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After the War

  After the war, black men like Thad Bryson came home changed. Black men had more choices than Thad had dreamed. But back in Old Fort the War and the Army had changed nothing except Thad. Jim Crow still dominated his life and the life of his family. Link to Another story “Young Black Officers” …

Young Black Officers

Video About Tuskegee Airmen Thad grew up knowing little beyond his black community in Old Fort, North Carolina. He lived in a two-room house on a small farm. Nobody in North Carolina expected much from a young black man, and it did not occur to young Thad to expect much from himself. He vaguely knew …

Disaster Loomed

Disaster loomed in the back of a 2 ½ ton truck parked at the Headquarters Company camp at Big Gerstle, Alaska. A young lieutenant proposed to haul ten soldiers, Sgt James Heard and his squad, 130 miles in the back of the unheated truck. The day’s extremely low temperature, combined with the wind chill effect …

Problem with No Solution

  Problem with no solution? When the soldiers of the 18th found themselves trying to build road over permafrost–a lake of ice covered by a thin layer of decayed vegation—it looked like they had encountered one. But on the Alaska Highway Project in 1942 the Corps of Engineers could not allow a problem with no …

Reinstalling a Tread

Reinstalling a tread back onto its drive sprocket, relatively routine on flat ground, became something very different when doing it on a 23-ton machine that was teetering on the edge of a crumbling slope of glacial debris. That called for great skill and calm nerves. In a better world, the catskinners of the 97th wouldn’t …

Twelve Hundred Black Soldiers

  Twelve hundred black soldiers jammed the hold as the David Branch pulled into frigid Valdez Harbor on April 29, 1942. The next morning when the ship tied up to the dock and dropped its gangplank, they waited to get off the ship and find somewhere to eat and sleep. To complicate things, strict orders …

Blues and the Highway Project

Blues came to Yukon in the blood and marrow of soldiers from the Mississippi Delta—the soldiers of the 93rd Engineering Regiment. After all, the blues were born in the Delta too. On a wall in the Carcross Depot today hangs a photo of a large group of black soldiers in front of the 1942 depot. …

Buffalo Soldiers in Skagway

Buffalo Soldiers from the 24th Infantry Regiment came to Skagway in 1899, forty-four years before the black soldiers of the 93rd came there to build the Alaska Highway. The Klondike Gold Rush had brought hordes of gold rushers who threatened the community and each other. The Army sent Company L of the 24th Infantry to …

Ten Mutineers

Ten young black men from the hot and humid South, Sgt. Heard and his squad had endured the spring and summer of 1942 building Alaska Highway through the wilds of Alaska.  In late fall Company F and the squad had crossed into Yukon Territory to work on south through piling snow and plunging temperatures. Back …

Thanksgiving in Yukon and Tim’s Best Story

Thanksgiving in Yukon, at Morley Bay, gave Tim’s best story its punchline. All of Tim’s stories conveyed feelings and meaning wrapped in humor, and the funniest and most meaningful ones we couldn’t hear too many times. His thanksgiving at Morley Bay gave him the best punchline he ever used. Christmas in Yukon The story didn’t …