George Griffin Finch was born on April 11, 1902, in
Dade City, Florida. He began his military career during
World War I, enlisting in the Aviation Section of the
United States Army's Signal Corps in 1918. He remained in the Reserve Corps after the war and, in 1926, became Commander,
27th Pursuit Squadron, 1st Pursuit Group. In 1940, Georgia Governor
Ed Rivers commissioned Finch to form the first flying unit of the
Georgia Air National Guard. The unit was mobilized into the United States Army in September 1941, with Major Finch as commander. After World War II, Finch was a leading critic of efforts to eliminate the air arm of the National Guard during peacetime. He became the first Chief of the Air Force Division of the National Guard Bureau in 1948. Under his leadership, the Air National Guard built to combat readiness and was among the first components called into service after the outbreak of the
Korean War. As a result of Finch's vision and perseverance, 45,000 officers and airmen of 22 wings and 65 squadrons gave the Air Force the strength it needed in the early phase of the Korean War. Finch served as the senior Air Force member of the United Nations negotiating team at the peace talks at Panmunjom, Korea, and received the
Legion of Merit for outstanding service in 1955. Finch assumed command of
Fourteenth Air Force at
Robins AFB, Georgia, becoming the nation's first Air National Guardsman to head a numbered air force. Finch had a career of "firsts", including the United States Army's first night landing with a single, five-million-candlepower floodlight in 1927. He also established and endowed the General John P. McConnell Award at the
United States Air Force Academy. ==Retirement and legacy==