Tuskegee Airmen Memorial Way Was Unveiled Last Week on San Antonio’s East Side
A stretch of Iowa Street on San Antonio’s East Side now carries a new name: Tuskegee Airmen Memorial Way, unveiled last week during a ceremony that brought together community members, leaders, and descendants in Denver Heights.

The designation honors the legacy of the Tuskegee Airmen while placing that history directly into the daily life of a neighborhood with deep ties to it. More than 100 people attended the unveiling, marking the culmination of a yearlong effort rooted not in City Hall, but in the community.
Rooted in the Community
The push began with Lt. Col. Rick Sinkfield and the San Antonio Chapter of the Tuskegee Airmen, who brought forward the need for a permanent, visible tribute in the city.

Iowa Street was not chosen at random. The corridor runs through Denver Heights, a historic East Side neighborhood where several Tuskegee Airmen once lived, making the designation both symbolic and grounded in place.
From Community Effort to City Action
That community push moved into the legislative process when District 2 Councilman Jalen McKee-Rodriguez filed a Council Consideration Request in April 2025.
Nearly a year later, the effort reached completion.
Yesterday, we had the privilege of joining the San Antonio Chapter of the Tuskegee Airmen to celebrate the designation of a section of Iowa Street as Tuskegee Airmen Memorial Way. McKee-Rodriguez. This was part of a Council Consideration Request our office filed last April, and now, nearly a year later, we’re celebrating its installation.
D2 Councilman Jalen McKee-Rodriguez
He added, “Our gratitude goes out to Lt. Colonel Sinkfield and the San Antonio Chapter of the Tuskegee Airmen for bringing this idea to our attention and for your leadership through this process.”
Related: San Antonio Lodge No. 1 Honored With “History Here” Marker
City Council approved the designation in 2025, with the official unveiling taking place last week.
The naming is ceremonial, meaning Iowa Street remains the official address, with Tuskegee Airmen Memorial Way added as an honorary designation.

A Legacy Made Visible
The Tuskegee Airmen—known as the “Red Tails”—were the nation’s first Black military aviators, flying missions during World War II in a segregated military while challenging deeply rooted racial barriers.
In San Antonio, that history now lives beyond textbooks and memorials. It exists on a street sign—seen by residents, drivers, and future generations moving through the East Side each day.
Leaders proclaimed March 26 as Tuskegee Airmen Commemoration Day during the unveiling ceremony. Not Just remembered but now carried forward This designation does more than honor the past. It shows how history moves, through people who refuse to let it fade, through communities that demand visibility, and through a city that ultimately puts that recognition in place.
Because the name doesn’t change where people live- but it changes what people see, every day.





