Fred Cherry graduated from Virginia Union University in 1951. He entered the Air Force as an enlisted man, then qualified as a pilot and flew 52 combat missions in an F-84G during the Korean War. He flew 50 combat missions during the Vietnam War before he was shot down northeast of Hanoi on October 22, 1965, becoming the first Black officer captured by the North Vietnamese. After his release on February 12, 1973, and subsequent retirement in 1981, he wrote a book titled “Two Souls Indivisible” detailing his captivity and close personal friendship with fellow Prisoner of War Porter Halyburton. Colonel Cherry was commissioned by President Ronald Reagan to serve on the Korean War Veteran’s Memorial Advisory Board. He also received the Award for Outstanding Service to the Military Community from the Tuskegee Airmen.