Pilot training on the Piper J-3 Cub training aircraft from Tuskegee University in Alabama, United States (home of the Tuskegee Airmen) during World War 2. The rear wing of the Piper Cub training aircraft flaps. Aircraft in flight. Aircraft flies between clouds. Pilot and copilot in aircraft while in flight.
Pilot training on the Piper J-3 Cub training aircraft from Tuskegee University in Alabama, United States (home of the Tuskegee Airmen in World War 2). Aerial view of Piper Cub training aircraft in flight. Pilot and copilot in aircraft while in flight. Aircraft tilts while in flight.
Pilot training on the Piper J-3 Cub training aircraft from Tuskegee University in Alabama, United States (home of the Tuskegee Airmen in World War 2). Moveable horizontal stabilizer of the Piper Cub is demonstrated. The aircraft "S" taxis on a field (proper for tail wheel airplanes, because of limited forward visibility). Trees in the background.
Pilot training on the Piper J-3 Cub training aircraft from Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, home of the Tuskegee Airmen during World War 2. The Piper Cub training aircraft taxis on a field. Trees in the background. Aircraft engine near propeller of the aircraft. African American man rotates handle on panel of aircraft. He operates the fuel switch. He then operates the throttle handle.
Home demonstration agent at Tuskegee Institute trains women as part of a Tuskegee Institute "Movable Schools" education outreach program. Collins, a farmer, meets a preacher. Two men with a poster from State Agriculture College. The poster advertises the upcoming arrival of a "Movable School" in the Alabama town. People read the poste and move to attend the school. Knapp truck (A Ford truck called the Knapp Agricultural Truck, so named to honor Seaman A. Knapp, of the national Cooperative Extension System) arrives with a group of instructors. Rural agricultural community of African American people learn skills from the movable school as they work in garden, water plants, erect stairs, mend houses, sharpen tools and make baskets. People learn carpentry under the guidance of an African American instructor. A new poultry house replaces an old hen house. A man views through a transit device as they learn about creating terraced farming plots.
Corner stone of church reads: "Sweet Gum A.M.E. Zion Church 1868. Rebuilt 1905." View of the unpainted wooden church, with many panes of its stain glass windows missing or damaged. ( The church is located at 560 Old Montgomery Hwy, Shorter, Alabama, near city of Tuskegee.) Rocky area at intersection of roads. A pile of rough hewn timbers. A large industrial building (possibly a mill). African American masons and painters on scaffold work on front of building, identified by sign reading:"Farmer's Alliance Warehouse." Nearby sign reads: "Fortner's Country Market." Cars parked in road by the stores. A pig and two piglets seen on the dirt road. African American man and woman walk slowly down along a rough dirt path or dirt road.
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