Eagle Biography
C. Alfred "Bud" Anderson
Universally known as "Chief," C. Alfred Anderson is a lifelong pioneer of
aviation opportunities for black Americans. Fascinated by airplanes from an early age, he
developed an intense desire to learn to fly as a young man in Staunton, Virginia. In the
1920s, however, he faced enormous resistance from the white-dominated aviation community.
Unable to find anyone who would teach him the basics of flying, Anderson borrowed money
and bought his first airplane, a Velie Monocoupe. Operating the craft alone, he learned
to fly by trial and error. He developed his skills sufficiently within a few months to
qualify for his private pilot license and was awarded his certificate in 1929.
His next
goal was to obtain an Air Transport License, but once again he was unable to secure
formal instruction. Undaunted, he learned the prescribed flying skills by reading,
observing, and practicing the required maneuvers solo. When he applied for his checkride,
however, the government check pilot refused to fly with him. Finally, a German immigrant,
World War I pilot Ernest Buel, persuaded the American check pilot to conduct the flight
check. Anderson performed flawlessly and, in 1932, became the first black to hold an Air
Transport rating. Dr. Albert Forsythe, a black physician, heard of his achievement and
became Anderson's partner and financial backer for a series of record setting flights. In
1933, Anderson and Forsythe became the first blacks to fly a transcontinental round
trip. The following year, they completed a highly publicized Pan American Goodwill
flight, and flew the first land plane to reach the Bahamas and several Caribbean islands.
During the late 1930s, Anderson began supporting himself by giving flight instruction
and, in 1939, he was recruited to start the Civilian Pilot Training Program (CPTP) at the
Tuskegee Institute in Alabama.
The fledgling program received a tremendous publicity
boost when Chief Anderson took Eleanor Roosevelt on an unscheduled airplane ride while
the First Lady was visiting Tuskegee's infantile paralysis research program. Anderson's
CPTP and its military follow-on, which he also directed, were responsible for training
the pilots who became the famous Tuskegee Airmen of World War II. Anderson and his fellow
Tuskegee instructors trained such famous military aviators as B. O. Davis, Jr., and
Daniel "Chappie" James. Following the war, Anderson continued as an aviation
instructor at Tuskegee and managed an aircraft sales business. In 1985, he received the
Frank G. Brewer Trophy, awarded annually for "outstanding contributions to the
development of air youth" in the field of education and training.
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Wartime pilot training demanded highly skilled instructors to train combat
pilots in minimum time. As chief pilot at Tuskegee, "Chief"
Anderson qualified all his instructors for low altitude aerobatics in the
PT-13 Kaydet. Though risky, the benefits of this rigorous training
would be seen many times in combat. Anderson and his hand-picked cadre of
instructors produced the skilled and aggressive pilots of the 99th Pursuit
Squadron, who escorted 200 bomber missions into Germany without a single
bomber lost.
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