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Downloaded from
YTS.MX
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[Harry Stewart]
Isn't that something?
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Official YIFY movies site:
YTS.MX
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[James Harvey] Yeah, it is.
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[Harry Stewart] Boy,
what a small world.
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[James Harvey]
Everything had to be perfect.
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The instructor gave me a
maneuver to practice until
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my next check ride.
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I practice, practice, practice
until I got it perfect.
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I'm having a
birthday party next year.
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[Harry Stewart] The 100th?
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[James Harvey] Huh?
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- 100?
- Yeah.
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[Harry Stewart] You fly along
and the sky is so tranquil.
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And then all of
a sudden: bang!
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[gunfire]
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And here's an 88 anti-aircraft
shell that might explode
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right next to you.
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[James Harvey] Each one of
us wanted to be the best.
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You get all
those best together.
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You've got quite
an organization.
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And that's what we had.
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[George Hardy] We painted
not only the rudder, but
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the whole damn tail red.
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And so became known
as the "Red Tails."
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And it was just a symbol.
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Because people started talking
about, "The Real Red Tails."
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[breathing with apparatus]
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[splash]
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[Narrator] In the waters
of Lake Huron,
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lies a P-39 Airacobra
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flown during a Tuskegee
training mission in 1944.
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[Drew Losinski] Hey there!
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[David Losinski]
Please stand by.
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[muffled yell].
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[Wayne Lusardi] Let me
know when there are 12 there.
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[Nicholas Lusardi] I got it.
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[DNR Staffer] You ready?
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[Wayne Lusardi] You ready?
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[Narrator] A recovery team is
piecing together what happened
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in these waters
all those years ago.
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[Wayne Lusardi] How many
people know that there are
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World War II assets and
archeological sites in America,
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no less in the Great Lakes?
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[Narrator] Wayne Lusardi
and Brian Smith...
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[Dr. Brian Smith] Gary, do
you want to zip me up?
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[Narrator] ...partnered up six
years ago and they've been
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dedicated to this unique
chapter of America's
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first Black military
airmen ever since.
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[Dr. Brian Smith] Bringing
all this back together,
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especially in a museum of the
Tuskegee Airmen,
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it's going to just
solidify the fact that
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these men who were not
treated as equal citizens,
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were willing
to give their lives.
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I think what's not in the
history books is...
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just the blood,
sweat, and tears that the
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Tuskegee airmen went through
to fight for their country.
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[Narrator] In training
missions alone, 15 young men
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lost their lives here
between 1943 and 1944.
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[Wayne Lusardi] We have a
sense of urgency to bring the
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aircraft up because
of its deterioration,
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because of a potential
looting threat.
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The clock is
definitely ticking.
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[propeller ticking]
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[Narrator] The plane was piloted
by 22-year-old Frank Moody,
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who had already
completed the rigors of the
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fledgling Tuskegee program.
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[Wayne Lusardi] Recovering
this from the lake bottom is
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really going to hopefully
lead to answering a lot of the
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00:04:23,013 --> 00:04:26,224
questions that we
have about the site.
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[Narrator] The Great Lakes
were an advanced training site,
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so by the time the
pilots arrived here,
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they were already the
cream of the crop.
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[Harry Stewart Jr] As a kid,
I used to view the planes
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taking off and landing and
fantasizing about myself being
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the pilot who's
flying the plane.
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So, I think that's what
actually pointed me towards
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trying to get into the
aviation field when
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World War II started.
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[Narrator] Training for Tuskegee
pilots on the home front
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was difficult and dangerous.
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[Harry Stewart Jr] There's
this anxiety, every time you
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get in that cockpit, you're
always got it in the back of
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your mind the
danger that you're in.
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[Dr. Brian Smith] The coastline
here in the Great Lakes was
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just like the
coastline in France.
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[gunfire]
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[James Harvey] I didn't know
what to expect.
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All this is new to me.
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I completed the exam, passed it,
then went off to learn to fly.
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[Dr. Brian Smith] So, they
trained here in P-39 aircraft.
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They would take off from
Selfridge and fly no more than
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50 feet above trees, hills,
mountains, all the way to
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Muskegon, turn around and
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come back just to prepare
them for combat.
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[♪ jazzy music]
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[Narrator] At that time,
Selfridge Field would have
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been abuzz with
wartime activity.
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The 332nd had moved from
Tuskegee, Alabama to Michigan
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and was supported by young men
who had volunteered to join
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the war effort,
just like Frank Moody.
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[Wayne Lusardi] He started
working for an aviation
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manufacturing company during
the war and then ultimately
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was able to get a spot at
Tuskegee, where he earned his
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wings in February 1944.
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[Dr. Brian Smith] He had gone
through the primary training,
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the basic training, the
advanced training,
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and he was in
combat training here
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at Selfridge Air
National Guard Base.
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[Matt Delmont] It's important
to remember how young these
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men and women were when they
were called into the service,
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taking on these
training missions.
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Each time you go up, you could
potentially lose your life and
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you're training to go to war.
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[John Harrison] I volunteered
to serve my country and
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I'm ready to serve my
country and the war.
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[Matt Delmont] Their patriotism
was deep and profound
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because they not only wanted to
win these military battles,
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but they also wanted to change
what America was about.
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[Soldier]
This isn't the Army's war.
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It isn't the Navy's war.
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It's the war of all Americans.
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[Narrator] But at the time,
the military didn't see
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all Americans as fit
to serve equally.
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It took the lobbying of civil
rights activists to force
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Congress to alter the
Selective Service Act of 1940.
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[Matt Delmont] The
Selective Service Act has
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non-discrimination provisions
that are written into it based
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on the previous protests
of civil right activists.
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00:08:01,523 --> 00:08:03,692
That means that Black
Americans can't be excluded
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from military service.
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[Harry Stewart Jr] Well, I
volunteered at 17, but I was
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00:08:10,615 --> 00:08:12,909
taken into the service at 18.
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At the beginning of
World War II,
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they had a mandatory for all
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00:08:18,665 --> 00:08:25,004
able-bodied males between
the ages of 18 and 36
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were to register for the draft.
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[Draft Officer] What
machines did you operate?
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00:08:30,218 --> 00:08:32,929
[Draftee] I operated boring
mills, tool grinders,
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00:08:32,929 --> 00:08:35,306
drill presses, planes.
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[Harry Stewart Jr] But most of
the African American soldiers,
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00:08:38,601 --> 00:08:41,396
even though they did a fine job,
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00:08:41,396 --> 00:08:43,815
they were segregated
to the point where
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00:08:43,815 --> 00:08:47,569
they were put into
strictly menial labor.
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00:08:49,946 --> 00:08:51,823
[Matt Delmont] White military
leaders just didn't believe
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00:08:51,823 --> 00:08:53,992
that Black Americans had
the intelligence, courage,
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00:08:53,992 --> 00:08:56,786
bravery, to be able to be
good soldiers, and they,
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00:08:56,786 --> 00:09:00,373
military leaders wrote that into
the official documentation.
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00:09:01,583 --> 00:09:02,917
[James Harvey] "According
to the studies, a Negro was
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00:09:02,917 --> 00:09:05,712
barely qualified
for combat duty.
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00:09:05,712 --> 00:09:10,300
Was by nature subservient,
mentally inferior, and
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00:09:10,300 --> 00:09:14,846
believed himself to be
inferior to the White man.
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Was susceptible to crowd
psychology, cannot control
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himself in the face of danger,
and did not have the initiative,
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00:09:23,730 --> 00:09:26,941
courage, and resourcefulness
of the White man."
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That's what we
had to put up with.
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All wrong.
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00:09:35,200 --> 00:09:38,995
[Lee Archer] I went down
to join the Army Air Corps.
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Took the test.
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Did very well on it, and after
I had hassled them a bit about
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not being called, I was
informed by the military that
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I would never be called for
the Army Air Corps because
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there were no colored units.
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There was never
going to be one.
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There was no way I could go.
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00:10:02,560 --> 00:10:05,146
[Narrator] But the Black
activist movement continued
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00:10:05,146 --> 00:10:08,066
its political assault
on Washington
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00:10:08,066 --> 00:10:12,070
demanding military equality.
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00:10:13,279 --> 00:10:15,406
[Matt Delmont] And what Black
activists are demanding are
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all things related to the war:
they want access to defense
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00:10:18,326 --> 00:10:20,453
industry jobs and they want
specific parts of the military
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00:10:20,453 --> 00:10:23,331
to be opened up, particularly
things like the Army Air Corps.
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00:10:23,748 --> 00:10:25,750
The White House, Roosevelt,
and other federal officials
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00:10:25,750 --> 00:10:28,419
just can't ignore anymore.
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[James Harvey] Roosevelt
was running for a third term.
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The Negro press and the NAACP,
they were on the backs of
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Congress wanting
something to happen.
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And Roosevelt figured that if
he started a fighter squadron,
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00:10:54,737 --> 00:10:57,824
he'd get the Black vote,
which he did.
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And he won.
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But all politics; but
it worked out for us.
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[Narrator] In January 1941,
the war department established
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the 99th Pursuit Squadron,
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00:11:16,342 --> 00:11:18,887
based out of Tuskegee, Alabama.
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00:11:21,848 --> 00:11:25,810
It was the first segregated unit
within the Army Air Corps.
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[President Roosevelt] I'm proud
of what Tuskegee has done.
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I don't whether in any
individual institution,
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00:11:34,777 --> 00:11:40,366
realize how much they are being
watched by the outside world.
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00:11:43,786 --> 00:11:45,580
[Matt Delmont] They were
trained to be successful
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00:11:45,580 --> 00:11:47,790
fighter pilots, but they're
also trained to really prove
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00:11:47,790 --> 00:11:50,084
to the larger military
establishment that
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00:11:50,084 --> 00:11:53,254
Black Americans
could do this work.
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[Narrator] And that's exactly
what Frank Moody was doing as
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00:11:56,174 --> 00:11:59,260
he advanced
through the program.
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00:12:00,386 --> 00:12:02,680
[Dr. Brian Smith] An airman
would have started out at
196
00:12:02,680 --> 00:12:07,268
Tuskegee and then move
to another base that
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00:12:07,268 --> 00:12:10,188
specifically focused
on combat training.
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00:12:10,188 --> 00:12:12,982
And that's why they
came to Selfridge.
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00:12:16,903 --> 00:12:20,823
They were learning how to come
from over the horizon on the
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00:12:20,823 --> 00:12:25,161
water to strafe or destroy
radar towers or installation
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00:12:25,161 --> 00:12:27,747
along the coast.
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00:12:32,710 --> 00:12:35,922
[Wayne Lusardi] On the morning
of April 11th, 1944, Frank Moody
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00:12:35,922 --> 00:12:38,549
was flying one of
the most sophisticated
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00:12:38,549 --> 00:12:42,345
fighter aircraft built at
the time: the P-39.
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00:12:42,345 --> 00:12:45,974
And did his pre-flight, and
the mission for the day was to
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00:12:45,974 --> 00:12:49,519
leave early in the morning and
to fly up over Lake Huron,
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00:12:49,519 --> 00:12:51,854
up the Saint Claire River, and
get out over the Lake Huron
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and do some gunnery exercises.
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[Dr. Brian Smith]
A P-39 Airacobra.
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00:13:00,613 --> 00:13:04,617
That's a unique airplane; the
engine was behind the pilot.
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00:13:04,617 --> 00:13:07,787
It had four 50-caliber machine
guns, two of which sat
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00:13:07,787 --> 00:13:10,540
right on top of the cowling.
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00:13:10,540 --> 00:13:13,835
In the middle of the airplane,
was a 37-millimeter canon,
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00:13:13,835 --> 00:13:18,381
which shot a shell
that would destroy tanks.
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00:13:23,386 --> 00:13:25,013
[Wayne Lusardi] So, four
aircraft, all P-39s,
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00:13:25,013 --> 00:13:28,016
left Selfridge Field.
217
00:13:31,853 --> 00:13:34,022
Right before 8:00 in the
morning, they came up over
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00:13:34,022 --> 00:13:35,440
Lake Huron.
219
00:13:35,440 --> 00:13:37,817
They were flying in
formation from south to north.
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00:13:37,817 --> 00:13:42,030
And when it was Lieutenant
Moody's time, he discharged
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00:13:42,030 --> 00:13:43,990
his weapons,
fired into the lake.
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00:13:43,990 --> 00:13:47,285
[gunfire]
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00:13:47,827 --> 00:13:50,038
And then something happened to
the aircraft that resulted in
224
00:13:50,038 --> 00:13:53,875
an almost instantaneous crash
into the water, cartwheeling
225
00:13:53,875 --> 00:13:55,877
of the aircraft,
and he was gone.
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00:13:55,877 --> 00:13:58,755
He was killed
immediately in that accident.
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00:14:01,299 --> 00:14:04,427
[Narrator] His body was
recovered in 54 days,
228
00:14:04,427 --> 00:14:08,014
but the plane was never found.
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00:14:08,014 --> 00:14:11,476
Until April 11, 2014,
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00:14:11,893 --> 00:14:15,521
exactly 70 years to
the date of the crash.
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00:14:23,112 --> 00:14:25,865
[Narrator] Frank Moody's
P-39 was discovered by
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00:14:25,865 --> 00:14:30,703
Drew and David Losinski,
a father-son dive team.
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00:14:32,121 --> 00:14:35,041
[David Losinski] We were diving,
my son and I, and the water
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00:14:35,041 --> 00:14:37,835
was crystal clear, this was
early in the Spring, I think.
235
00:14:39,212 --> 00:14:41,005
We went out and
went to the first spot.
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00:14:41,005 --> 00:14:43,633
We figured it was a rock, I
think, and the second spot,
237
00:14:43,633 --> 00:14:46,219
Drew's at the very bow of
the boat looking down;
238
00:14:46,219 --> 00:14:47,178
we're looking, and he goes,
239
00:14:47,512 --> 00:14:50,306
"Dad, I think you found,
we found an airplane!"
240
00:14:50,306 --> 00:14:52,475
And I'm back driving the boat,
241
00:14:52,475 --> 00:14:54,977
and I says, you know
how parents are,
242
00:14:54,977 --> 00:14:56,813
"yeah, sure, okay."
243
00:14:56,813 --> 00:14:59,524
"No, Dad, it's
really an airplane."
244
00:15:02,985 --> 00:15:05,905
[plash, bubbles]
245
00:15:07,573 --> 00:15:09,951
The main thing that we wanted
to do was to find out what the
246
00:15:09,951 --> 00:15:13,329
plane was or how it
got there, whose it was.
247
00:15:14,455 --> 00:15:18,167
We were down swimming,
looking at the wing,
248
00:15:21,045 --> 00:15:23,297
and we dust it off.
249
00:15:25,258 --> 00:15:28,302
You could see the
red position light.
250
00:15:28,302 --> 00:15:32,265
And looking at pictures,
I figured there should be
251
00:15:32,265 --> 00:15:35,059
something, something
painted, so we fanned it off.
252
00:15:35,643 --> 00:15:39,230
And there was a star,
a box with a star.
253
00:15:40,565 --> 00:15:46,654
It means that it's military,
and it's a U.S. military plane.
254
00:15:51,367 --> 00:15:53,661
[Drew Losinski] So later on,
we found out through lots of
255
00:15:53,661 --> 00:15:56,873
research and finding key parts
of the airplane, we got the
256
00:15:56,873 --> 00:16:00,084
radio call number, which we
linked to the accident report,
257
00:16:00,084 --> 00:16:05,298
which told us that we found
that plane 70 years to the
258
00:16:05,298 --> 00:16:08,134
date of when it crashed.
259
00:16:09,886 --> 00:16:12,430
It was pretty unbelievable.
260
00:16:16,058 --> 00:16:18,394
[Wayne Lusardi] The Losinski's
became immediate stewards
261
00:16:18,394 --> 00:16:19,979
of this site.
262
00:16:19,979 --> 00:16:21,981
We started kind of putting our
head together about
263
00:16:21,981 --> 00:16:24,233
what are the options.
264
00:16:24,233 --> 00:16:25,151
Should we leave it in place?
265
00:16:25,651 --> 00:16:28,279
Should we document the entire
wreck site ahead of time?
266
00:16:28,279 --> 00:16:31,449
Should it be recovered
either in part or partially?
267
00:16:32,867 --> 00:16:35,870
[Narrator] Finding Frank Moody's
plane triggered one of
268
00:16:35,870 --> 00:16:40,249
the most important World War II
archeological missions in
269
00:16:40,249 --> 00:16:42,752
the Great Lakes.
270
00:16:43,461 --> 00:16:46,214
[Wayne Lusardi] This is the
first airplane that has been
271
00:16:46,214 --> 00:16:49,175
archeologically documented
in the state of Michigan.
272
00:16:49,175 --> 00:16:51,135
We're trying to determine a
cause of the accident;
273
00:16:51,135 --> 00:16:53,387
we're trying to see
how an intact,
274
00:16:53,387 --> 00:16:56,849
very complicated machine,
suddenly breaks apart.
275
00:17:02,480 --> 00:17:04,649
[Narrator] Recovering a plane
that's been underwater for
276
00:17:04,649 --> 00:17:07,944
70 years is no easy task.
277
00:17:10,196 --> 00:17:12,281
It's a multi-year effort,
278
00:17:12,281 --> 00:17:14,283
trying to raise
it piece by piece
279
00:17:14,283 --> 00:17:18,079
and then immediately
start preservation efforts.
280
00:17:21,582 --> 00:17:22,708
And the collaboration with the
281
00:17:23,000 --> 00:17:27,171
Tuskegee Airmen National
Museum has been key.
282
00:17:33,844 --> 00:17:35,638
[Dr. Brian Smith] Frank Moody
and his crash brings to light
283
00:17:35,638 --> 00:17:39,475
the sacrifices that the Airmen
made just to get to combat.
284
00:17:41,560 --> 00:17:43,271
[Narrator] While we don't have
his first-hand accounts from
285
00:17:43,271 --> 00:17:48,734
Frank, we do from
other Tuskegee Airmen.
286
00:17:57,868 --> 00:17:59,620
[Harry Stewart Jr] I remember
that when I went into the
287
00:17:59,620 --> 00:18:04,333
service, the first place
I was assigned to was
288
00:18:04,333 --> 00:18:07,086
Kessler Field, Mississippi,
289
00:18:07,086 --> 00:18:11,173
that being below what they
call the Mason-Dixon Line.
290
00:18:12,300 --> 00:18:15,970
Below that geographical point,
segregation was the law.
291
00:18:15,970 --> 00:18:19,598
It was not a choice,
but a law there.
292
00:18:21,475 --> 00:18:23,269
[Matt Delmont] For Moody and
other Tuskegee pilots,
293
00:18:23,269 --> 00:18:25,229
they're always fighting two
battles at the same time.
294
00:18:25,229 --> 00:18:26,939
They're trained to fight a
military battle, which was
295
00:18:26,939 --> 00:18:29,400
frightening in its own right,
but they're also fighting a
296
00:18:29,400 --> 00:18:31,235
battle against racism,
297
00:18:31,235 --> 00:18:33,487
a battle against
second-class citizenship.
298
00:18:34,155 --> 00:18:35,489
[James Harvey] We
got to Washington D.C.
299
00:18:35,489 --> 00:18:38,409
a little early, so I got
off the train, went and had
300
00:18:38,409 --> 00:18:41,370
breakfast, came back, went
to get in the car I was in,
301
00:18:41,370 --> 00:18:44,373
conductor says,
no, no, no, no.
302
00:18:44,373 --> 00:18:47,168
You ride in the car
where Negroes ride.
303
00:18:47,168 --> 00:18:52,214
So, that was my introduction
to segregation and the South.
304
00:18:56,886 --> 00:18:58,137
[Matt Delmont] So, if you're
trying to think of a welcoming
305
00:18:58,596 --> 00:19:01,474
place to train Black troops,
Alabama in the 1940s wouldn't
306
00:19:01,474 --> 00:19:05,019
be the first place
that you would think of.
307
00:19:08,272 --> 00:19:10,316
One of the challenges at
Tuskegee Air Base was that it
308
00:19:10,316 --> 00:19:13,152
was a Jim Crow base in a Jim
Crow city in a Jim Crow state,
309
00:19:13,152 --> 00:19:15,696
and that shaped almost every
aspect of what training was
310
00:19:15,696 --> 00:19:17,698
like for these Black pilots.
311
00:19:17,698 --> 00:19:19,241
[James Harvey] I
didn't go to town.
312
00:19:19,241 --> 00:19:21,410
I stayed on the
base the whole time.
313
00:19:21,410 --> 00:19:24,330
You get into
trouble going into town.
314
00:19:25,206 --> 00:19:28,376
Now, down at Tuskegee, one of
the guys went into town,
315
00:19:28,376 --> 00:19:32,588
and the Sheriff told him, if I
ever catch you back in town,
316
00:19:32,588 --> 00:19:34,382
I'll blow your brains out.
317
00:19:44,392 --> 00:19:45,559
[Matt Delmont] The Tuskegee
Airmen had to channel their
318
00:19:45,893 --> 00:19:49,230
frustration, their anger, into
their military performance.
319
00:19:52,358 --> 00:19:53,776
[Harry Stewart Jr] My heart
must have skipped a couple of
320
00:19:54,068 --> 00:19:56,904
beats and that type of thing,
but I guess it was more with
321
00:19:56,904 --> 00:19:59,615
joy than anything else.
322
00:19:59,615 --> 00:20:04,745
I took off, and as soon as I
broke grounds, I just felt
323
00:20:04,745 --> 00:20:09,417
this exhilaration; I've done it,
I've done it, I've done it!
324
00:20:12,253 --> 00:20:18,843
[plane engine rumbling]
325
00:20:24,348 --> 00:20:30,104
[♪ triumphant music]
326
00:20:33,315 --> 00:20:35,776
[Narrator] Despite their
excellence, the military and
327
00:20:35,776 --> 00:20:38,904
the public were not on board,
328
00:20:38,904 --> 00:20:43,409
so the NAACP and the
Black press doubled down.
329
00:20:46,912 --> 00:20:48,622
[Matt Delmont] The Black press
understood themselves
330
00:20:48,622 --> 00:20:50,249
as a fighting press.
331
00:20:50,249 --> 00:20:51,709
And the thing they were
fighting for in the lead up to
332
00:20:51,709 --> 00:20:53,544
World War II and then during
World War II was to make sure
333
00:20:53,544 --> 00:20:55,880
Black Americans had a chance
to be able to serve their
334
00:20:55,880 --> 00:20:58,215
country equally.
335
00:21:01,260 --> 00:21:04,388
[Narrator] This relentless
advocacy laid the foundation
336
00:21:04,388 --> 00:21:08,809
for an innovative initiative:
the Double Victory Campaign.
337
00:21:12,813 --> 00:21:14,899
[Matt Delmont] The Double V
Campaign, is really the
338
00:21:14,899 --> 00:21:17,234
rallying cry for Black
Americans during the war.
339
00:21:17,234 --> 00:21:19,069
It's launched by the
Pittsburgh Courier.
340
00:21:19,069 --> 00:21:21,322
What they're calling for is a
victory over fascism abroad
341
00:21:21,322 --> 00:21:23,407
and victory over
racism at home.
342
00:21:33,209 --> 00:21:36,504
[Narrator] Eleanor Roosevelt
lent her powerful voice to the
343
00:21:36,504 --> 00:21:39,465
fight early on.
344
00:21:39,465 --> 00:21:41,217
[Newsreel Narrator] Everything
Eleanor Roosevelt says and
345
00:21:41,217 --> 00:21:43,677
does becomes news.
346
00:21:43,677 --> 00:21:47,556
[James Harvey] Well, she
had always heard that Negroes
347
00:21:47,556 --> 00:21:52,144
could not fly airplanes,
so she went to Tuskegee,
348
00:21:52,144 --> 00:21:55,523
and she rode with a guy we
call "Chief" Anderson.
349
00:21:55,523 --> 00:21:57,691
And she found out we
can fly airplanes
350
00:21:57,691 --> 00:22:00,152
just like anybody else.
351
00:22:00,152 --> 00:22:04,406
So, when they took the picture
of she and Chief Anderson in
352
00:22:04,406 --> 00:22:08,160
the airplane and it was
in all the newspapers
353
00:22:08,160 --> 00:22:10,371
throughout the country.
354
00:22:10,371 --> 00:22:13,874
That sealed the
deal right there.
355
00:22:13,874 --> 00:22:17,378
Yes, they can fly
just like anybody else.
356
00:22:17,378 --> 00:22:19,964
As a matter of fact,
they can fly better.
357
00:22:19,964 --> 00:22:21,757
[laughs]
358
00:22:21,757 --> 00:22:23,842
Just ask me.
359
00:22:33,519 --> 00:22:37,773
[Narrator] In 1942, the first
class of cadets graduated from
360
00:22:37,773 --> 00:22:41,026
Tuskegee Army Airfield.
361
00:22:42,486 --> 00:22:45,197
[Harry Stewart Jr] One of the
most fantastic days in my life
362
00:22:45,197 --> 00:22:48,242
there that I can never forget.
363
00:22:48,868 --> 00:22:52,663
But it was graduation day, and
just before going up and being
364
00:22:52,663 --> 00:22:57,501
presented my wings and
my bars, as I said,
365
00:22:57,501 --> 00:23:00,296
"I think I've done it!"
366
00:23:00,880 --> 00:23:02,339
[George Hardy] Yes,
it was a special day.
367
00:23:02,339 --> 00:23:06,427
We succeeded in the training
and got our wings and now
368
00:23:06,427 --> 00:23:09,346
we're commissioned as an
actual Second Lieutenant in
369
00:23:09,346 --> 00:23:11,515
the United States Army.
370
00:23:11,515 --> 00:23:13,350
And in July, a year before,
371
00:23:13,350 --> 00:23:15,436
I was just getting
into the service.
372
00:23:15,436 --> 00:23:17,021
And now I'm a pilot.
373
00:23:17,021 --> 00:23:19,607
I can fly airplanes.
374
00:23:25,237 --> 00:23:28,407
[Narrator] But the
risks were great.
375
00:23:29,241 --> 00:23:33,704
Nearly 15,000 servicemen died
during training exercises
376
00:23:33,704 --> 00:23:36,457
in the United States alone.
377
00:23:43,589 --> 00:23:48,427
[♪ somber music]
378
00:23:48,427 --> 00:23:52,389
Today, the archeological quest
to understand what happened to
379
00:23:52,389 --> 00:23:56,644
Frank Moody is in
its tenth year.
380
00:23:56,644 --> 00:23:59,688
[Wayne Lusardi] According to
the U.S. Army accident report,
381
00:23:59,688 --> 00:24:02,232
the other three pilots
that were in formation
382
00:24:02,232 --> 00:24:04,860
with Lieutenant
Frank Moody, two of them
383
00:24:04,860 --> 00:24:08,155
reported seeing fragments
coming off of the aircraft,
384
00:24:08,155 --> 00:24:11,200
near the forward fuselage.
385
00:24:17,081 --> 00:24:19,541
It's always a possibility
that there's some kind of
386
00:24:19,541 --> 00:24:22,461
mechanical problem
with the aircraft.
387
00:24:23,545 --> 00:24:25,631
[Dr. Brian Smith] The airplane
started to shake apart,
388
00:24:25,631 --> 00:24:27,383
and he lost control.
389
00:24:27,383 --> 00:24:30,469
The airplane nosed into
the lake, Lake Huron.
390
00:24:33,347 --> 00:24:34,807
[Wayne Lusardi] The Army,
because they never found the
391
00:24:34,807 --> 00:24:37,601
airplane, really never came
to any conclusions as to
392
00:24:37,601 --> 00:24:39,853
what caused the accident.
393
00:24:47,152 --> 00:24:49,321
[Narrator] When the team
started exploring the site in
394
00:24:49,321 --> 00:24:53,283
2015, they had to figure out
the best way to recover
395
00:24:53,283 --> 00:24:56,537
all of the parts.
396
00:24:58,706 --> 00:25:02,042
[Wayne Lusardi] Looking at a
vastly scattered airplane
397
00:25:02,042 --> 00:25:04,044
has been a challenge.
398
00:25:04,044 --> 00:25:05,170
It became very overwhelming.
399
00:25:05,546 --> 00:25:08,424
It's like, okay, well, how
are we going to do this?
400
00:25:09,758 --> 00:25:12,386
The ultimate goal of this
project is to bring the
401
00:25:12,386 --> 00:25:15,472
aircraft up in its entirety.
402
00:25:21,770 --> 00:25:23,772
Nick, you have the go-pro?
403
00:25:23,772 --> 00:25:25,691
[Nicholas Lusardi] Yep.
404
00:25:31,905 --> 00:25:35,159
[splashing]
405
00:25:40,831 --> 00:25:43,333
[splashing]
406
00:25:43,333 --> 00:25:44,626
[Wayne Lusardi]
The site is broken.
407
00:25:44,626 --> 00:25:46,086
It's highly disarticulated.
408
00:25:46,378 --> 00:25:48,464
You had and airplane that was
roughly 30 feet in length and
409
00:25:48,464 --> 00:25:51,967
about a 32-foot wingspan that
is now in literally thousands
410
00:25:51,967 --> 00:25:54,887
of pieces across
the lake floor.
411
00:26:02,186 --> 00:26:04,313
[gunfire]
412
00:26:04,313 --> 00:26:07,107
[David Losinski]
Gimme that knife for the cable.
413
00:26:11,820 --> 00:26:14,156
[Drew Losinski] Alright.
Winch up.
414
00:26:16,784 --> 00:26:19,244
[radio chatter]
415
00:26:20,287 --> 00:26:23,248
[Dr. Brian Smith] We got this
humongous propeller blade
416
00:26:23,248 --> 00:26:25,751
with the gearbox.
417
00:26:28,045 --> 00:26:30,422
[David Losinski] I say stop.
418
00:26:34,968 --> 00:26:37,179
Cool!
419
00:26:46,396 --> 00:26:48,816
[Wayne Lusardi] The
accident report suggested that
420
00:26:48,816 --> 00:26:51,276
something may have happened
up forward in the fuselage,
421
00:26:51,276 --> 00:26:53,821
and that could have
been a propeller issue.
422
00:26:53,821 --> 00:26:55,030
[Dr. Brian Smith] Of course,
I was imagining
423
00:26:55,030 --> 00:26:56,240
the whole airplane.
424
00:26:56,657 --> 00:26:59,118
[Wayne Lusardi] That's exactly
what I was thinking too.
425
00:26:59,493 --> 00:27:02,246
The remarkable thing is
how far apart they all are.
426
00:27:02,246 --> 00:27:06,250
You know, this one was 500
feet beyond, or the single
427
00:27:06,250 --> 00:27:09,503
blade was 500 feet north,
and the other one was
428
00:27:09,503 --> 00:27:11,880
1,200 feet
to the south of it.
429
00:27:11,880 --> 00:27:14,258
[Dr. Brian Smith] This is maybe
the last piece in the puzzle
430
00:27:14,258 --> 00:27:16,885
of why the airplane went down.
431
00:27:16,885 --> 00:27:19,346
It's, so far, you know,
up until this point,
432
00:27:19,346 --> 00:27:21,056
it's just been unexplainable.
433
00:27:21,056 --> 00:27:25,602
It's about
70-some years and, wow.
434
00:27:26,937 --> 00:27:30,315
[Wayne Lusardi]
Yeah, it's pretty crazy.
435
00:27:37,739 --> 00:27:44,830
[♪ somber music]
436
00:27:47,958 --> 00:27:49,877
[Narrator] By the time
Frank Moody was flying his
437
00:27:49,877 --> 00:27:52,838
training missions,
Tuskegee Airmen had
438
00:27:52,838 --> 00:27:56,508
been in the European
theater for over a year.
439
00:28:01,305 --> 00:28:07,519
[♪ military music]
440
00:28:07,519 --> 00:28:09,062
[Newsreel Narrator] Wing
cameras, synchronized with
441
00:28:09,062 --> 00:28:12,065
blazing guns, record dramatic
evidence of Nazi planes
442
00:28:12,065 --> 00:28:14,151
blasted from the skies.
443
00:28:14,151 --> 00:28:19,239
[gunfire]
444
00:28:20,908 --> 00:28:22,951
[Lee Archer] I never thought
about air-to-air combat as
445
00:28:22,951 --> 00:28:24,870
a big problem.
446
00:28:24,870 --> 00:28:27,956
[gunfire]
447
00:28:27,956 --> 00:28:29,750
I looked for it.
448
00:28:29,750 --> 00:28:33,587
I'd be flying along, "oh, I hope
we get some enemy aircraft."
449
00:28:33,587 --> 00:28:36,924
I thought about that is
a duel between two men.
450
00:28:36,924 --> 00:28:40,344
I believed that I was a
competent pilot, and I knew in
451
00:28:40,344 --> 00:28:42,888
my mind that I was.
452
00:28:43,472 --> 00:28:46,934
[gunfire]
453
00:28:50,812 --> 00:28:52,522
[Narrator] Lee Archer flew
under the command of
454
00:28:52,522 --> 00:28:55,901
Benjamin O. Davis, Junior.
455
00:28:58,737 --> 00:29:00,113
[Matt Delmont] Davis is one
of the amazing figures
456
00:29:00,113 --> 00:29:01,615
from World War II.
457
00:29:01,615 --> 00:29:03,533
He graduates from
West Point in 1936.
458
00:29:03,533 --> 00:29:05,619
He's the first Black person
to graduate from West Point
459
00:29:05,619 --> 00:29:08,038
in the 20th century,
only the fourth overall.
460
00:29:08,038 --> 00:29:09,998
It's only with the Tuskegee
Experiment getting started
461
00:29:09,998 --> 00:29:11,959
that he has the opportunity to
pursue his lifelong dream of
462
00:29:11,959 --> 00:29:13,877
becoming a pilot.
463
00:29:13,877 --> 00:29:16,880
[James Harvey] He
was a no-nonsense guy.
464
00:29:16,880 --> 00:29:18,924
Everything had
to be done right.
465
00:29:18,924 --> 00:29:22,010
And you can't
knock him for that.
466
00:29:22,010 --> 00:29:24,888
That's the way things should
be no matter what you do,
467
00:29:24,888 --> 00:29:26,181
you do it right.
468
00:29:26,181 --> 00:29:29,142
And he was our commander.
469
00:29:29,142 --> 00:29:31,144
[William Holloman] He made
a military man out of me.
470
00:29:31,144 --> 00:29:34,398
I think that he
taught us discipline.
471
00:29:34,398 --> 00:29:38,235
And he always tried to
encourage us to improve
472
00:29:38,235 --> 00:29:42,280
ourselves because he said,
"America's watching you."
473
00:29:46,660 --> 00:29:51,164
[drone whirring]
474
00:29:56,878 --> 00:29:58,630
[Wayne Lusardi] Today
is a really big deal.
475
00:29:58,630 --> 00:29:59,798
It's a major
piece of the puzzle.
476
00:30:00,340 --> 00:30:01,842
It's going to tell us a lot
about the airplane and what
477
00:30:01,842 --> 00:30:05,762
was going on with it when
Lieutenant Moody crashed here.
478
00:30:11,685 --> 00:30:13,562
[splash]
479
00:30:16,940 --> 00:30:18,859
[Dr. Brian Smith] It's
really murky down there.
480
00:30:18,859 --> 00:30:20,610
I thought it would be
better today because
481
00:30:20,610 --> 00:30:21,987
it's sunny and calm.
482
00:30:21,987 --> 00:30:24,865
I think yesterday just
stirred everything up.
483
00:30:28,452 --> 00:30:30,078
[David Losinski] We're
still waiting on straps, ok?
484
00:30:30,078 --> 00:30:32,247
[David Losinski] Ok.
485
00:30:37,210 --> 00:30:38,879
[David Losinski] Do
not move the cable.
486
00:30:39,379 --> 00:30:41,965
Very good. Good.
487
00:30:41,965 --> 00:30:43,884
[Dr. Brian Smith] In a few
minutes we're going to see
488
00:30:43,884 --> 00:30:47,929
Alison engine coming up that
powered the P-39 that
489
00:30:47,929 --> 00:30:50,474
Frank Moody was flying.
490
00:30:50,474 --> 00:30:52,601
I can't wait.
491
00:30:52,976 --> 00:30:55,812
[David Losinski] I got
[inaudible] that the cradle's
492
00:30:55,812 --> 00:30:58,732
going to be the way.
493
00:31:01,777 --> 00:31:03,278
[Dr. Brian Smith] I'm
seeing the airbag.
494
00:31:03,278 --> 00:31:06,156
The crane hook is coming up.
495
00:31:06,740 --> 00:31:07,866
There it is!
496
00:31:08,283 --> 00:31:10,077
About two feet underwater and
it hasn't been this this high
497
00:31:10,077 --> 00:31:14,748
since 1944, April 11th.
498
00:31:17,167 --> 00:31:18,668
Yeah, you can
stop right there.
499
00:31:18,668 --> 00:31:20,253
The bolts are underneath.
500
00:31:20,253 --> 00:31:21,880
Good work Wayne!
501
00:31:21,880 --> 00:31:23,215
[David Losinski]
Pretty smooth!
502
00:31:23,215 --> 00:31:24,466
Congratulations!
503
00:31:24,466 --> 00:31:27,677
[chatter].
504
00:31:28,470 --> 00:31:30,639
[Wayne Lusardi] Piece by piece
airplane's coming up.
505
00:31:31,264 --> 00:31:34,976
[Dr. Brian Smith] I don't
have the words to express.
506
00:31:36,269 --> 00:31:38,188
[Wayne Lusardi] Probably the
heaviest single component of
507
00:31:38,188 --> 00:31:39,523
the aircraft.
508
00:31:39,523 --> 00:31:42,943
So, very cool, it's really
going to start to teach us
509
00:31:42,943 --> 00:31:45,779
a lot about this airplane.
510
00:31:45,779 --> 00:31:47,197
[Dr. Brian Smith]
Getting it back to the
511
00:31:47,197 --> 00:31:49,366
Tuskegee Airmen
National Museum in Detroit
512
00:31:49,366 --> 00:31:52,619
will start the
conservation process.
513
00:31:52,619 --> 00:31:56,373
Having the engine, the
propeller, the gearbox,
514
00:31:56,373 --> 00:32:00,043
all of that to examine from a
forensics side will help us
515
00:32:00,043 --> 00:32:03,338
determine what was the
cause of the accident.
516
00:32:04,840 --> 00:32:06,800
[David Losinski]
Are we good to good?
517
00:32:06,800 --> 00:32:09,469
Alright.
518
00:32:18,228 --> 00:32:20,105
[Wayne Lusardi] Now, we
have to transport it to shore.
519
00:32:20,105 --> 00:32:22,524
We've got to get it off of
this barge, move it onto a
520
00:32:22,524 --> 00:32:25,443
flatbed vehicle, and
then transport it to the
521
00:32:25,443 --> 00:32:28,321
conservation
laboratory in Detroit.
522
00:32:32,826 --> 00:32:35,203
[Dr. Brian Smith] We do need
to move the water machine.
523
00:32:35,203 --> 00:32:36,872
[Wayne Lusardi] Are
you pumping currently?
524
00:32:36,872 --> 00:32:38,039
[Isis Gillespie] No.
525
00:32:38,039 --> 00:32:39,249
- No.
- Ok.
526
00:32:39,249 --> 00:32:40,375
- We just turned it off.
- Ok.
527
00:32:40,375 --> 00:32:41,626
[Dr. Brian Smith] Ready for
the engine?
528
00:32:41,626 --> 00:32:43,753
- We got it.
- I got it.
529
00:32:43,753 --> 00:32:46,715
[Dr. Brian Smith] You go
up, just a little bit.
530
00:32:46,715 --> 00:32:49,009
Alright, hold.
531
00:32:49,009 --> 00:32:54,014
[beeping]
532
00:32:56,099 --> 00:32:58,185
[Wayne Lusardi]
Alright, nice and slow.
533
00:32:58,185 --> 00:33:00,145
[Isis Gillespie] Nice.
534
00:33:01,521 --> 00:33:03,481
[Wayne Lusardi] The laying out
the plane like this today is
535
00:33:03,481 --> 00:33:07,152
an incredible visual
opportunity to get a feel
536
00:33:07,152 --> 00:33:08,820
for how big this airplane is.
537
00:33:08,820 --> 00:33:11,198
It's hard to imagine it when
you're underwater looking at
538
00:33:11,198 --> 00:33:14,201
just a little piece here and
a little piece there and it's
539
00:33:14,201 --> 00:33:17,162
pretty impressive to
kind of see it like this.
540
00:33:17,162 --> 00:33:19,289
This is the first time these
artifacts have come together
541
00:33:19,289 --> 00:33:21,625
in this orientation since
the airplane went apart
542
00:33:21,625 --> 00:33:24,711
79 years ago.
543
00:33:26,213 --> 00:33:29,132
This is the artifact that
designed this entire airplane:
544
00:33:29,132 --> 00:33:31,384
the 37-millimeter cannon.
545
00:33:31,384 --> 00:33:33,637
It was mounted at the nose.
546
00:33:33,637 --> 00:33:36,264
It was also armed with
50-caliber machine guns
547
00:33:36,264 --> 00:33:37,766
on either side.
548
00:33:37,766 --> 00:33:40,227
And so with all of this stuff
up in the forward fuselage,
549
00:33:40,227 --> 00:33:42,062
it was no room for the engine.
550
00:33:42,062 --> 00:33:45,315
So, the engine went
back behind the pilot.
551
00:33:45,315 --> 00:33:47,400
And that was a very unique
situation for a single-seat
552
00:33:47,400 --> 00:33:50,153
fighter aircraft at that time.
553
00:33:50,153 --> 00:33:53,114
[Dr. Brian Smith] It gives me
pause to think this big, massive
554
00:33:53,114 --> 00:33:57,994
1200- pound engine, would
actually fly in an airplane.
555
00:34:02,540 --> 00:34:06,086
[Narrator] But the P-39's
had their limitations;
556
00:34:06,086 --> 00:34:09,631
they performed best
at lower altitudes,
557
00:34:09,631 --> 00:34:11,299
better for strafing.
558
00:34:11,299 --> 00:34:15,512
[gunfire]
559
00:34:16,346 --> 00:34:17,639
[Lee Archer] They needed
airplanes that would go
560
00:34:17,639 --> 00:34:21,059
further, and they got the 51.
561
00:34:21,059 --> 00:34:23,270
It could go further.
It could go higher.
562
00:34:23,270 --> 00:34:26,523
It could fly longer.
It could turn better.
563
00:34:26,523 --> 00:34:30,819
It had all of the
agile traits of a fighter.
564
00:34:33,363 --> 00:34:36,116
[Harry Stewart Jr] When I got
in the P-51 and I took it off,
565
00:34:36,116 --> 00:34:39,327
I fell in love with it,
the first time I flew it.
566
00:34:39,327 --> 00:34:43,081
It was such a beautifully
handling aircraft.
567
00:34:47,961 --> 00:34:49,379
[Matt Delmont] The Tuskegee
pilots had a very specific
568
00:34:49,379 --> 00:34:50,797
role in combat.
569
00:34:50,797 --> 00:34:52,716
Their job was to accompany
bombers on these
570
00:34:52,716 --> 00:34:54,509
targeted bombing runs.
571
00:34:54,843 --> 00:34:56,219
[Newsreel Narrator] Huge
fleets of allied bombers
572
00:34:56,219 --> 00:34:58,930
protected by umbrellas of
fighter planes, continue their
573
00:34:58,930 --> 00:35:02,767
all-out offensive upon
Nazi war plants in Europe.
574
00:35:05,103 --> 00:35:08,315
[whistling]
575
00:35:12,068 --> 00:35:13,695
[James Harvey] The White
fighter groups, they were
576
00:35:13,695 --> 00:35:17,866
averaging 46 bombers
lost per mission.
577
00:35:17,866 --> 00:35:19,576
Per mission.
578
00:35:19,576 --> 00:35:22,120
That's a lot of people.
579
00:35:22,120 --> 00:35:23,330
A lot of people.
580
00:35:23,330 --> 00:35:26,166
That's why we got the
job of escorting bombers.
581
00:35:28,960 --> 00:35:31,212
[George Hardy] Colonel Davis
said, "don't leave the bombers.
582
00:35:31,212 --> 00:35:33,965
If that German fighter leaves,
let him go and you stick with
583
00:35:33,965 --> 00:35:35,300
the bombers.
584
00:35:35,759 --> 00:35:38,053
There's ten men on each bomber
airplane, only one man in that
585
00:35:38,053 --> 00:35:39,888
German fighter.
586
00:35:39,888 --> 00:35:42,474
We want to protect the
bombers and bring those home.
587
00:35:45,727 --> 00:35:47,729
[Harold Brown] When we first
started flying with them,
588
00:35:47,729 --> 00:35:50,398
they knew that there was a new
fighter group that had joined:
589
00:35:50,398 --> 00:35:51,608
the Red Tails.
590
00:35:52,108 --> 00:35:55,195
They said who are these guys
flying these damn Red Tails?
591
00:35:55,195 --> 00:35:57,322
These guys are
with us all the way.
592
00:35:57,322 --> 00:35:59,824
By the way, who
are these guys?
593
00:36:09,125 --> 00:36:10,502
[Matt Delmont] One of the
things that happens after the
594
00:36:10,502 --> 00:36:12,170
Tuskegee Airmen get into
combat is they start to
595
00:36:12,170 --> 00:36:14,172
receive media attention, not
just from Black newspapers,
596
00:36:14,172 --> 00:36:16,341
but now from
national newspapers.
597
00:36:16,341 --> 00:36:18,551
They say that they've mastered
the art of aviation,
598
00:36:18,551 --> 00:36:21,388
that they're squashing
Hitler's Aces like bugs.
599
00:36:21,388 --> 00:36:23,723
[gunfire]
600
00:36:25,684 --> 00:36:27,018
[James Harvey] It got to
the point where they were
601
00:36:27,018 --> 00:36:28,978
requesting us.
602
00:36:28,978 --> 00:36:30,772
They wanted us.
603
00:36:30,772 --> 00:36:33,316
They didn't believe we were
flying airplanes when we got
604
00:36:33,316 --> 00:36:37,362
over there, because the book
said "no, they can't do that."
605
00:36:38,905 --> 00:36:39,739
[Newsreel Narrator] On a
bombing mission over enemy
606
00:36:40,240 --> 00:36:43,410
territory, a fighter escort
is a mighty comforting sight.
607
00:36:43,410 --> 00:36:45,620
This man thought it
was plenty good enough.
608
00:36:45,620 --> 00:36:49,624
As far as he was concerned,
this man could fly tough cover
609
00:36:49,624 --> 00:36:53,253
for him any day.
610
00:36:53,753 --> 00:36:55,547
[Harry Stewart Jr] When I was
escorting the bombers,
611
00:36:55,547 --> 00:36:57,757
there were White guys
in these planes here,
612
00:36:57,757 --> 00:36:59,551
they were just Americans there.
613
00:36:59,551 --> 00:37:01,511
We were all on the same team.
614
00:37:01,511 --> 00:37:04,264
That's what they were, and I
never looked at them as being
615
00:37:04,264 --> 00:37:07,392
White or anything else.
616
00:37:07,392 --> 00:37:10,228
We were just team members.
617
00:37:13,022 --> 00:37:15,108
[Narrator] After their
many successes in Europe,
618
00:37:15,108 --> 00:37:20,738
the Tuskegee Airmen
were unstoppable.
619
00:37:22,824 --> 00:37:25,285
[James Harvey] Now, you
may ask, who was the best?
620
00:37:25,285 --> 00:37:27,620
Depends on who's
telling the story!
621
00:37:27,620 --> 00:37:29,205
[laughs]
622
00:37:29,205 --> 00:37:30,498
Right now, I am!
623
00:37:30,498 --> 00:37:31,750
[laughs]
624
00:37:37,839 --> 00:37:40,425
[♪ celebratory music]
625
00:37:40,425 --> 00:37:42,051
[Newsreel Narrator] Throughout
the world, throngs of people
626
00:37:42,051 --> 00:37:44,846
hail the end
of the war in Europe.
627
00:37:45,346 --> 00:37:46,848
[Matt Delmont] Victory
Over Europe Day was a time of
628
00:37:46,848 --> 00:37:49,142
jubilation for
Black Americans.
629
00:37:49,142 --> 00:37:52,270
[President Truman] The whole
world must be cleansed of the
630
00:37:52,270 --> 00:37:56,316
evil from which half
the world has been freed.
631
00:37:57,942 --> 00:37:59,652
[Matt Delmont] The hope that
with the war over, they will
632
00:37:59,652 --> 00:38:01,446
finally be able to come back
to the United States and start
633
00:38:01,446 --> 00:38:04,407
to see some of what they
fought for come into reality.
634
00:38:06,075 --> 00:38:08,536
[William Holloman] I remember
this for the rest of my life:
635
00:38:08,536 --> 00:38:11,748
we were coming down the
gangplank, getting off the
636
00:38:11,748 --> 00:38:15,418
boat, they had a sign at
the bottom of the gangplank:
637
00:38:15,418 --> 00:38:17,295
Whites to one side.
638
00:38:17,295 --> 00:38:19,214
Colored to the other side.
639
00:38:19,214 --> 00:38:23,676
And I said to myself,
"This is some country."
640
00:38:29,557 --> 00:38:32,852
[Narrator] After the war, the
Tuskegee pilots returned to
641
00:38:32,852 --> 00:38:38,525
segregated units, but their
successes in Europe
642
00:38:38,525 --> 00:38:42,403
served as a rallying
cry for change.
643
00:38:47,534 --> 00:38:48,952
[Matt Delmont] One of the
first and most important
644
00:38:48,952 --> 00:38:51,538
civil rights milestones after
the war was the signing of
645
00:38:51,538 --> 00:38:53,706
Executive Order 9981.
646
00:38:54,123 --> 00:38:55,542
[Newsreel Narrator] By
Executive Order of President
647
00:38:55,542 --> 00:38:59,838
Harry S. Truman: integration
of all military units.
648
00:38:59,838 --> 00:39:03,758
It will take time, but
the policy was established.
649
00:39:04,968 --> 00:39:06,594
[Harold Brown] The more
I thought about it,
650
00:39:06,594 --> 00:39:08,596
we really did something special.
651
00:39:08,596 --> 00:39:11,558
If we had not been as successful
as we were, there is
652
00:39:11,558 --> 00:39:15,770
no way that Truman would have
possibly made that move.
653
00:39:17,188 --> 00:39:18,648
[Matt Delmont] So, the
military becomes integrated
654
00:39:18,648 --> 00:39:20,567
before most of corporate
America, before most of
655
00:39:20,567 --> 00:39:21,442
higher education does.
656
00:39:22,068 --> 00:39:23,778
And so, it really provides one
of the building blocks for the
657
00:39:23,778 --> 00:39:25,530
larger success of the
Civil Right Movement
658
00:39:25,530 --> 00:39:28,241
in the 1950s and 60s.
659
00:39:29,367 --> 00:39:31,286
One of the troubling things
that happens at the end of
660
00:39:31,286 --> 00:39:34,414
World War II is that the first
wave of books that come out
661
00:39:34,414 --> 00:39:35,582
about the war,
662
00:39:35,582 --> 00:39:39,168
really write Black Americans
out of the story.
663
00:39:39,168 --> 00:39:41,963
That's why it took so
long before the service,
664
00:39:41,963 --> 00:39:45,174
the patriotism, the tremendous
successes, and path-breaking
665
00:39:45,174 --> 00:39:48,303
work of the Tuskegee Airmen
to come to the forefront.
666
00:39:52,473 --> 00:39:55,935
[Narrator] Now, Frank
Moody's recovered P-39...
667
00:39:55,935 --> 00:39:57,729
[Wayne Lusardi] Hey,
we'll swing around.
668
00:39:57,729 --> 00:40:02,483
[Narrator] Is adding a new
chapter to the Airmen's stories.
669
00:40:02,483 --> 00:40:04,944
[Dr. Brian Smith] It's amazing
that this gun isn't bent.
670
00:40:04,944 --> 00:40:06,571
[Wayne Lusardi] When we start
to look at this and when we
671
00:40:06,571 --> 00:40:09,699
have this all kind of laid out
here, we're starting to see a
672
00:40:09,699 --> 00:40:13,620
lot of damage that happened
in the propeller blades.
673
00:40:13,620 --> 00:40:17,498
And you might think that
that's just a rock hole or
674
00:40:17,498 --> 00:40:20,001
something that was damage as
this artifact was sitting on
675
00:40:20,001 --> 00:40:22,503
the lake floor for the last
eight decades, but when you
676
00:40:22,503 --> 00:40:25,548
start looking at the other two
blades and they have identical
677
00:40:25,548 --> 00:40:29,093
holes in them, suddenly we're
starting to see something
678
00:40:29,093 --> 00:40:32,513
here; a major problem that's
going on with this aircraft.
679
00:40:33,181 --> 00:40:34,557
[Dr. Brian Smith]
Synchronization, if you've ever
680
00:40:34,557 --> 00:40:36,184
gone to dance class and
danced with a partner,
681
00:40:36,184 --> 00:40:38,770
you don't want to
step on their toes.
682
00:40:38,770 --> 00:40:41,981
So, you would synchronize your
steps, so that you always
683
00:40:41,981 --> 00:40:44,317
miss each other's feet.
684
00:40:44,317 --> 00:40:50,073
And this airplane had a
synchronizer or an interrupter
685
00:40:50,073 --> 00:40:54,952
in the hub, which knew where
the propeller blade was and
686
00:40:54,952 --> 00:40:58,581
would stop this gun from
firing when the blade was
687
00:40:58,581 --> 00:41:00,708
in front of the gun.
688
00:41:00,708 --> 00:41:03,086
[Wayne Lusardi] In in a sense,
the pilot's not actually
689
00:41:03,086 --> 00:41:04,253
shooting the gun.
690
00:41:04,879 --> 00:41:06,631
He's pulling the trigger, but
then the airplane's deciding,
691
00:41:06,631 --> 00:41:09,676
right here, when that
gun is actually firing.
692
00:41:09,676 --> 00:41:11,386
[Dr. Brian Smith] Yes.
693
00:41:11,386 --> 00:41:13,096
[Wayne Lusardi] When Lieutenant
Moody pulled the trigger,
694
00:41:13,096 --> 00:41:15,640
the guns fired into
the propeller blades and
695
00:41:15,640 --> 00:41:18,434
they created an entry
hole and an exit wound.
696
00:41:18,434 --> 00:41:20,144
And that's the same,
very consistent,
697
00:41:20,144 --> 00:41:23,064
on all three of these blades.
698
00:41:23,064 --> 00:41:25,608
[Dr. Brian Smith] If it was
Frank Moody's fault, you know,
699
00:41:25,608 --> 00:41:29,529
due to pilot error or a
collision with another aircraft,
700
00:41:29,529 --> 00:41:32,699
we would see other damage,
especially in these blades
701
00:41:32,699 --> 00:41:35,118
that we're not seeing.
702
00:41:35,118 --> 00:41:37,704
[Narrator] The proof found
in these blades serve as a
703
00:41:37,704 --> 00:41:42,500
testament to Frank Moody and
his extraordinary journey.
704
00:41:43,084 --> 00:41:43,835
[Dr. Brian Smith] Amazing!
705
00:41:44,544 --> 00:41:46,254
[Narrator] In the end, it
was the mechanical system
706
00:41:46,254 --> 00:41:47,839
that failed him.
707
00:41:47,839 --> 00:41:50,925
[Dr. Brian Smith] Now we can
chronicle, highlight, and
708
00:41:50,925 --> 00:41:54,554
talk about his life and the
importance of his life toward
709
00:41:54,554 --> 00:41:57,640
the war effort, toward
fighting the Germans.
710
00:41:59,517 --> 00:42:01,519
[Matt Delmont] Artifacts like
the plane help us make those
711
00:42:01,519 --> 00:42:04,939
jumps between scale in terms
of how we talk about history.
712
00:42:04,939 --> 00:42:06,774
Frank Moody's story is one
piece of the puzzle that helps
713
00:42:06,774 --> 00:42:09,777
to fill in our larger
understanding of what America
714
00:42:09,777 --> 00:42:12,363
was like during World War II.
715
00:42:12,363 --> 00:42:13,990
And more than anything, it
gives us an opportunity to
716
00:42:13,990 --> 00:42:16,159
help honor the service
and sacrifices of
717
00:42:16,159 --> 00:42:18,536
those Black veterans.
718
00:42:19,662 --> 00:42:22,623
[Narrator] For years the
Tuskegee Airmen pushed the
719
00:42:22,623 --> 00:42:25,293
boundaries of what was possible,
720
00:42:25,293 --> 00:42:27,503
distinguishing
themselves in the air,
721
00:42:27,503 --> 00:42:32,925
while breaking barriers for
Black Americans everywhere.
722
00:42:32,925 --> 00:42:35,261
[Matt Delmont] One of the
through lines in Black history
723
00:42:35,261 --> 00:42:37,764
is Black people having to
prove they could do things
724
00:42:37,764 --> 00:42:39,724
other people doubt
that they could do.
725
00:42:39,724 --> 00:42:42,727
[James Harvey] Outside, the
next day, then it all came back.
726
00:42:42,727 --> 00:42:44,896
Everything we did
had to be perfect.
727
00:42:44,896 --> 00:42:47,231
Everything had to be perfect.
728
00:42:47,231 --> 00:42:50,193
That helped us and
made us better pilots.
729
00:42:50,193 --> 00:42:52,945
That's why we were so good.
730
00:42:52,945 --> 00:42:55,948
What can I say?
731
00:42:55,948 --> 00:42:57,241
[laughs]
732
00:42:57,241 --> 00:42:59,577
They were trying to
take us down the drain,
733
00:42:59,577 --> 00:43:01,996
and we said, no, no, no.
734
00:43:04,916 --> 00:43:07,627
[George Hardy] Well, it's a
matter that we prove them wrong
735
00:43:07,627 --> 00:43:11,297
that we could do a job
and that's about all you can do.
736
00:43:11,297 --> 00:43:14,634
But they'll always be
some doubting Thomases,
737
00:43:14,634 --> 00:43:18,638
but we did the best we could.
738
00:43:24,852 --> 00:43:26,562
[Harry Stewart Jr]
Well, that's it.
739
00:43:26,562 --> 00:43:28,147
That's it, we proved it.
740
00:43:28,147 --> 00:43:30,525
And that hangs on you when you
feel as though that every day
741
00:43:30,525 --> 00:43:33,402
you have something to prove.
742
00:43:34,695 --> 00:43:37,406
[James Harvey] We showed
them that yes, we can think.
743
00:43:37,406 --> 00:43:40,618
We can think under pressure,
we can think all the time.
744
00:43:40,618 --> 00:43:44,622
We know how to do the job and
get the job done, done right.
745
00:43:46,582 --> 00:43:48,668
[Harry Stewart Jr] I'm in the
mood to fly that Cessna
746
00:43:48,668 --> 00:43:50,753
right now, you want to
go up with me?
747
00:43:50,753 --> 00:43:52,046
[James Harvey] Ok.
If I can get in!
748
00:43:52,046 --> 00:43:53,130
[laughs]
749
00:43:53,130 --> 00:43:54,257
That's my problem!
750
00:43:54,257 --> 00:43:55,550
[laughs]
751
00:43:55,550 --> 00:43:57,260
[Harry Stewart Jr] Ok!
752
00:43:58,761 --> 00:44:00,847
Captioned by
Cotter Media Group.