Home / Full timeline / James E. Hair, one of thirteen Blacks who broke the U.S. Navy’s color barrier by becoming officers in World War II, dies at St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York of an apparent heart attack.
James E. Hair, one of thirteen Blacks who broke the U.S. Navy’s color barrier by becoming officers in World War II, dies at St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York of an apparent heart attack.
1992 (Jan 3)
James E. Hair, one of thirteen Blacks who broke the U.S. Navy's color barrier by becoming officers in World War II, died at St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York. Hair, who was seventy-six, died of an apparent heart attack. A grandson of slaves, Hair faced a segregated Navy that relegated Blacks to duties as cooks and stewards when he enlisted in 1942. When President Franklin D. Roosevelt challenged the segregation practice, the Navy reluctantly admitted thirteen Blacks to its Great Lakes Training Station near Chicago. Segregated from the white candidates, the Blacks were only given eight weeks of training instead of the customary sixteen, so they studied at night and quizzed one another thoroughly on Navy regulations. Dubbed the "Golden 13" in observance of the gold stripes they wanted to wear, they scored so high that skeptical Navy officers ordered them retested. The results were even higher, averaging 3.89 out of 4.00—the best class score ever recorded. They were commissioned as ensigns on March 17, 1944. Hair was assigned to skipper USSYTB-215 tugboat. In 1945, as a first lieutenant, he became the first Black officer on the USS Mason, a landing ship that sailed in Asia with a Black crew.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.