HomeBlack Aviator: The Story of William J. Powell (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight Series)
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Black Aviator: The Story of William J. Powell (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight Series)

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About this book

During the 1930s a prominent black entrepreneur and pilot named William J. Powell urged blacks to acquire the skills to become pilots mechanics and aviation business leaders so that they could attain economic power in the air age and break down the barriers of racism. Powell shared his vision of black advancement in his thinly disguised 1934 autobiography Black Wings now reissued as Black Aviator after six decades of obscurity. Containing new photographs and historical information on Powells life and times (1899-1942) the book chronicles the formative part of Powells career in aviation through the fictional personality of "Bill Brown." The narrative begins with Powells first airplane ride in Paris in 1927 (three months after Charles Lindbergh crossed the Atlantic) and then moves to Los Angeles where he pursued his career in aviation full time. Powell worked tirelessly to promote black awareness of aviation recruiting Duke Ellington Joe Louis and other prominent figures as sponsors. Black Aviator recounts how he founded the Bessie Coleman Aero Club to promote flying within the black community sponsored record-breaking flights and organized air shows. Powell provides vivid portrayals of early black pilots such as Hubert Fauntleroy Julian James Herman Banning and C. Alfred Anderson. Based on real events and individuals Bill Browns story describes how black pilots first broke into aviation in the Depression years. An introductory essay by Von Hardesty places Powells life and work in the larger context of American social history.