Chuck Yeager born

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 | Family | Relocation | West Virginia |
Updated By: History Editorial Network (HEN)
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Chuck Yeager, born on February 13, 1923, in Myra, West Virginia, emerged from humble beginnings as the son of farming parents Albert Hal Yeager and Susie Mae Yeager. At the age of five, his family relocated to Hamlin, West Virginia, where he grew up alongside his two brothers, Roy and Hal Jr., and two sisters, Doris Ann and Pansy Lee. Yeager's early education took place at Hamlin High School, where he excelled in subjects like geometry and typing while also participating in basketball and football. After graduating in June 1941, Yeager's interest in the military was sparked during his teenage years at the Citizens Military Training Camp in Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana, in the summers of 1939 and 1940. His military journey would later lead him to become a legendary test pilot and the first person to break the sound barrier. Yeager's legacy is not only marked by his remarkable achievements in aviation but also by his dedication to family, having married Glennis Dickhouse in 1945 and raising four children together. Glennis passed away in 1990, leaving behind a legacy intertwined with Yeager's own extraordinary life story.
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