Pneumonia is an acute respiratory infection of the lower respiratory tract. The effectiveness of the host immune response determines the severity of infection, or whether pneumonia occurs at all. The lungs house both innate and adaptive immune systems, which integrate their activities to provide host defense that eliminates microbes and prevents lower respiratory infection from becoming severe. Professional immune cells in the lung, like macrophages and lymphocytes, work with lung constituents, like epithelial cells and fibroblasts, to optimize antimicrobial defense. The dynamics of the immune response during infection and the immune components contributing to defense are influenced by prior experiences with respiratory pathogens, remodeling lung immunity in ways that improve responses against subsequent infections. This review covers how innate and adaptive immune activities coordinate inside the lung to provide integrated and effective immune resistance against respiratory pathogens.