The Other Harlem
In 1930s Chicago, at the corner of 87th Street and Harlem Avenue, Cornelius Coffey made aviation history.
- By Giles Lambertson
- Air & Space magazine, March 2010
During wartime flight instruction at Harlem, students learned on a WACO UPF-7 trainer; the field also had Piper Cubs.
SI-99-15432~P
(Page 5 of 6)
“She said, ‘I’ve been watching you, Quentin, and I know you can learn to fly. Let me show you something,’ ” he remembers. “She pulled it up into a stall and we spun seven or eight times—and you don’t spin a Cub!—and then she pulled it out and this little lady said to me, ‘You can’t be King Kong, Quentin. You’ve got to be gentle. You’re going to learn to fly today.’ ” And he did. Smith completed training at Tuskegee and was assigned to a bomber group based in Seymour, Indiana.
Bev Dunjill’s connection to Harlem began in 1943 as a 16-year-old member of the Civil Air Patrol. He remembers Coffey as attentive. “He saw in me a kid who wanted to fly so bad he could taste it,” says Dunjill, who at 82 lives just a few miles east of the old airport site. “He was a wonderful man. He was such an important person in my life.”
Coffey offered to pay the black teenager 50 cents an hour to work at Harlem, plus give him 30 minutes of flying time each weekend. Dunjill instantly accepted, though he didn’t tell his airplane-fearing mother for six months. Each day Dunjill rode a streetcar to the end of the line at 63rd Street, where Coffey met him and drove him to the airport. The teen spent his days pushing airplanes from the hangar, washing fuselages, and performing minor maintenance.
The exact number of pilots that the Harlem wartime program turned out is unknown, but it was in the hundreds. No airplane was ever wrecked.
After the war, Coffey did some work at Harlem, but spent most of the next two decades teaching aviation mechanics in high schools and an area college.
Some of the aviators from Harlem’s early years went on to have distinguished careers. Coffey himself got a patent on a popular carburetor warming system, and the Federal Aviation Administration honored him with an aerial navigation waypoint (“Cofey Fix” in FAA spelling) to align aircraft landing at Chicago Midway Airport. Harold Hurd was inducted into the Illinois Aviation Hall of Fame. Dale White broke employment barriers for black mechanics. Willa Brown ran twice (unsuccessfully) for Congress, the first black woman to try for a Congressional seat. Quentin Smith stayed active in aviation, becoming president of the Gary, Indiana Regional Airport Authority. And Bev Dunjill, who had entered the cadet program at Tuskegee as World War II ceased, re-enlisted in 1949 and became an F-86 jet combat instructor in Korea, along with a pilot named Gus Grissom.
In the post-war years, Harlem Airport grew even busier, with six flying schools, a repair service, and half a dozen hangars. Forty acres were added, and 10 unpaved runways crisscrossed the field.
But in September 1956 the airport lost its lease. A parcel of land that had once been a cornfield was transformed once more, this time into a residential subdivision and a shopping center named Southfield Plaza. Today, customers walk to Shop ’N Save, Hobby Lobby, and Walgreens on pavement where leather-helmeted pilots once revved engines to taxi and take off. Grassy airstrips scarred by ruts have disappeared under smooth streets lined with houses and trees. The acreage’s only link to aviation is several hundred feet overhead, where airliners descend toward landings at Midway Airport.
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Comments (8)
the picture of Chauncey E. Spencer Sr. and his sister was not taken in Washington D.C, it was taken in New York @
Floyd Bennett Airport after Chauncey E. Spencer Sr. and Dale L. White left Washington D.C and talking with Sen. Harry Truman in 1939. EDITORS' REPLY: Our apologies. The caption has been corrected.
Posted by Chauncey E. Spencer II on February 4,2010 | 08:27 PM
To all of you, who are bold and beautiful, going behind enemy lines to write these kind of stories about our African American pilots I commend you for getting the word out, keep it coming.
Posted by I J Baker on March 15,2010 | 12:33 AM
I fill with pride reading this article.
My Dad Faite Mack, my number one hero, and my family were good friends of Mr. Coffee and most of the individuals mentioned in this article.
My Dad also spearheaded the donation of National Guard aircraft to the Dunbar and CVS high schools maintenance programs in Chicago.
Mr. Coffee was my examiner when I received my AMT license and in spite of how humble he was, will remain hero to us all.
Dr. Quentin Smith, also a hero, was my principal in high school and set an example for all of the young men he educated.
They are really America's heroes
Posted by Phillip B. Mack on March 17,2010 | 05:37 PM
My 1987 PBS documentary film 'Flyers In Search of A Dream'(www.shopPBS.org) tells the story of America's first black aviators, including Cornelius Coffey, Harold Hurd, and Willa Brown. So, I am pleased to read this excellent story on The Other Harlem. My interest in these stories began when I was in grade school, listening to family stories about my grandmother's brother, James Herman Banning, the first black pilot licensed in the United States in 1926 and the first to fly coast-to-coast (with Thomas C. Allen) in 1932. Banning, Allen, Coffey, Hurd, Willa Brown, Bessie Coleman, John Robinson, William J. Powell, all convey a story of determination to succeed against all odds.
Posted by Philip S. Hart on April 21,2010 | 01:42 PM
On Sat. August 28, 2010 at 1:00pm We will open The Robbins History Museum at 3644 W. 139th Street in Robbins, IL near the location of the historic Robbins Airport site in Robbins. This Museum will tell the true story of the life and Aviation careers of John C. Robinson, Cornelius R. Coffey, Harold Hurd, Clyde Hampton, Janet Bragg, Willa B. Brown, and many others as well as display personal aviation artifacts they left us to enjoy. We are the new owners of the great Harold Hurd Aviation collection, Coffey Collection and others. I first met Cornelius R. Coffey, Harold Hurd and Clyde Hampton in 1982 I met Janet Bragg one month before she passed away at the St. Francis hospital in neighboring Blue Island, IL. and fell in love with their Aviation careers and dedicated myself to build a Museum to their memory and legacy as the embryonic beginnings of the now famous Tuskegee Airmen.
Posted by Tyrone Haymore on June 15,2010 | 03:43 AM
Post Script: Please note...My spelling of Mr. Coffey's name "Coffee" is intentional and the way I spelled his name on all of my notes to him...He never corrected me until he signed my temporary certificate. I apologized to him at that moment and he told me not to worry...it his way of knowing that the notes were truly from me. It is my continued salute to a great man of history.
Posted by Phillip B. Mack on December 22,2011 | 07:30 PM
As I look back I think to myself why when I hear the Tuskegee Airmen talk to small and large groups of people they said nothing about those who come before there self.
This go's for the only two movies about the Tuskegee Airmen
Hollywood History!!
In order to teach others about this part of American History, it should be complete and all the story is out there....
NATIONAL AIRMEN ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA
....before the Tuskegee Airmen
During the mid 1930’s and prior to World War II a group of foresighted, concerned, and dedicated individuals came together in the Chicago area to form an organization that actively pursued and set the stage for the participation of African-Americans in the realms of aviation and aeronautics.
Under the leadership of Cornelius R. Coffey, Willa B, Brown, and Enoc P. Waters, the National Negro Airmen Association of American was formed with the express purpose.......to further stimulate interest in aviation, and to bring about a better understanding in the field of aeronautics. Shortly thereafter Claude Barnett, director of the Association of Negro Press (ANP), with strong backing from Chauncey Spencer and Dale White, suggested that the word Negro be dropped and the organization renamed the National Airmen Association of America. The proposal was adopted maintaining the original objectives.
On August 16, 1939 application for Certificate of Incorporation was filed in Cook County with the Illinois Secretary of State listing as Directors the following: Cornelius R. Coffey, Dale L. White, Harold Hurd, Willa B. Brown, Marie St. Clair, Charles Johnson, Chauncey E. Spencer, Grover C. Nash, Edward H. Johnson, Janet Waterford, George Williams, and Enoch P. Waters.
Posted by Chauncey E. Spencer II on January 7,2012 | 11:35 AM
I had the great pleasure of meeting Mr. Coffey when he was inducted into the "Charles Taylor" Master Mechanic's Award first class. I was an Aviation Safety Counselor, and presented an award to another individual, but Mr. Coffey made a real impression on me. He walked around and I think shook everyones hand that was there, thanking them. He was quiet and soft spoken, but you could just feel his presence while with him.
Posted by Mike Carey on January 27,2012 | 12:52 PM