Becoming a medic instead, Woodson was assigned to the 320th Barrage Balloon Battalion, whose job was to loft blimp-like, hydrogen-filled spheres high into the sky to protect strategic sites from Axis aerial assaults. As Hervieux reports in her book, the all-Black unit trained in Tennessee during the height of Jim Crow laws, where German prisoners of war received better treatment than they did. (The Germans, for example, were allowed to eat at restaurants in town, whereas they couldn’t.)
Not long after D-Day, the 320th Barrage Balloon Battalion was sent back to the United States, to a base in Georgia, only to be greeted on arrival by racist slurs from white soldiers. The unit later shipped off to Hawaii, where it spent the remainder of the conflict.
Woodson, whose brother served with the famed Tuskegee Airmen, remained in the Army Reserve for years thereafter and was recalled to active duty during the Korean War, though this time he never went overseas. Following a brief stint back in Georgia—where he was supposed to do work on communicable diseases for the military, only to find out they wouldn’t give the job to an African American—he became director of the morgue at an Army medical center in Maryland.
At this point, Woodson met Joann at a dance: The couple would marry in 1952 and have three children together. Despite dreaming of attending medical school, very few of which were then open to Blacks, Woodson chose a post-military career in medical technology. “He was always interested in medicine,” Joann Woodson tells HISTORY, adding that he spent nearly four decades at the National Institutes of Health in Maryland, where he particularly enjoyed performing diagnostic tests following open-heart surgery.
An electronics whiz who once built a color TV from scratch, Woodson dabbled in photography and spent much time gardening at his Clarksburg, Maryland, home. Yet he never much talked about his war experiences until 1994, when the French government presented him with a medallion in Normandy as part of a celebration of the 50th anniversary of D-Day.
Around the same time, a study commissioned by the U.S. Army concluded that racism was to blame for the military’s failure to honor soldiers of color during World War II. In response, President Bill Clinton awarded Medals of Honor to seven Black soldiers who had served in the conflict, only one of whom was still alive to receive it. Woodson was not among them, an oversight, in Joann Woodson’s opinion, that she now hopes to correct.
“As long as I am living,” says Joann, who plans on donating the medal to a museum, “I would do anything to see that he gets the proper recognition.”