Hemet in the 1940s
The 1940s were dominated by World War II. European artists and intellectuals fled Hitler and the Holocaust, bringing new ideas created in disillusionment. War production pulled us out of the Great Depression. Women were needed to replace men who had gone off to war, and so the first great exodus of women from the home to the workplace began. Rationing affected the food we ate, the clothes we wore, the toys with which children played.
Hemet-Ryan Airport hosted an Army pilot-training school from 1940 to 1944. A student named Chuck Yeager - then Cadet Chuck Yeager and now General Chuck Yeager - was in the class of 1942. General Chuck Yeager, unquestionably the most famous test pilot of all time, is the pilot who broke the sound barrier in 1947.
Ryan Air Attack Base is named after the late Claude T. Ryan, who is most famous for having designed the Spirit of St. Louis airplane, and who began the Ryan School of Aeronautics in Hemet during World War II. Through contract with the federal government, 14,000 army cadets were trained to fly.