Brigadier-General George Godfrey Lundberg (October 19, 1892 – January 1981) was a pilot in the United States Air Force.
After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania's Economics program in 1917,[1] Lundberg was made a Second Lieutenant the following year while stationed at Fort Omaha, Nebraska.[2] By 1936, he had been made a Captain.[3][4]
Lundberg later served as a Major[5] at the Middletown Air Technical Service Command in Pennsylvania where he was eventually named commander.[6] He was moved to Eighth Air Force in England during the Second World War.[6] He became known as the "chief airman" to Major General Edwin Forrest Harding of the 32nd Infantry Division, and offered a commendation to Harding's son.[7]
In February 1945, he was given command of Antilles Air Command in San Juan, Puerto Rico as a Colonel.[8] On April 7, 1947, he was named Base Commander of Norton Air Force Base in San Bernardino, California.[9] He served as commander of the Pacific Overseas Air Material District until his retirement in 1949.[6]
Following his retirement, he moved to Olean, New York and was appointed "Civilian Defense Chief" of the city the following year,[10] and oversaw the city's celebration of Armed Forces Day.[11]