Sunday, March 11, 2012

Lady Pirates Win Third Straight MEAC title

Congratulations to the Lady Pirates for winning their third straight MEAC title!


Hampton University Athletics - LADY PIRATES WIN THIRD STRAIGHT MEAC TOURNEY TITLEWINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Three years under head coach David Six, three titles.
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Three years under head coach David Six, three titles.

With a 54-53 nail-biting win over Howar


Sunday, February 19, 2012

2012 North Carolina Region of NHAA, Inc Annual Meeting

2012 Annual Meeting of the
National Hampton Alumni Association, Inc.
North Carolina Region


When: March 10, 2012 
Time: 8:30am-12:30pm
Where: Sundance Plaza Hotel and Suits
              3050 University Parkway
              Winston-Salem, NC 27105


Show Your Support for Hampton in the MEAC Tournament

Come Support the Pirates and Lady Pirates
in the

March 5-10, 2012
at the Joel Coliseum
in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

The Pirates and Lady Pirates are both the defending MEAC Champions and need fan support in 2012 to make it happen again. The tournament will be moving to Norfolk, VA from 2013-2015, so it might not return to theTriad again. Let's take advantage of its close proximity to more than 1500 Hampton alumni in the state of NC and let's show our support and love for our "Home by the Sea". Come cheer on the Pirates & Lady Pirates during their games and then party with alumni and friends at the MEAC After Parties on Thursday and Friday nights. An All Access pass for one or both nights is only $10 (http://meacpirates.eventbrite.com/). Proceeds will benefit the NC Region NHAA Endowed Scholarship which will provide scholarships to students from NC attending Hampton University.

If you can't make any of the events, "show your HU love by giving" and please consider making a donation to the "NC Region Endowed Scholarship" (you will have to select Endowed Scholarship in the campaign section and put "NC Region Endowed Scholarship" in the Additional Comments section of the form) or the campaign of your choice at http://donateto.hamptonu.edu

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Hampton's Influence on Tuskegee



Hampton's Heroes -  Hamptonian Tuskegee Airmen and the History of Hampton's Influence on Tuskegee

The U.S. government sponsored African-American flight training in 1939 with the Civilian Pilot Training (CPT) Act. Administered by the Civilian Aeronautics Association (CAA), the Act authorized selected schools to offer CPT primary flight training for pilots in case of a national emergency. Schools for African-American candidates included Tuskegee Institute, Howard University, Hampton Institute, and the Coffey School of Aeronautics. The government paid for ground and flight school instruction. Colleges provided instructors, physical examinations for potential students, and transportation to approved flying fields. Tuskegee Institute originally offered elementary or primary CPT courses. In July 1940, the CAA authorized Tuskegee Institute  (founded by Booker T. Washington (1875 Hampton grad) to provide advanced CPT courses.  Robert Muss Moton (1890 Hampton grad) - Robert Moton was the second president of Tuskegee University.  Moton retired from Tuskegee in 1935 and died at his home, Holly Knoll, in Capahosic, Virginia, on the York River, on May 31, 1940. He was buried at the Hampton Institute. Moton Field at the Tuskegee Institute, where the black pilots known as the Tuskegee Airmen trained during World War II (1939-1945), was named for him in 1941. Moton Field was the only primary flight facility for African-American pilot candidates in the U.S. Army Air Corps (Army Air Forces) during World War II. Moton Field was built between 1940 and 1942 with funding from the Julius Rosenwald Fund to provide primary flight training under a contract with the U.S. military. http://encyclopediavirginia.org/Moton_Robert_Russa_1867-1940
 
The first class graduated from Tuskegee on March 7, 1942 and earned their wings. They were Lemuel Curtis, Charles DeBow, Mac Ross, George S. "Spanky" Roberts, and Benjamin O. Davis, Jr. Other classes soon followed and the Tuskegee Airmen flew into their place in history.

Charles H. DeBow, a Hampton grad, was a poor boy with a dream of flying. After finding a flying school that would accept him, he worked day and night at odd jobs to pay for his lessons. Earning a civil pilot’s license was one of Charles’ many educational achievements before attending Hampton Institute. After graduation he taught school for a short time. After an announcement of a Negro flying unit had black men lined up at recruiting offices, Charles applied to the Army Air Corps. They selected the brightest and the best, he was among them. This first class was taking advanced training when Japanese forces bombed Pearl Harbor. Of the original thirteen men selected only five graduated. They received their wings before the statue of Booker T. Washington at Tuskegee Army Air Field on March 7th, 1942. Later, DeBow was stopped in a Montgomery street by a white citizen asking, "Why do you boys want to fly anyhow?" He thought over the question several days and replied in a news paper article: "....first, I was flying for my parents who had worked hard at menial jobs to give me an opportunity. Second, I was flying for my race, to prove myself as Booker T. Washington and George Washington Carver had in the field of science. Third, I was flying for my country, however imperfect, it could open doors and was a much better option than Nazism." The American Magazine.

Additional  Hamptonian-Tuskegee Airmen (just to name a few include):  Caesar Bassette ’37, George "Richard" Bolling ’40Roscoe Draper ‘40, Lt. Col Willis J. Hubert ’40 , William Hudgins ’40,  Philip Lee ‘40, William R. Thompson ’40, Alexander Wilkerson ‘4X, William Neal Brown ’41, Ernest Henderson ’41, Washington Dubois Ross ‘41,William Streat ’41, Vernon Haywood attended ’38-’41 (Class of ’42), Milton Holmes ‘42, Percy Sutton ’43, Augustus Palmer ’47, Jerry Hodges attended ’43-’44 (Class of ’47),Walter Tucker ’49, Henry Bohler ’50, Lt. Col (Ret.) Francis Horne Sr ‘51, James M. Dillard ‘51, and Alfred Bailey '53.   (There maybe more Hamptonians that were not mentioned)

Founder's Day Worship and Fellowship

Annual Raleigh Chapter of NHAA
Founder's Day Worship and Fellowship

Watts Chapel Missionary Baptist Church
January 22, 2012
10:30 am Service
(please arrive by no later than 10:15 so that we can sit together)


After Church Fellowship at Primesmokehouse Restaurant 
2800 Rock Quarry Road, Raleigh, NC 


  

Monday, December 12, 2011

A Royal Hamptonian Holiday Affair

 
Rocking and Ringing the Royal & White!
Please join your Hampton family for our annual Hamptonian Holiday affair on Sunday, Dec 18th from 4-7PM at the Village Lakes Clubhouse at 5252 Turfgrass Raleigh, NC 27610 (located off Rogers Lane, which is off Highway 64 Business East in Raleigh).

We are asking that you bring a side dish or dessert, a non-perishable food to donate to a needy cause, and if you have any excess or treasures that you don't want or need anymore, please bring an item to donate to our silent auction. Please identify your item and email us at raleighnhaa@yahoo.com by Dec 15th so that a bid sheet can be prepared. One pirate's junk may be another pirate's treasure. (i.e. artwork, music, jewelry, gift baskets, collectibles, accessories etc.).

All local alumni, students and parents are invited to attend this year's event. Please RSVP by Dec 16th and let us know what you are bringing in the evite's comments section.

Alumni, please don't forget your end of the year gift to Hampton University (get your tax deductions in for 2011). You may bring your donation to the party (and I will mail in for you) or please make a donation online by Dec 31 at https://secure.hamptonu.edu/development/ (put Chapter Code AAEK in additional comments section).

Happy Holidays!!