Marlon D. Green has been considered the “Jackie Robinson
of Aviation,” although he didn't set out to make that distinction. The
former Air Force pilot was determined to fly for a commercial airline
but was denied because he was Black. Undaunted, he decided to sue for
his right to fly. In 1963, the U.S. Supreme Court sided with Green and
dismantled the racist hiring practices within the airline industry,
leading the way for David Harris to become the first Black pilot for a
major American airline.
Marlon
Dewitt Green was born June 6, 1929 in El Dorado, Ark. After living in
Lansing, Mich., Green joined the Air Force and logged over 3,000 flight
hours via multi-engine aircraft such as B-26s. In 1957, Green was
encouraged by reports that commercial airlines would be hiring Black
pilots, so be began applying to the major airlines. According to varying
sources, he was either rejected or denied because of his race.
Green
was finally invited for a flight test by Continental Airlines after he
left the race field blank. He still wasn't hired, despite having more
experience than his white counterparts. Angered by Continental's refusal
to let him join its pilots corp, Green filed a complaint with the
Colorado Anti-Discrimination Commission. Continental was based in the
state, which had just passed a law barring racial discrimination during
the hiring process.
The
Commission used the race basis to bring the charge of discrimination,
but the Green v. Continental Airlines case was couched within the
unconstitutional barring of interstate commerce. Since Continental
traveled state to state, the Constitution supported Green's case and
thus the airline would be sued on two counts, discrimination and the
blocking of interstate travel for employment.
Green's
case ultimately made its way to the Supreme Court, which sided with him
in April 1963. The following year, Harris would become the first Black
pilot to fly for a major airline when he was hired by American Airlines.
In 1965, after all the fuss, Continental hired Green and he flew for
the airline until 1979.
Green,
who died in July 2009, was survived by his ex-wife Eleanor Green, three
sons, three daughters and two grandchildren, in addition to two
brothers. In 2010, he was honored by Continental after they named a
Boeing 737 in their fleet after the captain.
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