Fighter Pilot Instructor |
Spann Watson was born in 1916 near rural Johnston, South Carolina, the second son of Sherman and Leona Holt Watson. He began his education at the age of four, at Red Hill, a one-room school. Later, he attended Simpkins School and finally Reeder Branch School, on the grounds of Reeder Branch Church, which still exists in Saluda County. In 1927, when Watson was 10 years old, his family moved to Lodi, New Jersey. A frequent visitor to the nearby Teterboro Airport, Watson watched Charles A. Lindbergh fly in his famous plane “Spirit of Watson was educated at Lodi and Hackensack Public Schools and at Howard University where he studied mechanical engineering. He began his aviation training in 1939 in the original College Pilot Training Program at Howard and continued under the same program at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. In 1941, he joined the U.S. Army Air Corps as a flying cadet. A pioneer of the Tuskegee Airmen Experience, he was an original member of the famed 99th Fighter Squadron. On July 8, 1943, Watson was one of eight pilots who successfully fought the German elite Luftwaffe over the Mediterranean Sea, off the coast of Sicily, marking the first time African-American pilots fought in air combat. In World War II, he distinguished himself flying missions over North Africa, Sicily, Italy, and Southern Europe. At the midpoint of his combat tour with the original 99th At the close of the Air War in Europe, the 99th F.S. was withdrawn from Italy and reactivated at Fort Knox, Kentucky to prepare for participation in the war against Japan. Spann Watson was selected again to reassemble the 99th F.S. completely. It quickly grew to a peak of 136 Tuskegee Airmen Pilots, 14 Flight Leaders and 79 F47 N Airplanes by the time “A” weapons closed out the war in the Far East. Spann Watson supervised the flight activities of the 99th F.S. as the In 1965, after a 23-year military career, Watson joined the Lt. Col. Watson's photo hangs with other Airmen in the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. He is the first African-American elected as an Elder Statesman of Aviation by the National Aeronautics Association and served as the National President of the Tuskegee Airmen, a group he helped organize. Among his many honors include the Charles A. “Chief” Anderson Award from the National Coalition of He was one of the Tuskegee Airmen honored by In September 2000, he was awarded the Cliff Henderson Achievement Award, by the National Aviation Club. A new Tuskegee Airmen Chapter in Columbia, S.C. was dedicated in his honor on September 30, 2002. His awards and recognition continue from many origins as the Col. Watson and his wife Edna were married December 17, 1943. They have five children, seven grandchildren and one great-grandchild. |