Donald Wilson was a United States Army Air Forces general during World War II.
Major General Donald Wilson
General George Kenney and his staff. Donald Wilson is in the foreground.
From left, General Carl A. Spaatz, Commanding General, Army Air Forces; Major General Muir S. Fairchild, Air University commander; and Major General Donald M. Wilson, Commanding General, Air Proving Ground Command, talk following the Air University dedication ceremony at Maxwell Field on 3 September 1946.
Air Corps Tactical School
The Air Corps Tactical School, also known as ACTS and "the Tactical School", was a military professional development school for officers of the United States Army Air Service and United States Army Air Corps, the first such school in the world. Created in 1920 at Langley Field, Virginia, it relocated to Maxwell Field, Alabama, in July 1931. Instruction at the school was suspended in 1940, anticipating the entry of the United States into World War II, and the school was dissolved shortly after. ACTS was replaced in November 1942 by the Army Air Force School of Applied Tactics.
Brig.Gen. William Lendrun "Billy" Mitchell
Austin Hall, Air Corps Tactical School
Aerial view of Maxwell Field in 1937