Relative Was One Of The Tuskegee Airmen
When Airman Christopher Platte decided to join the Air Force
last year, he didn't know he would be following in famous
footsteps. His graduation from Basic Military Training at Lackland
Air Force Base December 11th gave Platte a rare opportunity to
spend time spent with his great uncle, retired Air Force Capt.
Claude Platte, an original Tuskegee Airman.
US Airforce Photo
BMT graduation was the first time since
he was an infant that Platte had been with his famous uncle, who
helped break down racial and educational barriers by becoming one
of the first African American officers trained and commissioned in
the newly reopened Air Force pilot training program at Randolph Air
Force Base, Texas, in the 1940s.
The younger Platte found out about his uncle after telling his
family he wanted to join the Air Force. He first spoke with his
great uncle in November 2008, he said. "I talked to my mother about
[joining the Air Force] and she said, 'Oh, by the way, you have a
great uncle who is a Tuskegee Airman,'" Platte recalled. "I had no
idea," he added. "I think that it's going to be a great motivation
for me to take it a step higher now that I know where I come from.
Even if I decide not to be a pilot, it's motivation to be the best
I can be in the Air Force."
The elder Platte served 18 years in the Air Force and trained
more than 400 African American airmen to fly solo and pilot
specialized military aircraft. Captain Platte's brother --
Christopher Platte's grandfather -- was also a Tuskegee Airman.
Captain Platte has received many honors including an honorary
doctorate in public service from Tuskegee University in 2006, and
the Congressional Gold Medal in 2007. Retired from Bell Helicopter
Textron Co. and living in North Texas, Platte and other Tuskegee
Airmen travel the country telling their stories. A modest man who
stays involved in community service, the elder Platte said he
wasn't out to break down barriers; he only wanted to fly. "It was
something I wanted to do," he said. "It was just like getting a
toy. I didn't think about the segregation part of it. I wasn't
interfered with, so I really enjoyed it."
Captain Platte's return to Lackland AFB for his great nephew's
graduation was the first time he had been back since his own BMT
nearly 50 years ago. And, as Airman Platte begins his military
career, he's entering as a survival, evasion, resistance and escape
specialist. He, too, started down a different trail. After all, how
many airmen begin their career with an Eagle Scout Court of Honor
the day before BMT graduation? "It was an interesting experience.
It was not a traditional court of honor," he said about the
December 10th ceremony. Col. William Mott V, the 37th Training Wing
commander, presided over the event and presented Platte with his
Eagle Scout award.
The two days of activities were enough to make a mother proud.
"I don't think there are words to describe how proud I am," said
Platte's mother, Marilyn Wright. "He really didn't have any idea
the legacy he was stepping into. Since he was six, he's been
saying, 'I want to fly planes; I want to be in the air!'"
"Honestly, I tried to discourage him, but it's in his heart to be
an airman," she said. "Now he's fulfilling a dream."