Home / Full timeline / Daniel “Chappie” James, the only four-star Black general in the U.S. Armed Forces, dies of a heart attack in Colorado Springs, Colorado, at age fifty-eight.
Daniel “Chappie” James, the only four-star Black general in the U.S. Armed Forces, dies of a heart attack in Colorado Springs, Colorado, at age fifty-eight.
1978 (Feb 25)
Daniel "Chappie" James, the only four-star Black general in the U.S. Armed Forces, died of a heart attack in Colorado Springs, Colorado, at age fifty-eight. James, a graduate of Tuskegee Institute, grew up in Pensacola, Florida, during a period of rigid racial segregation. His mother, Lillie A. James, who founded her own school for Black youths, encouraged him to dream of higher things. James emerged from pushing a coal dolly in a Pensacola gas plant to one of the nation's most influential military leaders. Of his mother's influence, James once stated: “My mother used to say, 'Don't stand there banging on the door of opportunity, then, when someone opens it, you say, 'Wait a minute, I got to get my bags.' You be prepared with your bags of knowledge, your patriotism, your honor, and when somebody opens that door, you charge in." James, who served in three wars with the Air Force, retired on January 26, 1978. He wrote on a portrait of himself that now hangs in the Pentagon: “I fought three wars and three more wouldn't be too many to defend my country. ... I love America and as she has weaknesses or ills, I'll hold her hand."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.