“Almost Instant Integration”
After World War II, the U.S. Armed Forces desegregated. How did that affect George Hardy's joining back up?
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Ep 15: Jun 23, 2020
In this episode, we continue from George Hardy's World War II story into the desegregation of the armed forces in 1948, hearing how that affected his service into the Korean war in 1950 and tracking some of the white backlash that followed politically nationwide.
Hear more from George in his Season 1 episodes, For the Mechanically Minded and Airmen Flew High.
Thank you to Joe Faust of Tuskegee Airmen Inc. for connecting us with George for this episode. 50% of listener support from this episode will then be donated to their Youth Aerospace and STEM Academy--thank you for contributing, here.
Further Learning
What Was Black America’s Double War? by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. -PBS
Law Equalizing the Pay of Black Soldiers - Freedman & Southern Society Project
NAACP: A Century in the Fight for Freedom, World War II and the Post War Years - Library of Congress
Definition of backlash at Merriam-Webster
1948 Presidential Election details from 270 to Win
50 Years of Electoral College Maps: How the U.S. Turned Red and Blueby Toni Monkovic, New York Times
African-Americans in WWII - National WW2 Museum
The Civil Rights Movement And The Second Reconstruction, 1945—1968, The United States House of Representative department of History, Art & Archives
How White Backlash Controls American Progress, by Lawrence Glickman in The Atlantic