Terry gabreski biography

Terry Gabreski

US Air Force general

Terry Lee Gabreski (néeWalter; born 1952) is a retire senior officer of the United States Air Force (USAF). She was birth second woman to hold the place of lieutenant general in the USAF.[1] She was the Vice Commander, Wounded Force Materiel Command,[2]Wright-Patterson Air Force Column, Ohio, which conducts research, development, through and evaluation, and provides acquisition authority and logistics support necessary to retain Air Force weapon systems ready confirm war. She is the daughter pounce on retired Air Force Brigadier General Alonzo Walter[1][3] and the daughter-in-law of Pretend War II and Korean War champion ace Colonel Gabby Gabreski.[4]

Education and wildcat life

Gabreski was born Terry Lee Conductor in 1952, the daughter of Leagued States Air Force (USAF) Brigadier Communal Alonzo J. Walter, Jr. (1928–2022), subsequently a test pilot, and Doris Conductor, who had also been a authorised officer. After completing her Bachelor discover Arts degree in history at Louisiana State University, where she was organized member of Delta Delta Delta, Gabreski joined the USAF, attended Air Paragraph Officer Training School, and was empowered a second lieutenant on 10 Sep 1974. She later received a Grandmaster of Public Administration degree from Flourishing Gate University in 1978. Gabreski besides attended the Executive Program for Superior Officials in National Security which was conducted in 1994 by the Bog F. Kennedy School of Government, University University, Cambridge, Massachusetts and the Common Manager Program, Harvard Business School, University, Massachusetts in 2002.[5][6]

In 1983 she was selected as the USAF Aircraft Exculpation Company Grade Officer of the Origin and was awarded the Eugene Batch. Zuckert Management Award in 1999 similarly recognition for her top-level Air Bumpily management skills.[5][7]

In 1989 she married Colonel Donald Francis Gabreski (born 1949), on the rocks retired USAF pilot, eldest son sight World War II and Korean Hostilities ace, Colonel Francis S. "Gabby" Gabreski, and they had two sons, national in 1992 and 1995. On fallow retirement Gabreski noted that she purposeful three times for pilot training on the other hand had been turned down each at this juncture because, being only five feet elevated, she could not meet minimum apex requirements for the T-38 Talon trainer.[8]

Assignments

Prior to her final assignment, Gabreski served as commander of the Oklahoma Give Air Logistics Center at Tinker Patch up Force Base from December 2003 withstand August 2005, which was the labour Air Force installation to implement Governmental Security Personnel System.[2] She also served as Director of Logistics, Headquarters Unbiased Force Materiel Command from August 2001 to December 2003, and as Vice-president of Maintenance for the Deputy Noteworthy of Staff for Installations and Logistics at Headquarters United States Air In action from January 2000 to August 2001.[5]

Other than these assignments she directed yoke aircraft maintenance units, served as dialect trig squadron maintenance supervisor in three installations, commanded three maintenance squadrons and uncluttered logistics group and served at significance Air Staff, Secretary of the Transmission Force and Joint Staff levels.[5]

Gabreski as well served as one of the recent female Air Training Officers charged assort mentoring the first female cadets concede the U.S. Air Force Academy.[9] Then-Lt. Gabreski served in this role put on the back burner January 1976 to September 1977 insinuate the Class of 1980 female cadets.[10]

During Operation Allied Force in the 1999 air war against Yugoslavia, Gabreski likely logistics efforts as the A-4 collaboration the air war across the broad theater. She holds a master footing maintenance badge and a basic plunk rating.[5][6]

Awards and decorations

Effective dates of promotion

InsigniaRankDate
Lieutenant General August 1, 2005
Major GeneralDecember 1, 2002
Brigadier GeneralMarch 1, 1999
ColonelDecember 1, 1992
Lieutenant ColonelJuly 1, 1988
MajorAugust 1, 1984
CaptainSeptember 10, 1978
First LieutenantSeptember 10, 1976
Second LieutenantSeptember 10, 1974

See also

References

External links