Up First from NPR - Dozens of Black pilots disappeared during WWII. Who are the men still lost?

Episode Date: April 12, 2026

Dozens of Tuskegee Airmen went missing in action during World War II. Most of them have not been found. Who were these men and what happened to them? In her book, "Forgotten Souls," NPR investigative ...correspondent Cheryl W. Thompson tells their stories.To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I'm Aisha Roscoe, and you're listening to The Sunday Story from Up First, where we go beyond the news of the day to bring you one big story. Today, the Tuskegee Airmen are celebrated as American heroes, black men who fought in World War II for a country that was still brutally segregated. Eventually, these men who shattered the color line as combat pilots would be awarded some of the nation's highest honors. In 2007, the Tuskegee Airmen were awarded the Congressional Gold Medal by President George W. Bush. The Tuskegee Airmen helped win a war, and you help change our nation for the better. Yours is the story of the human spirit, and it ends like all great stories do, with wisdom and lessons and hope for tomorrow. But some never got to see those tributes because they never made it home
Starting point is 00:01:03 and their families felt they were forgotten by the U.S. government. The families I got to know, I think, would be happy with someone knocking on their door, picking up the phone saying, you know what, we haven't forgotten about your dad, we haven't forgotten about your brother, we haven't forgotten about your uncle, something. But does it have crickets? You know, it's probably the most hurtful thing for them. NPR investigative correspondent Cheryl W. Thompson is the author of a book that published earlier this year.
Starting point is 00:01:36 It's called Forgotten Souls, The Search for the Lost Tuskegee Airmen. It tells the stories of 27 black airmen who went missing during flights overseas, leaving their families forever changed and still looking for answers. When we come back, I sit down. with Cheryl to talk about her personal connection to the airmen and what she learned over years of research about who these men were. We'll be right back. We're back with the Sunday story. I'm here with Cheryl W. Thompson.
Starting point is 00:02:25 Cheryl, welcome to the show. And thank you for being here. Hi, Aisha. Thanks for having me. I know that you have a personal connection to the Tuskegee Airmen. Tell me about that. And is that why you decided to write? the book? So, yeah, my dad was a Tuskegee Airmen. You know, there were, actually Tuskegee Airmen
Starting point is 00:02:46 were more than pilots. There were like 14,000 of them who did all kinds of things. But he was actually in the flying school. And I write about how he didn't quite make it to the plane because he had a little trouble landing. Okay. And when you're in the middle of a war, you got to be able to land. You got to be able to land. But it also explains a lot about why I drive the way I do, because he taught me to drive. Okay, okay. So, but is that why, because you have this personal connection? I mean, he was one of the Tuskegee Airmen, even though he wasn't a pilot.
Starting point is 00:03:20 Is that why you wanted to do this book? Is this how you got interested in it? So actually, how I got interested in it, because he used to tell the stories. He used to talk about, and the guys used to come to the house, you know, when I was a kid growing up. And I always think, gosh, I should have paid closer attention when I was a kid to the stories that he told the men who would come to the house. And he was in the cadet class with some really well-known pilot's general McGee and the guy who is actually on the cover of the book, William F. Williams, they were all in the same cadet class. But I digress. So how this came about was when, before I came to NPR, I spent 22 years at the Washington Post. And one day I was talking with a colleague who had done this amazing story on the remains of someone they thought was an airman, a Tuskegee Airman. They found.
Starting point is 00:04:08 over in Austria. And I said to him, I said, do you think there were others? And he says, oh, yeah, there were others. And so he knew, you know, about my dad, or I'm sure I had talked about it at Nanzum at some point during my time there. And I said to him, I said, this is your book. And he said, no, Cheryl, this is your book. And so a couple years passed, I thought about it and thought about it. And you know, as a reporter, I can write a news story. I can write a feature writing a book is a whole other, that's a whole other level. And so it took me a few years to sort of get up the courage to go, okay, can I do this? Can I really pull this off? And then I decided, okay, let me see what I can do and pitch it and see if somebody will buy into it. Well, I mean, we're so glad that you did take this on. And, you know, I mean, we'll get into, obviously, because you're talking about people who went missing in action. So there's loss. And we'll get into. And we'll get into. that. But first, I want to talk to you about how this book, it really shines a light on the lives of these men. Was there anything that surprised you about their personal lives when you started
Starting point is 00:05:19 doing this research? I think the one thing that surprised me most was really how young they were. But in their letters and in their conversations with relatives, they seemed so much older because they had to grow up so quickly. But most of them were fresh out of college. The oldest one was 28. The youngest one, I believe, was 20. Yeah. And it just, they were just starting out. And they had their whole lives to look forward to. That was one of the things that surprised me.
Starting point is 00:05:49 The other was just the kind of lives they led before they went off to war. I don't think any of them were wealthy. They didn't come from wealthy backgrounds. They came from all over the country, you know, from the south, from your home state. Yeah, of North Carolina. And, you know, my dad was born in Dallas but raised in Chicago. So they just, you know, they were just these typical sort of starry-eyed men who just wanted to serve this country and do something good. And there was this chance to do this.
Starting point is 00:06:20 And, you know, a lot had been written about the airmen. Lots of things have been written about them. But nobody had ever really delved into their lives. And that's the angle I chose to take because it was so fascinating to me. It's like, who are these men who disappeared? Who are they? Yeah. And, I mean, I found it so powerful to hear from some of these pilots in their own words through their letters to their loved ones.
Starting point is 00:06:44 And could you read a letter from John Henry Chavis? He was writing to his mother about his soon-to-be bride who he called Cookie. Okay. I'm still a very lucky guy. Look at the nice letter I got from her mother. The next time you talk to Cookie, be sure to welcome her to the Chavis family. By the way, when are you going to congratulate me? I'm sure you're happy over my having such a perfect girlfriend. Who writes like that now?
Starting point is 00:07:17 Who right? No, and that's the other thing is reading those letters. I was like, what have we lost in the fact that people don't sin, they don't communicate like that anymore. But from this, like, he's so, like, you know, starry-eyed and, like, you know, and just, like, got the perfect. girlfriend, which, you know, everybody feels like that at that, you know, at that first age. Like, how did you feel going through these personal effects? And, like, how did you get this letter?
Starting point is 00:07:44 So I got this letter from Chavis' nephew and niece. You know, I got lucky. You know, journalism is a lot about luck, but writing this book was a lot about luck, too, because so many of these relatives actually kept or were handed, letters were handed down from other relatives to them. And they just, to their credit, they kept them. And I got, you know, other letters were just as sort of endearing. Yes. Yeah. Very heartwarming. Very heartwarming. Very heartwarming. Very real. Very from the heart kind of letters. Yeah. And, you know, reading that letter from Chavis filled with all of this hope and joy, the other part of the book is that it makes it really sad when you learn of the the tragedy of his disappearance on a mission in February 1945.
Starting point is 00:08:37 The military blamed engine trouble for Chavis' plane going down. But as the book shows, like, there is often, like, just a lack of clarity about what happened when these pilots went missing. Was that just a feature or, like, just the nature of war at that time? Were these type of crashes common? Well, you know, there was a lot going on because there was a war. going on. But I think that the black pilots were ignored more than others, right? You know, when war was over or even during the war when some of these men disappeared, some of the guys they
Starting point is 00:09:16 were with over in Italy, which is where they were, that's where they were based. They went looking for them. Their fellow pilots went circling for them or looking for them. And the government certainly was aware that they disappeared because they always had to find. if somebody went missing, you had to file a report. But oftentimes, you know, if they went down in enemy territory, the government say, well, it was, you know, it was too dangerous for us to go and search for them. Okay, fine. But then there's after the war.
Starting point is 00:09:45 And, you know, sometimes it took two, three, four, five years. I'm not sure what they hoped to find after all that time. Yeah. And sometimes they didn't search at all. Yeah. I mean, and so do you attribute that lack of urgency to the fact that this was a segregated military at that time and that these were black men and that they were not valued as much at that moment.
Starting point is 00:10:06 Oh, I absolutely think that plays a role for sure. I mean, talking to, you know, not only learning about the 27, but also the Tuskegee Airmen pilots who flew over in the 332nd fighter group who were still living when I started this book four years ago, now going on five, having conversations with them and meeting with them, The stories they told me about how they were treated was just unimaginable that they did not want you there, period. They didn't want them flying the planes. They didn't want them there. You don't forget things like that.
Starting point is 00:10:42 And you don't forget when people treat you badly. When we come back, Cheryl W. Thompson will tell us about her conversations with the family members of missing airmen. Stay with us. We're back with the Sunday story. I've been talking with my NPR colleague, Cheryl W. Thompson, about her new book, Forgotten Souls, The Search for the Lost Tuskegee Airmen. Talk to me about the impact on the families, because it sounds like, you know, they would get the telegram that their loved ones were MIA, and a year later they would be declared dead. And how did the families move forward and how did they deal with just the not knowing?
Starting point is 00:11:28 I don't think, and I think I'm safe and saying, this for the families I met with and talked to repeatedly. They never got over it, right? They never got over it. Some of them still have siblings, and they're in their 90s now. And so it destroyed their parents, not only moms, but dads as well, who just, you know, there was one father who just didn't want his son to be in the, and to go off to war. He didn't want him to go.
Starting point is 00:11:55 He didn't want him to go because he knew. He didn't want to lose him. And he lost him. And for the children, right, because some of them had children. The oldest one I found at the time her dad disappeared was three. And she's now 84. And she has said to me, and I talked to her just out of the day because I keep in touch with these families because it's sort of like, you know, when you spend time with these people over years, you just have a relationship, you develop some kind of relationship with them. And she says, you know, I'm still waiting.
Starting point is 00:12:32 I'm hoping that one day, you know, somebody will knock on my door and say, we found your dad. What is the government looking? Like, did you find any evidence of that? Are they looking? Are these families getting any type of support? So none of the families, with the exception of two that they found in the last, you know, eight years, no, the families told me they have never heard from the government. The government has just totally ignored them. Why do you think this hasn't been talked about more?
Starting point is 00:13:02 I mean, I feel like we hear, not saying that we could ever hear enough about the Tuskegee Airmen, but we hear about the honors. You know, in the state of the union, they're getting an honor at the White House. But why haven't we talked more about those that were lost and their remains were not found? Why have we not talked about that? That's a good question. That's a question you should post to the government and ask them like, what are you guys doing? Why hasn't this come up? Because, I mean, they were honored, you know, back in, I want to say it was 2007 by the Bush, George W. Bush White House when they got the Congressional Medal of Honor. Actually, it was on my birthday. And so those who were, you know, still around, of course, went to the White House and they were very touched by it and honored by it. And then President Obama in the homes I visited with families, there was some kind of proclamation from President Obama on the walls of these homes, right?
Starting point is 00:13:57 There were. And then, you know, that's a question. That's a really good question. Why? What do the families that you talk to, what do they want from the government? Do they want, obviously they want their loved ones found, but do they want even just an acknowledgement? The families I got to know, I think, would be happy with someone knocking on their door,
Starting point is 00:14:22 picking up the phone saying, you know what, we haven't forgotten about your dad. We haven't forgotten about your brother. We haven't forgotten about your uncle, something. But to have crickets, you know, is probably the most hurtful thing for them. It's to just because in their mind it says nobody cares. Well, what do you think, what do you want the public to learn from this book? Because you've now, you know, set this record and borne witness to the lives of these men and put it in black and white so we can all see, you know, the honor that they served with and lost their lives.
Starting point is 00:15:02 Like, what do you want the public to take from this? You know, I would love it if people really, like, realized how amazing these men were, not just as soldiers, not just as patriots, but they had lives before this war. They were like you and me, right? They were, you know, most of them were college educated or had been to college. And they were just starting out and they had girlfriends, right, like John Chavez. And they had wives and they had children and they have families who love them. And I don't want people to forget that, you know, because we know that the Tuskegee Airmen existed. Right?
Starting point is 00:15:44 We know that. But what do we really know about who these men were? They had people who loved them, who cared about them, who never, ever. forgot them. And now, you know, they have no closure. And most all, you know, of course, all the parents are gone. They never got closure. They never had a body to bury. You know, it was just they were left hanging. The government, you know, at some point, kind of left them hanging by not keeping in touch with them. Cheryl, thank you so much. Thank you, Aisha, for having me. That was NPR investigative correspondent, Cheryl W. Thompson. You can find
Starting point is 00:16:24 find more of her work at NPR.org. Her new book is Forgotten Souls, The Search for the Lost Tuskegee Airmen. This episode of the Sunday Story was produced by Rennie Svornoski and edited by Justine Yan. The engineer was Jimmy Keely, special thanks to Ryan Bank and Ed McNulty, who produced and edited the original interview. The Sunday Story team includes Andrew Mamo, Jenny Schmidt, and our senior supervising producer, Leanna Simstrom. Our executive producer is Irene Noguchi. I'm Ayesha Rosco. Up First is back tomorrow with all the news you need to start your week. Until then, have a great rest of your weekend.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.