In 1930, when future Ethiopian ruler Haile Selassie was planning a lavish ceremony to celebrate his coronation as emperor, he sent an emissary to a 33-year-old U.S.-based aviator, Hubert Fauntleroy Julian. Aviation had come to Ethiopia only the year before, with the arrival of a French Potez 25 biplane piloted by André Maillet, but the modernity-obsessed Selassie hoped to put on an aerial display, with a flamboyant performer who would attract the world’s attention. Julian, known in New York as the “Black Eagle of Harlem” and sometimes called the “Negro Lindbergh,” was the perfect choice.
At the emperor-elect’s request, the Ethiopian Imperial Air Force, which consisted of two Junkers monoplanes, a Gipsy Moth, and two French pilots, performed a pre-coronation show. In an unplanned flourish, Julian leapt from Maillet’s airplane, parachuting to the feet of Selassie, who was so pleased that he bestowed Ethiopian citizenship on Julian, the rank of colonel, and awarded him the Order of Menelik, the empire’s highest honor.
Julian’s glory was short-lived. Four months later, during a coronation dress rehearsal in Addis Ababa, Julian lost control of the de Havilland Gipsy Moth he was flying. As the emperor-elect looked on in fury, Julian made a crash landing into a eucalyptus tree. The Moth had been Selassie’s personal airplane, a gift from Selfridge’s department store in London, and Julian was expelled from the country amid allegations that he had stolen the aircraft. He accused the Ethiopian air force’s French airmen of sabotaging him, but conceded in his 1964 memoir, Black Eagle, that “a crash at an air display watched by foreigners whom the Emperor wanted to impress was clearly a disaster.”
So the Black Eagle returned to Harlem. For the rest of his life Julian would continue to promote himself as Selassie’s air marshal, but Ethiopia would prove to be only a brief chapter in the Black Eagle’s just-true-enough life story.
It was in Ethiopia, in 2001, that I first heard of Julian. I was visiting a family of Jamaican Rastafarians who had immigrated to Ethiopia, and while we were discussing the history of other West Indians who had settled in the country, Julian’s name came up.
The Black Eagle is remembered in Ethiopia for his famous pre-coronation crash, and for his vocal anti-fascist stance in the days preceding World War II. He was spoken of reverently—although some of the details of his life were a bit muddled—and is remembered as someone who tried to do heroic things. Even though he didn’t always succeed, he’s considered a hero for trying.
In Julian’s autobiography, I learned that he himself muddled some of the details of his life. He was born in 1897 in the British colony of Trinidad, the son of a cocoa plantation manager. He writes that he grew up in a middle class neighborhood in the capital, Port of Spain, where he attended a British-administered boys’ school. The island’s first exposure to flight ended badly: In January 1913, aircraft designer Frank Boland crashed a tail-less biplane over the Queen’s Park Savannah, near Julian’s home, and was killed instantly. Julian, feeling the need to make the crash part of his personal narrative, moved it back to 1909 in his autobiography, placing himself at the scene.
I would learn that this compulsion to embellish was an essential part of Julian’s character. While these embellishments made it tempting to dismiss Julian as a charlatan, each time I dug deeper I found that his stories usually contained ample elements of truth.


Comments
Wonderful article on the bio of H.F. Julian. It filled in many gaps and misinformation that I had previously read on his life and exploits. Since I am just one generation behind him, I can recall many of the reports that florished around and about him,all of which were followed closely by me as a young man. Thanks, for a very through and intertesting article on this man. E.J. Murray Sacramento, CA
Posted by Edgar J. Murray on November 26,2008 | 03:43PM
What a fascinating story about a man I never even heard of before now, despite being something of an enthusiast -- if not an obsessed one -- of aviation history, especially its more colorful lore! Thanks for running the story.
Posted by Mekhong Kurt on December 14,2008 | 04:19PM
This is a great article! Julian's photo is in the National Air and Space Museum "Black Wings" exhibit which opened in September 1982. My 1987 PBS documentary film "Flyers In Search of A Dream" which tells the story of America's early black aviators has a segment on Julian. My award-winning 1992 book for young readers "Flying Free: America's First Black Aviators" also tells of Julian's exploits. One thing missing in David Shaftel's otherwise fine article is reference to his days in Los Angeles with the Bessie Coleman Aero Club and his participation in the first all-black air circus in 1931. My great-uncle, James Herman Banning, the first black pilot licensed in the United States in 1926 and the first black pilot to fly coast-to-coast from LA to NYC (with mechanic Thomas C. Allen), was one of Julian's peers and rivals.
Posted by Philip Hart on December 24,2008 | 10:15AM
I ran across the story about the Black Eagle something like 1983. And I always thought his story was great self-promotion, so much so that I had little trouble envisioning him as the subject of a movie. In fact many of the things he did seem almost like it was really a movie about an exceptional hero in some Spike Lee Joint. I recall reading in the Pugent book, I believe it was called: "The Black Eagle; Herbert Julian Fauntleroy, came into the United States from Canada, and in his style he had hired a white driver and here he came into the country dressed to a tee, with the driver I mentioned, at a time when not many blacks, were known for coming from the north, but more likely going to the north to escape segregation and Jim Crow laws that plagued this country around the time of his arrival. It was hard to know which was fact and which fiction, but he was a very entertaining sort of fellow, probably who has never been fully understood.
Posted by William Crockerham on February 27,2009 | 01:43AM
I just wanted to update my remarks from last February, and the main point is that the book I read was by John Nugent. The Black Eagle also was involved in Markus Garvey's Back to Africa movement and this review probably mentioned that as well. A contemporary of his, was of course, Bessie Coleman and both did as other Negroes back then had to do, go to France to obtain pilot training, as they could not receive it here in America at that time, because of racism. He was involved in so much and so often that he certainly was ahead of his time, even today he did or attempted to do more things than anyone black or white of his century. But when one compares his life with other Blacks from the Caribbean Islands that seems to be their Modus Operandi. Think of Harry Belafonte and Sidney Poiter, two who came here and did a lot with what they had to operate with, at a similar time of Jim Crow laws and what ever else that this society through their way. I don't know if Denzel's character in American Gangster's was based on a true black person but he was from the Island's also. In professional basketball, there is Tim Duncan, who is also from the Caribbean I believe.
Posted by William Crockerham on April 11,2009 | 02:06PM
Thanks! Very nice. I first heard of Julian as a child, reading my father's H. Allen Smith books. He seemed to be a wildly improbable superhero, a perfect object of fascination for a child. This is a wonderful fleshing out of the man. It would be nice to see more.
Posted by Anne Olson on April 12,2009 | 02:56PM
I met Julian in 1960 at the old Tamiami Airport in Miami, Florida. At the time, I was working my way through the University of Miami as a flight instructor. Julian was trying to acquire the paperwork to deliver am AT6 to some country in Latin America, but was very vague as to where he and the aircraft were really headed. At the time he was calling himself The Ebony Eagle and told one unbelivable story after the next. He was was one of the most interesting people that I have ever met and left a lasting impression.
Posted by Ira Deutsch on July 27,2009 | 09:27AM
Growing up in Brooklyn during and just after the war I was privilaged to meet Col. Julian as he was a close friend of one of our neighbors and visited many times. He even signed an autograph for me that has disappeared over the years. I read his autobiography when it was published.
Posted by steve jacobson on September 13,2009 | 01:22PM
I too had met Col. Julian at Lincoln air force base Lincoln Nebraska, i was teaching a class in aircraft mechanics he came into my class as a private in the US air force, his stories were almost unvelieveable but had newspaper articles to back them up, we became quite good friends, the local radio station had him as a guest and he asked me to go with him, charming guy, after graduating from the school i ran into him one day and i could swear he had a majors rank, could be wrong about that, but he asked if i wanted to go for a ride in a p-38 but my classes were about to start and didn't have the option of going with him, that was the last time i saw him, i understood at the time his wife was also in the military, but then again i may be mistaken on that, he told me about his shall we say adventure in ethiopia and had newspaper articles from london about his challenge to the head of the german air force for a duel over the english channel, Julian had a personal fighter plane given to him supposedly by Selassie
Posted by Tom Brink on November 8,2009 | 07:49PM