ROBERT SEARCY, 88
Member of the Tuskegee Airmen
Robert Searcy, a member of the all-black group of World War II servicemen known as the Tuskegee Airmen, died of colon cancer Sept. 7 at his granddaughter's home in Atlanta. He was 88.
ROBERT SEARCY, 88
Member of the Tuskegee Airmen
Robert Searcy, a member of the all-black group of World War II servicemen known as the Tuskegee Airmen, died of colon cancer Sept. 7 at his granddaughter's home in Atlanta. He was 88.
Searcy was born in Mount Pleasant, Texas, in 1921, and briefly attended what is now Prairie View A&M University before enlisting in the Army Air Corps in 1942.
In an interview this year, he said that after basic training at Fort Hood, Texas, he was selected to lead a group of airmen to Tuskegee Army Airfield in Tuskegee, Ala.
Searcy described how porters on the train platform that day told him that his men would be segregated, barred from dining and sleeping quarters. Searcy objected.
"I demanded that they give us equal passage to get there, off and on, to eat and sleep with the rest of them," he said.
He said the porters, who were mostly black, eventually gave in.
"I was put in charge of those men," he said. "I felt I had to represent what the Constitution was for those men. That's what leadership is."
Searcy then served as a general clerk in Italy, surviving an attack by submarines on his way and numerous air assaults on his camp in the Italian marshes, where he lived in a tent and slogged through black mud and ash from nearby Mount Vesuvius to deliver military intelligence messages to superiors.
Searcy was honorably discharged Oct. 27, 1945, with commendations for supporting combat missions over Europe, North Africa and the Middle East.
He settled in Los Angeles and attended extension school at the University of California, Los Angeles, part time for two years before marrying childhood friend Betty Lydia Jones in 1948. They had a daughter, Robyn, in 1952 and later divorced. Searcy remarried aspiring Swedish actress Mona Elisa Arbvie in 1978. The couple had no children, later divorced and Arbvie died in a car crash in 1990.
Searcy went on to work at a downtown post office and opened several clothing stores in Hollywood and South Los Angeles. He kept clippings about the airmen, read widely, and encouraged his grandchildren to do the same.
"To me, he was like history. He just had so many stories to tell," said granddaughter Christy Davis, 32, of Atlanta.
Davis, a mother of three and a driver for FedEx, said Searcy encouraged her to get an education and better herself.