LOS ANGELES — Clarence E. Huntley Jr. and Joseph Shambrey grew up running track together in the same Los Angeles neighborhood in the 1930s.
When World War II broke out, they enlisted in the Army and jumped at the chance to join the all-black group of soldiers known as the Tuskegee Airmen.
After the war, they came back home together, married their respective sweethearts and rarely let a month pass without getting together or talking by phone.
So it was ironic but perhaps not all that surprising when both died on Jan. 5 at 91.
"They were friends all the way to the end," Huntley's nephew, Craig Huntly, summed up in an interview Monday with The Associated Press.
"As soon as I got the word that my uncle had died," he said, "one of the first people I began calling was Joe. And I got no answer."
After their enlistment in 1942, both men quickly set out to be part of what was then called the Tuskegee Experiment — the formation of the U.S. military's first all-black squadron of pilots. The group went on to take part in more than 15,000 combat missions, earning over 150 Distinguished Flying Crosses.
As Tuskegee Airmen mechanics, Huntley and Shambrey did what they could to make sure the planes stayed in the air until the mission was over.