to proclaim the 4th Thursday in March a National Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day.            

 SYNOPSIS 

 This Concurrent Resolution supports Congressional efforts to proclaim the 4th Thursday in March a National Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day.