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Category: 26. Military service
FOX0005. Fox, Geoff. First
Indian pilots reunite, reminisce after 40 years. Robesonian
Monday, 14 May 2001.
Publication type: Newspaper article
Describes a reunion between Tom Oxendine and
Fannie Belle Locklear (maiden name: Hunt), the only two survivors of a
class of eight Lumbee who, sixty years ago, took a federally funded Civilian
Pilot Training Course. The three-month course, whose members were chosen
for academic performance and passing a physical, was taught by pilot Horace
Barnes and was intended to prepare Native American pilots for Navy service
in the impending World War II.
As a result of the course, Tom Oxendine, in November 1942,
became the first Native American commissioned as a Navy pilot. He won a
Distinguished Flying Cross for his World War II service, then completed
a degree at UNC-Pembroke. He served in Korea and Vietnam, commanded the
Navy's largest basic flight-training program, was director of plans for
the Navy Department's Office of Information in the Pentagon, and was in
charge of the public affairs office of the Naval Air Systems Command. After
retiring from the Navy, he worked as a consultant and marketing representative
for several companies.
Fannie Belle (Hunt) Locklear did not accept the Navy commission
as pilot. She married, raised three children, and worked as a school bus
driver and an educator for 38 years.
Additional subjects: Lumbee pilots | Tom Oxendine | Fannie
Belle (Hunt) Locklear
This annotation was written on May 18, 2001 and edited
on June 21, 2002.
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