Archie Williams - Meteorologist and Olympic Gold Medalist
In honor of Black History Month and National Weather Person’s Day, we are highlighting the legacy of Archie Williams, an accomplished meteorologist, Olympic gold medalist, and educator.
Born in 1915 in Oakland, California, Williams expressed an early interest in both aviation and athletics. While studying mechanical engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, he excelled in track and field, setting a world record and qualifying for the 1936 Berlin Olympics, where he won a gold medal in the 400-meter race.
After an injury ended his running career and engineering jobs were denied due to racial discrimination, Williams redirected his focus toward aviation and meteorology.During World War II, he became one of 14 African Americans commissioned through the Army Air Forces aviation meteorological cadet program.
Following graduation, Williams served as a weather officer and flight instructor for the Tuskegee Airmen, helping train the first black military pilots in U.S. history. “While I was there, I had three jobs,” Williams later recalled. “I was a weather officer; I was drawing weather maps, making weather forecasts; and teaching intro to flying.”
Williams spent 22 years in the U.S. Air Force—many of them as a meteorologist at the Air Force Weather Center—retiring in 1964 as a lieutenant colonel and command pilot. He went on to spend the next two decades teaching math and computer science to high school students in California.




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