Stephan Wilkinson wrote:
I just did a quick search, and the National Park Service, which of course operates the Moton Field National Historic Site, says, "Nobody knows for certain, but the best information is that about 200 are still alive." Most of them are obviously former ground and support personnel. Some media reports and Roscoe Brown obits said that he was "the last pilot," but I don't think that's true.
I did a little looking around too. This 2005 article says about 100 are left.
https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid= ... 4668&hl=enHere are some articles I located that maybe worthy of further research if you are not already familiar with them. Disregard if you already know about them.
Company A Negro WAC's is mentioned. Were they flyers and if so what happened to them?

Training Negros In The Virgin Islands

First Class To Go Thru Tuskegee

First German Plane Shot Down Over Sicily?

The Abraham Lincoln Battalion (ALB) fighting in the Spanish Civil War, This is pre-Tuskegee.

James L. H. Peck, Flew Combat Flts in the Spanish Civil War. (Similar to the Flying Tigers, Pre-Tuskegee)

Cleveland M. Colbert, Flew Combat Flts In The Spanish Civil War (Pre-Tuskegee)
