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This love affair was kindled in the late 1930\\''s, when the United States Government created Civilian Pilot Training Programs throughout the country to provide a surplus of pilots in case of a national emergency. African Americans were included in these programs, although trained at segregated facilities.
Their love of flight became fully ablaze amid World War II as political pressure challenged the government to expand the role of African Americans in the military. The Army Air Corps was the first agency to accept the challenge. Tuskegee Institute, a small black college in Alabama, was selected to host the \\"military experiment\\" to train African American pilots and support staff--thus the Tuskegee Airmen were born.
The outstanding performance of the over 15,000 men and women who shared the \\"Tuskegee Experience\\" from 1942-1946, is immortalized at the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site.