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Last Name: Haywood

Vernon V. Haywood

Vernon V. Haywood

Arizona Aviation Hall of Fame
Enshrined 1993

Vernon Haywood was born in Raleigh, North Carolina. In 1938-1940 he attended Hampton University where he received his primary flight instruction in the Civilian Pilot Training Program. Then in 1941, he went to Tuskegee Institute for secondary training and soon became an aviation cadet in the Army Air Force. During World War II he served 15 months as a fighter pilot in the Mediterranean Theater, flying P-39s, P-47s, and P-51s. Assigned to Williams AFB in 1949, he was one of the first four black jet flight instructors in the U.S. Air Force.

Note:

Tuskegee Airman awarded the Congressional Gold Medal posthumously in 2006.

By serving so effectively as an instructor, then flight and section commander, he helped certify the goal of total integration in the armed forces. And the exemplary performance of Haywood and his colleagues also did much to advance civil rights and topple other racial barriers throughout all America. A highly decorated and respected leader, he continued his illustrious USAF career until retiring a colonel in 1971. Vernon Haywood’s record of achievement brought great credit to Arizona and the nation.

John Connelly and Leland Hayward

John Connelly and Leland Hayward

Arizona Aviation Hall of Fame
Enshrined 2000

WWII and their mutual interest in aviation brought John “Jack” Connelly and Leland Hayward together. Jack Connolly was trained as a U.S. Army pilot during the closing days of WWI. At war’s end, Connelly combined work in the financial world with an active life in aviation and motion pictures. His aviation activities involved work as a test pilot and a founder of Regional Airlines.

Leland Hayward was a “giant” in the American Theater and a friend and contemporary of other such giants in music and theater as Richard Rogers, Josh Logan, and Oscar Hammerstein. He was also an accomplished pilot.

We honor Jack Connelly and Leland Hayward for their role in training more than 25,000 American and Allied pilots from more than 29 nations in WWII. Their company, Southwest Airways, built three Phoenix-area airports and operated a fourth. Today, Scottsdale Airport (Thunderbird 2) and Falcon Field serve the needs of private and corporate aviation. Thunderbird 1 in Glendale, Arizona is now the site of the respected American Graduate School of International Management.