COLUMBUS, GA (WTVM) -
Four of the six surviving members of the legendary American
Volunteer Group Flying Tigers will visit the National Infantry Museum on
Friday, October 19.
They will host a Meet and Greet with the public from 1 - 2
p.m. in Patriot Hall. The public and media are invited to meet these courageous
men, have a picture taken and get an autograph. AVG Flying Tigers commemorative
coins will be available for purchase.
"We are so pleased to
host the Flying Tigers," said National Infantry Foundation President Ben Williams.
"For them to be able and willing to share their own personal stories with our
visitors really makes this museum come to life."
Prior to the Q&A Forum, moderated by National Infantry
Museum Executive VP and Chief Development Officer, COL (Ret) Greg Camp,
the original four AVG Flying Tigers will be presented a handmade quilt by the
Quilts of Valor Foundation, a non-profit organization that aims to provide
quilts to all combat service members and veterans touched by war.
Commemorative AVG Flying Tigers coins also will be sold for
$12 in support of the Flying Tigers Association, to keep the legacy of these
combat veterans and American heroes alive.
The American Volunteer Group Flying Tigers was formed to
assist China from the invasion of the Japanese in 1941. With the help of
President Franklin Roosevelt, approximately 100 pilots and 200 ground personnel
were discharged from the Navy, Marines and Army and recruited for this venture
around April 1941– approximately
eight months before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
The AVG Flying Tigers first served in Burma around the time
of Pearl Harbor, and after the surprise attack of the Japanese, became one of
the only positive things in the Pacific Theatre at the beginning of WWII.
There are only six original AVG Flying Tigers still living
today.
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