, March 17, 1945 In 1941 the 43rd Division mobilized for service in the
Pacific Theater. In 1942, Wing was named commander of the division's
68th Field Artillery Brigade, and later that year he was appointed the 43rd's Assistant Division Commander. Wing became commander of the division as a
major general in 1943, replacing Major General
John H. Hester. Wing successfully rebuffed attempts to replace him with a Regular Army officer, as was done in most divisions, making him one of three National Guard officers to command combat divisions in World War II. The other National Guard officers who commanded combat divisions,
Robert S. Beightler of the
37th Infantry Division and
Raymond S. McLain of the
90th Infantry Division, received commissions in the Regular Army immediately after the war, which is likely the source of the claim that Wing was the only National Guard officer to command a combat division in World War II. Wing's success at keeping his command was especially noteworthy because he had been diagnosed with heart disease, and could have asked to be relieved on medical grounds. The 43rd Division, named "Winged Victory" in honor of its commander, saw action at
Guadalcanal,
Rendova,
New Georgia,
New Guinea and
Luzon. It played a vital role in the capture of the
Ipo Dam outside
Manila, Philippines, taking the city's main water source intact and breaking Japanese resistance, an action for which it received the U.S.
Presidential Unit Citation and the
Philippine Presidential Unit Citation. The 43rd Division served on occupation duty in Japan before being deactivated in October, 1945. ==Post-World War II==