Born: 12/03/1942
Inducted: 11/10/2007
Madison, Wisconsin native Tom Thomas
began flying as an Air Force ROTC cadet at the University of
Wisconsin- Madison in 1964. Commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant in 1966,
he began a twenty-eight year career in the Air Force and Wisconsin
Air National Guard. That career would include piloting KC-135 and
KC-97 aerial refueling tankers, A-10A and F-16D fighters. His rating
as USAF Command Pilot is one of seven civilian and military pilot
ratings he has earned. In 1973,
Thomas began a thirty-two year career with the Aeronautics Bureau of
the Wisconsin Department of Transportation. During that time Tom was
involved in, oversaw or was responsible for administering aviation
safety, aircraft registration, airport management and aviation
education programs. Those programs included the Tall Structure
Permit, Airport Site Approval, Automated Weather Observation System,
Navigational Aids, Airport Safety Data Inspection, Federal Surplus
Property and the State Block Grant Program. There is hardly a state
aviation administration program implemented in the 1970s, 1980s, and
1990s that Tom did not participate in. Long
before his retirement as Chief, Aviation Management and Education
Section in 2005, Thomas was recognized in state and national
aviation circles as a top-flight administrator. Tom promoted
aviation in Wisconsin as the author of travel and education guides.
As an educator, he led Wisconsin schools into the space age through
the Rockets for Schools Program and provided opportunity for
aviation careers for low income and minority students through the
ACE Program. His most memorable
aviation achievement came in 1977, when he was part of the crew of a
Boeing 377 Stratocruiser that landed on a short, uphill runway at
the tiny Dodgeville (Wisconsin) Airport. Tom remains active in the
Civil Air Patrol, as an aviation consultant and flight instructor.
He fills his free time spending it with his grandchildren.
|