The Black Swallow of Death: Eugene Bullard’s Astonishing Life

In 1950s New York, an older Black man quietly operated an elevator at Rockefeller Center. His passengers had no idea they were riding with a decorated war hero, a former spy, a Paris jazz-club owner, and the first Black American military pilot in history.

This episode follows Eugene Jacques Bullard from Jim Crow-era Georgia to the trenches of World War I, the skies over France, and the heart of 1920s Parisian nightlife, only to find his hardest battles waiting back home in America. It is a story of relentless reinvention and dignity in the face of a country that refused to recognize him until decades after his death.

  • How an 11-year-old ran away from Georgia and stowed away on a freighter chasing his father’s stories of a fairer France
  • His combat record with the French Foreign Legion and the elite ‘Swallows of Death,’ earning the Croix de Guerre at Verdun
  • Becoming the first Black American military pilot in 1917, only to be rejected by the U.S. Air Service for being Black
  • Spying on Nazi officers who assumed he couldn’t understand the German they spoke around him
  • The 1949 Peekskill beating, his French Legion of Honor knighthood, and his posthumous U.S. Air Force commission 77 years later

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