El Paso's Homegrown: World War II

El Paso's Homegrown: World War II

The homefront of El Paso, Texas was no stranger to war. Between 1861 and 1941, the region had witnessed and experienced the costs of the American Civil War, the Mexican Revolution, and the First World War as well as ongoing Border tensions. When the United States officially entered World War II in December of 1941, so too did the El Paso community. Young men enlisted or were drafted into combat. Women joined the workforce in record-setting numbers to replace them, and the Bracero Program brought Mexicans over the border through Ciudad Juárez to further alleviate labor shortages in the United States. Fort Bliss, established nearly a century earlier, became a major Army base, while social clubs, like the Woman’s Club, rolled bandages and raised money. Almost everyone purchased war bonds and learned to live on ration books. Despite these struggles, many El Pasoans recall their city as being a bustling, peaceful town during this period. In 1940, El Paso still measured less than thirteen square miles and had a population of fewer than 100,000 people within its city limits. This exhibition examines the impact of World War II on the greater El Paso community and how the people of El Paso left their mark on history through their service at home and abroad. Though often viewed as idyllic during this period, El Paso was a complex Bordertown with people of different cultures working to survive and thrive during a global conflict. The El Paso Museum of History is honored to share El Paso’s Homegrown: World War II. This exhibition is made possible by members of the community who generously collaborated with the Museum to showcase mementos of their loved ones who served in the war.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: El Paso Museum of History

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Cowboys - El Paso

The names of these two men were once written in pencil under the ...

Argyria Louise White, aged 5 months

There were a number of families named White living in El Paso at ...

Tigua Children In The Parade

Tigua children during a Sun Bowl Parade.

Children In The Sun Bowl Parade - 1936

Children in the Sun Bowl Parade in 1936.

Sun Bowl Parade - 1937

Sun Bowl Parade in 1937.

Pamela Ann MacGuire-1966

Pamela Ann MacGuire- Sun Bowl Queen for the year 1966.

Felix Manuel Bustillos

Felix Manuel Bustillos graduated in 1938. His picture on the ...

Carmen Sanchez

The image of the graduate Carmen Sanchez was taken in 1963.

Carmela de la Torre (Valdez)

This little girl in the beautiful white dress is called Carmela ...

Jake Erlich - El Paso, Texas

Many of us know of Erlich as the “world’s tallest man,” as ...

Parade Downtown - 1908

Mobile car in front of City Hall.

John Neff Wedding Party

John Neff 1938 - 1939 Sun Bowl President

Henry M. Walker - Secretary of the El Paso Central Labor Union

Henry M. Walker served in 1898 in Galveston, Tex. as president ...

William Moellar

Car in parade---1908.

Mrs. W. L. Crockett

The Crocketts were originally from Las Vegas, New Mexico. Mrs. ...

Mills Building

The image shows Pioneer Plaza and some of the buildings which ...

Historical Building

The building at 100 E. San Antonio had been a landmark in the ...

Power Plant looking east.

This may be the Power Plant on Santa Fe St.

Yard between electric plant and warehouse looking east.

Possibly the power plant on Santa Fe St. You can see a wooden ...

Electric Power Plant looking southwest.

A beautiful brick building with power lines strung everywhere. ...

Sol C. Schutz

Sol Schutz, an El Paso pioneer, was born in 1845 and died in ...

Graduates

These four young people may be an early graduating class from El ...

First To Graduate From El Paso's Only High School-1887

Image caption: Kate Moore was one of two members of the first ...

home.search_collection