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<a class="fancybox" rel="dfa9d2156f1f0d84a3a475d0d7d0fc18" href="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/039/851/for_gallery_v2/635668630270982733-West-Point-Outcast-Ho-Weig-2-.jpg"><img src="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/039/851/large_v3/635668630270982733-West-Point-Outcast-Ho-Weig-2-.jpg" alt="635668630270982733 west point outcast ho weig 2 " /></a></div></div>From: Air Force Times<br /><br />WEST POINT, N.Y. — Benjamin O. Davis Jr. entered West Point in 1932 as its only black cadet and spent the next four years shunned. He roomed alone, and no one befriended him. The future Tuskegee Airman and trailblazing Air Force general later said he was "an invisible man."<br /><br />Now, more than a decade after his death, the academy that allowed Davis to be ostracized is honoring him.<br /><br />A new cadet barracks being constructed among the fortress-like buildings of the U.S. Military Academy will be named for Davis — a rare privilege previously granted to graduates with names like MacArthur and Eisenhower. Officials at the storied academy say Davis was a natural choice by dint of his career and character. It also gives the academy a chance to belatedly do right by Davis.<br /><br />"If you want to know what, 'Duty, Honor, Country' look like, just read a little bit about Benjamin O. Davis Jr., and your jaw will drop because he is the epitome of what we want at a time when we didn't know what 'right' looked like," said Col. Ty Seidule, the head of West Point's history department and a head of the naming committee. "So it's our chance to acknowledge one of our greatest graduates."<br /><br />Davis, who died in 2002 at age 89, has a history-soaked resume that includes commanding the all-black 332nd Fighter Group, known as the Red Tails, and becoming the first black general of the Air Force, which he joined in 1947. He retired as a three-star general in 1970 and was awarded a fourth star in 1998 by President Bill Clinton.<br /><br />West Point graduated its first black cadet at the tail-end of Reconstruction in 1877, though no black cadet had graduated in the 20th century when Davis arrived at the academy along the Hudson River.<br /><br />Some cadets clearly wanted to keep it that way.<br /><br />Davis was "silenced," a coordinated shunning usually reserved for cadets who violated the honor code. He roomed by himself, and fellow cadets spoke to him only as needed. Mess hall tables with empty places would be too full for him to sit at.<br /><br />"I was to be silenced solely because the cadets did not want blacks at West Point. Their only purpose was to freeze me out," Davis wrote in his 1991 autobiography. "What they did not realize was that I was stubborn enough to put up with their treatment to reach the goal I had come to obtain."<br /><br />Davis wrote that while West Point administrators could maintain the silencing was not official, "they knew precisely how I was being treated."<br /><br />Davis refused to buckle. He took long, solo runs through the surrounding hills, listened to his radio and wrote cheerful letters home. He graduated 35th in a class of 276.<br /><br />In the end, his steely tenacity won respect from the very cadets who made his four years so difficult. His yearbook entry notes that he earned "the sincere admiration of his classmates."<br /><br />Davis, a Washington, D.C., native, went on to a long career in which he persevered in the face of racism, notably with the pioneering Tuskegee Airmen.<br /><br />"He tried to tell us that it was not going be easy, because we had not been accepted as full citizens of the United States," said Needham Jones, 96, who served under Davis in the 99th Pursuit Squadron in ground support and the motor pool.<br /><br />"He said, 'Don't you let nobody tell you — don't you never believe — that you are inferior to anybody else,' ... it meant a hell of a lot to us," Jones said.<br /><br />Davis Barracks, set to open in January 2017, is now a rumbling, sprawling $186 million construction site jammed tight against older barracks. It will rise six stories, house 650 cadets and have a granite exterior to match the Cadet Chapel looming on a hillside above. The extra space will alleviate some crowding and allow West Point to shift around cadets as they modernize each of the current eight barracks.<br /><br />Seidule said Davis was an obvious choice not only for his character, but also because of his inspirational story and a career that highlights the role of West Point graduates in the birth of the Air Force.<br /><br />"This is not West Point at its finest hour," he said, "this is a chance for West Point to recognize one of its finest."<br /><br /><a target="_blank" href="http://www.airforcetimes.com/story/military/2015/05/10/west-point-names-barracks-for-black-graduate-who-was-shunned/27086775/">http://www.airforcetimes.com/story/military/2015/05/10/west-point-names-barracks-for-black-graduate-who-was-shunned/27086775/</a>West Point names barracks for black graduate who was shunned2015-05-11T11:37:20-04:00AirForce Times659353<div class="images-v2-count-1"><div class="content-picture image-v2-number-1" id="image-39851"> <div class="social_icons social-buttons-on-image">
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<a class="fancybox" rel="10a72e4fd239a2b167f5149c3ed1b3af" href="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/039/851/for_gallery_v2/635668630270982733-West-Point-Outcast-Ho-Weig-2-.jpg"><img src="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/039/851/large_v3/635668630270982733-West-Point-Outcast-Ho-Weig-2-.jpg" alt="635668630270982733 west point outcast ho weig 2 " /></a></div></div>From: Air Force Times<br /><br />WEST POINT, N.Y. — Benjamin O. Davis Jr. entered West Point in 1932 as its only black cadet and spent the next four years shunned. He roomed alone, and no one befriended him. The future Tuskegee Airman and trailblazing Air Force general later said he was "an invisible man."<br /><br />Now, more than a decade after his death, the academy that allowed Davis to be ostracized is honoring him.<br /><br />A new cadet barracks being constructed among the fortress-like buildings of the U.S. Military Academy will be named for Davis — a rare privilege previously granted to graduates with names like MacArthur and Eisenhower. Officials at the storied academy say Davis was a natural choice by dint of his career and character. It also gives the academy a chance to belatedly do right by Davis.<br /><br />"If you want to know what, 'Duty, Honor, Country' look like, just read a little bit about Benjamin O. Davis Jr., and your jaw will drop because he is the epitome of what we want at a time when we didn't know what 'right' looked like," said Col. Ty Seidule, the head of West Point's history department and a head of the naming committee. "So it's our chance to acknowledge one of our greatest graduates."<br /><br />Davis, who died in 2002 at age 89, has a history-soaked resume that includes commanding the all-black 332nd Fighter Group, known as the Red Tails, and becoming the first black general of the Air Force, which he joined in 1947. He retired as a three-star general in 1970 and was awarded a fourth star in 1998 by President Bill Clinton.<br /><br />West Point graduated its first black cadet at the tail-end of Reconstruction in 1877, though no black cadet had graduated in the 20th century when Davis arrived at the academy along the Hudson River.<br /><br />Some cadets clearly wanted to keep it that way.<br /><br />Davis was "silenced," a coordinated shunning usually reserved for cadets who violated the honor code. He roomed by himself, and fellow cadets spoke to him only as needed. Mess hall tables with empty places would be too full for him to sit at.<br /><br />"I was to be silenced solely because the cadets did not want blacks at West Point. Their only purpose was to freeze me out," Davis wrote in his 1991 autobiography. "What they did not realize was that I was stubborn enough to put up with their treatment to reach the goal I had come to obtain."<br /><br />Davis wrote that while West Point administrators could maintain the silencing was not official, "they knew precisely how I was being treated."<br /><br />Davis refused to buckle. He took long, solo runs through the surrounding hills, listened to his radio and wrote cheerful letters home. He graduated 35th in a class of 276.<br /><br />In the end, his steely tenacity won respect from the very cadets who made his four years so difficult. His yearbook entry notes that he earned "the sincere admiration of his classmates."<br /><br />Davis, a Washington, D.C., native, went on to a long career in which he persevered in the face of racism, notably with the pioneering Tuskegee Airmen.<br /><br />"He tried to tell us that it was not going be easy, because we had not been accepted as full citizens of the United States," said Needham Jones, 96, who served under Davis in the 99th Pursuit Squadron in ground support and the motor pool.<br /><br />"He said, 'Don't you let nobody tell you — don't you never believe — that you are inferior to anybody else,' ... it meant a hell of a lot to us," Jones said.<br /><br />Davis Barracks, set to open in January 2017, is now a rumbling, sprawling $186 million construction site jammed tight against older barracks. It will rise six stories, house 650 cadets and have a granite exterior to match the Cadet Chapel looming on a hillside above. The extra space will alleviate some crowding and allow West Point to shift around cadets as they modernize each of the current eight barracks.<br /><br />Seidule said Davis was an obvious choice not only for his character, but also because of his inspirational story and a career that highlights the role of West Point graduates in the birth of the Air Force.<br /><br />"This is not West Point at its finest hour," he said, "this is a chance for West Point to recognize one of its finest."<br /><br /><a target="_blank" href="http://www.airforcetimes.com/story/military/2015/05/10/west-point-names-barracks-for-black-graduate-who-was-shunned/27086775/">http://www.airforcetimes.com/story/military/2015/05/10/west-point-names-barracks-for-black-graduate-who-was-shunned/27086775/</a>West Point names barracks for black graduate who was shunned2015-05-11T11:37:20-04:002015-05-11T11:37:20-04:00COL Jean (John) F. B.660053<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Very sad commentary on that injustice. I am glad to see him being honored. Long overdue.Response by COL Jean (John) F. B. made May 11 at 2015 3:26 PM2015-05-11T15:26:37-04:002015-05-11T15:26:37-04:00SPC Charles Brown660082<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Way too long in coming.Response by SPC Charles Brown made May 11 at 2015 3:36 PM2015-05-11T15:36:07-04:002015-05-11T15:36:07-04:00TSgt David Holman660681<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I'm glad to see this man honored, but it is a shame that we take so much time to honor those who deserve it. I'm sure it would have meant the world to him to be there when the dedication happened.Response by TSgt David Holman made May 11 at 2015 7:24 PM2015-05-11T19:24:16-04:002015-05-11T19:24:16-04:00LTC David S. Chang, ChFC®, CLU®660704<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I am very happy to hear this! I remember reading about him while at the Academy but we didn't really pay attention. This is a great way to make sure we all (especially incoming cadets) know what he did in the face adversity.<br /><br />Just imagine what he could have done if we supported him more!Response by LTC David S. Chang, ChFC®, CLU® made May 11 at 2015 7:40 PM2015-05-11T19:40:12-04:002015-05-11T19:40:12-04:00TSgt Anthony Ellis674578<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>An injustice being served-such a great leaderResponse by TSgt Anthony Ellis made May 17 at 2015 9:49 AM2015-05-17T09:49:51-04:002015-05-17T09:49:51-04:00Capt Michael Greene1513437<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Trying to get $25 during college, I got an assignment from a local Black issues magazine that wanted a little bio piece on the Manager of the Month at a little grocery chain. After an hour of boring interview, I asked a throw-away question: "What was the best decision you ever made?" He said "To join the Army Air Corps in WWII." What? A Black pilot in WWII? He introduced me to the Tuskegee Airmen, and so I traveled around interviewing retired Colonels throughout Florida. They were the most impressive leaders I've ever met. At the end of the last interview, I had to ask why they were such an impressive bunch. How did the cream rise to the top? The quiet old man transformed from relaxing on his couch to sitting straight up and he loudly stated "Because Whitey made it So Damn Hard!" Then I learned more about the Black military experience than could ever be taught in school. After 10 more years in the military, I learned never to underestimate the quality of minority (or female) leadership. B.O. Davis began a national transformation!Response by Capt Michael Greene made May 9 at 2016 4:23 PM2016-05-09T16:23:00-04:002016-05-09T16:23:00-04:00CSM Thomas McGarry1526428<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Agree-Long overdue!! Disgraceful what this American soldier was made to go through!Response by CSM Thomas McGarry made May 13 at 2016 1:11 PM2016-05-13T13:11:04-04:002016-05-13T13:11:04-04:00SMSgt Lawrence McCarter5266042<div class="images-v2-count-1"><div class="content-picture image-v2-number-1" id="image-391768"> <div class="social_icons social-buttons-on-image">
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<a class="fancybox" rel="23c9e23087b357302a3f314b4fb3714d" href="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/391/768/for_gallery_v2/68321418.PNG"><img src="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/391/768/large_v3/68321418.PNG" alt="68321418" /></a></div></div>Here is Benjamin O. Davis as a Fighter pilot in World war II and Commander of one of the most decorated units. As a Cadet, West Point was difficult enough and what He endured and still came out on top says a lot about how strong His character was. I find him to be a man to be admired and looked up to. I doubt I could have endured what He did and still excelled. This is what greatness and a real Hero looks like. His father also was a Brigadier General in the Army, this strong leadership is in His blood.Response by SMSgt Lawrence McCarter made Nov 23 at 2019 12:45 AM2019-11-23T00:45:36-05:002019-11-23T00:45:36-05:00SMSgt Lawrence McCarter5266046<div class="images-v2-count-1"><div class="content-picture image-v2-number-1" id="image-391773"> <div class="social_icons social-buttons-on-image">
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<a href="mailto:?subject=Check this out on RallyPoint!&body=Hi, I thought you would find this interesting:%0D%0AWest Point names barracks for black graduate who was shunned%0D%0A %0D%0AHere is the link: https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/west-point-names-barracks-for-black-graduate-who-was-shunned"
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<a class="fancybox" rel="f9f4344cd2e61eb4274ce078e1a6aee4" href="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/391/773/for_gallery_v2/72bbba48.PNG"><img src="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/391/773/large_v3/72bbba48.PNG" alt="72bbba48" /></a></div></div>then Colonel Davis, (later General) wanted to make sure that their aircraft could be identified and everyone knew the combat role His men were engaged in. The red tail on their P51 Mustangs stuck out and with bombers escorts and aerial combat they knew Who had saved them. the 332rd Fighter Group," Red tails."Response by SMSgt Lawrence McCarter made Nov 23 at 2019 12:50 AM2019-11-23T00:50:54-05:002019-11-23T00:50:54-05:00Lt Col Charlie Brown5266344<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>He was a fantastic officer and human being...so glad he is being honored this wayResponse by Lt Col Charlie Brown made Nov 23 at 2019 5:22 AM2019-11-23T05:22:24-05:002019-11-23T05:22:24-05:002015-05-11T11:37:20-04:00