Holloman, William Hugo, III, Lt Col

Deceased
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
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Last Rank
Lieutenant Colonel
Last Primary AFSC/MOS
AAF MOS 770-Airplane Pilot
Last AFSC Group
Pilot (Enlisted)
Primary Unit
1966-1972, US Army (USA)
Service Years
1943 - 1972
Officer srcset=
Lieutenant Colonel

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

23 kb


Home State
Missouri
Missouri
Year of Birth
1924
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by A3C Michael S. Bell (Unit Historian) to remember Holloman, William Hugo, III, Lt Col.

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Contact Info
Home Town
St. Louis, Missouri
Last Address
Kent, Washington
Date of Passing
Jun 11, 2010
 
Location of Interment
Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery (VA) - St. Louis, Missouri
Wall/Plot Coordinates
SECTION D SITE 2645

 Official Badges 

US Air Force Honorable Discharge (Old Style) US Army Honorable Discharge WW II Honorable Discharge Pin


 Unofficial Badges 

Cold War Medal Tuskegee Airmen Congressional Gold Medal


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Tuskegee Airmen, IncNational Cemetery Administration (NCA)
  2010, Tuskegee Airmen, Inc
  2010, National Cemetery Administration (NCA)


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

From Seattle Times:

Seattle Times staff reporter

Bill Holloman, a Tuskegee Airman, didn't stop serving his country when his active duty as one of the United States' first African-American combat pilots ended after World War II.

He was called back to service in the Korean War and became the Air Force's first black helicopter pilot. He went to war again in Vietnam.

During the nearly four decades after he retired from the Army, he served his country in a different way: by teaching younger generations how war and aviation intersected in a way that helped end centuries of racial separation.

Lt. Col. William H. Holloman III, a Kent resident, died at a hospital Friday after a heart attack. He was 85.

A St. Louis native who as a teenager was so crazy about flying he would walk two miles to an airport to watch the planes, he volunteered for an all-black aviation-training program at Tuskegee Army Air Field in Alabama.

Because some Army generals were dubious about the ability of African Americans to maintain and fly aircraft, the Tuskegee Airmen were required to undergo twice as much training as their white counterparts.

One of 450 trainees sent to North Africa and Italy, Lt. Col. Holloman flew a single-seat P-51 Mustang fighter-bomber from a base in Italy to targets in Germany, Austria and Eastern European countries. He flew 19 combat missions, including escorting bombers and hitting enemy targets.

Stationed at bases segregated by race, the black fighter pilots and the white bomber crews mingled in towns where whites insisted on buying drinks for their fighter escorts. When Lt. Col. Holloman sailed back to the States, he walked down a gangplank in New York and saw signs that read, "Whites to the right, coloreds to the left."

The war at home

"I always say we were fighting two wars: the war against Hitler and the race war at home. Both were to preserve democracy," Lt. Col. Holloman told Seattle Times columnist Danny Westneat in 2008.

Although racial segregation continued in much of the country for another two decades, the Tuskegee Airmen showed white aviators and their commanders that they, too, were first-class warriors.

President Truman issued an executive order in 1948 integrating all branches of the armed forces. President Obama invited the Tuskegee Airmen to his inauguration last year.

After World War II, Lt. Col. Holloman did stints dusting crops in South America and flying small commercial planes in Canada. An Air Force reservist, he was called back to active duty during the Korean War and in Vietnam, where he switched to the Army. He retired in 1972.

A founding member and first president of the Sam Bruce Chapter of Tuskegee Airmen Inc., Lt. Col. Holloman took the Tuskegee story to virtually anyone who would listen.

"Just by talking to him you were touching a primary point of history," said Greg Anders, commander of Cascade Warbirds, a vintage-aircraft organization Lt. Col. Holloman was active in.

Lt. Col. Holloman annually hosted panels at the Museum of Flight, spoke to young people about history and aviation, and traveled the country sharing his story. His calendar was booked for the next two years with speeches, aircraft fly-ins and other events, daughter Lesley Holloman said. "He never slowed down. ... He loved that people wanted to hear what he had to say about history," she said.

Flight jacket in museum

Lt. Col. Holloman's World War II flight jacket is on display at the Northwest African American Museum in Seattle. He attended the museum's opening in 2008, standing by the jacket and telling the Tuskegee Airmen story to the 3,000 visitors, said the museum's executive director, Barbara Earl Thomas.

His presence left Thomas and others in tears, she said. "When people realized that he was actually the person that belonged to the jacket, they were like, 'Oh, my god, you're kidding!' ... That was the moment when people made the connection. That made us feel like we were a living museum."

He is survived by his wife, Artie Adele Holloman, of Kent; sons William IV and Michael Holloman, both of Seattle, and Christopher, of Bellevue; daughters Lesley Holloman, of St. Louis, Robyn Holloman, of Seattle and Maria Holloman-Toye, of Rochester, Thurston County; and five grandchildren.

Viewing will be at Marlatt Funeral Home in Kent from 1 to 2 p.m. Friday, with a flyover of vintage military aircraft at 1:45 p.m. and a memorial service at 2 p.m. A service will be held Monday in St. Louis.

Keith Ervin: 206-464-2105 or kervin@seattletimes.com


   

  1943-1945, 99th Fighter Squadron
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 99th Fighter Squadron Details

99th Fighter Squadron
Type
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Fighter Units
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Last Updated: Dec 10, 2019
   
   
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48 Members Also There at Same Time
99th Fighter Squadron

Surcey, William Stockton, MSgt, (1941-1945) [Other Service Rank]
Wofford, Kenneth O., Col, (1945-1977) [Other Service Rank]
Bartley, William Roscoe, Capt, (1942-1950) Captain
Davis, Alfonza Wesley, Capt, (1941-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1065 Captain
Iles, George Jewell, Col, (1943-1973) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Captain
Lawrence, Erwin Bernard, Capt, (1942-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1065 Captain
Roberts, Leon C., Capt, (1942-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Captain
Ross, Mac, Capt, (1941-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Captain
Baugh, Howard Lee, Lt Col, (1942-1967) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
Bowman, Leroy, 1st Lt, (1941-1945) 105 1055A First Lieutenant
Carter, Herbert Eugene, Lt Col, (1942-1969) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
Dart, Clarence W., Lt Col, (1942-1961) First Lieutenant
Decatur, Robert, Capt, (1943-1945) First Lieutenant
Deiz, Robert William, Maj, (1942-1961) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
Eagleson, Wilson Vash, 1st Lt, (1942-1972) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
Gray, George Elbert, Capt, (1942-1951) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
McCrumby, George Thomas, 1st Lt, (1942-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
Mitchell, Paul Graham, 1st Lt, (1941-1943) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
Morgan, John Henry, 1st Lt, (1942-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
Roberts, George Spencer, Col, (1941-1968) First Lieutenant
Smith, Graham, Capt, (1942-1951) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
Walker, Quitman Charles, 1st Lt, (1942-1944) First Lieutenant
Wheeler, Jimmie Douglas, 1st Lt, (1942-1945) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
White, Sherman Windham, 1st Lt, (1941-1943) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
Williams, Edward Julius, Capt, (1942-1951) First Lieutenant
Wright, Frank N., 1st Lt, (1941-1945) A23 AAF MOS 1055 First Lieutenant
Bailey, Charles P., 2nd Lt, (1943-1947) A33 AAF MOS 770 Second Lieutenant
Brooks, Sidney P., 2nd Lt, (1941-1943) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
Brown, James B., 2nd Lt, (1942-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
Bruce, Samuel Martin, 2nd Lt, (1942-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
Chavis, John Henry, 2nd Lt, (1942-1945) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
Dunlap, Alwayne M., 2nd Lt, (1942-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
Gordon, Joseph E., 2nd Lt, (1943-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
Hockaday, Wendell W., 2nd Lt, (1941-1945) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
James, Daniel, Gen, (1942-1978) Second Lieutenant
Leftenant, Samuel Gordon, 2nd Lt, (1943-1945) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
Macon, Richard Douglas, Capt, (1942-1945) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
McCullin, James Lawrence, 2nd Lt, (1942-1943) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
Nelson, Neal V., 2nd Lt, (1943-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
Street, Thomas Calvin, 2nd Lt, (1944-1945) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Second Lieutenant
Westbrook, Shelby, 1st Lt, (1944-1945) Second Lieutenant
Gant, Morris E., FltOff, (1944-1945) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Flight Officer
Golden, Newman Camay, 1st Lt, (1943-1951) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Flight Officer
Willette, Leonard Robert, 2nd Lt, (1942-1944) A23 AAF MOS 1055 Flight Officer
Burno, Andrew, 1stSgt, (1940-1945) A25 003 Master Sergeant
Burno, Andrew, 1stSgt, (1943-1945) A02 AAF MOS 502 Master Sergeant
Burno, Andrew, 1stSgt, (1940-1945) A25 Master Sergeant
Jett, Edsel Allen, TSgt, (1941-1943) A01 AAF MOS 911 Technical Sergeant
Gary, Percy C., SSgt, (1942-1944) Staff Sergeant

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