MADISON, Wis. — The Wisconsin Air National Guard inducted two celebrated retirees into its Hall of Fame Sept. 22 at the 115th Fighter Wing, Truax Field.

The 40th annual induction ceremony included Brig. Gen. Margaret “Peg” Bair, former Wisconsin Air National Guard chief of staff and the Wisconsin Air National Guard’s first female general officer; and Col. Jeffrey “Ace” Wiegand, former commander of the 115th Fighter Wing as well as former Wisconsin Air National Guard chief of staff.

The Wisconsin Air National Guard Hall of Fame recognizes personnel who served above and beyond what would normally be considered outstanding or exemplary. Inductees are recognized for their sustained exceptional duty performance, innovation, enhancement of combat effectiveness and enhancement of public support for the Wisconsin Air National Guard. Additionally, their service must bring great credit to the state, nation and the Wisconsin Air National Guard.

Brig. Gen. David May, Wisconsin’s deputy adjutant general for Air, cited an adjutant general who served 100 years before the Wisconsin Air National Guard Hall of Fame began to explain why Bair and Wiegand met that criteria.

“I believe that the heritage of this organization is rooted in visionary thinking, followed by action, resulting in a great impact,” May said. “The leaders that continue to emerge from our ranks embody this mindset.”

May said that Wisconsin Adjutant General Chandler Chapman, who served from 1882 to 1889, established a visionary standard by putting in place the means to prepare the state militia’s transformation into a state national guard.

“In hindsight, it would appear that Gen. Chapman was looking over the horizon,” May said. “And in true Wisconsin form, he set out to make sure we were leading, and not reacting, to this massive change eventually captured in the Militia Act of 1903. Wisconsin was later recognized as one of only a small number of states fully ready for this transition. He had a vision, took action, and the impact was enormous.”

May first met both Bair and Wiegand during his first drill with the Wisconsin Air National Guard in 2009. And while May initially struggled to understand the differences between a chief of staff, director of staff and deputy adjutant general for Air, he did not fail to recognize how capably Bair led her staff as well as how well she synchronized the Air staff with a relatively young Joint Staff.