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This
Month in History:
From
Cape Canaveral, Florida, John Hershel Glenn Jr. is successfully
launched into space aboard the Friendship 7 spacecraft on the first
orbital flight by an American astronaut.
Glenn, a lieutenant colonel
in the U.S. Marine Corps, was among the seven men chosen by the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) in 1959 to
become America's first astronauts. A decorated pilot, he flew nearly
150 combat missions during World War II and the Korean War. In 1957,
he made the first nonstop supersonic flight across the United States,
flying from Los Angeles to New York in three hours and 23 minutes.
Glenn was preceded in
space by two Americans, Alan B. Shepard Jr. and Virgil I. "Gus"
Grissom, and two Soviets, Yuri A. Gagarin and Gherman S. Titov.
In April 1961, Gagarin was the first man in space, and his spacecraft
Vostok 1 made a full orbit before returning to Earth. Less than
one month later, Shepard was launched into space aboard Freedom
7 on a suborbital flight. In July, Grissom made another brief suborbital
flight aboard Liberty Bell 7. In August, with the Americans still
having failed to make an orbital flight, the Russians sprinted further
ahead in the space race when Titov spent more than 25 hours in space
aboard Vostok 2, making 17 orbits. As a technological power, the
United States was looking very much second-rate compared with its
Cold War adversary. If the Americans wanted to dispel this notion,
they needed a multi-orbital flight before another Soviet space advance
arrived.
It was with this responsibility
in mind that John Glenn lifted off from the launch pad at Cape Canaveral
at 9:47 a.m. on February 20, 1962. Some 100,000 spectators watched
on the ground nearby and millions more saw it on television. After
separating from its launching rocket, the bell-shaped Friendship
7 capsule entered into an orbit around Earth at a speed of about
17,500 miles per hour. Smoothing into orbit, Glenn radioed back,
"Capsule is turning around. Oh, that view is tremendous."
During Friendship 7's
first orbit, Glenn noticed what he described as small, glowing fireflies
drifting by the capsule's tiny window. It was some time later that
NASA mission control determined that the sparks were crystallized
water vapor released by the capsule's air-conditioning system. Before
the end of the first orbit, a more serious problem occurred when
Friendship 7's automatic control system began to malfunction, sending
the capsule into erratic movements. At the end of the orbit, Glenn
switched to manual control and regained command of the craft.
Toward the end of Glenn's
third and last orbit, mission control received a mechanical signal
from the spacecraft indicating that the heat shield on the base
of the capsule was possibly loose. Traveling at its immense speed,
the capsule would be incinerated if the shield failed to absorb
and dissipate the extremely high reentry temperatures. It was decided
that the craft's retrorockets, usually jettisoned before reentry,
would be left on in order to better secure the heat shield. Less
than a minute later, Friendship 7 slammed into Earth's atmosphere.
During Glenn's fiery
descent back to Earth, the straps holding the retrorockets gave
way and flapped violently by his window as a shroud of ions caused
by excessive friction enveloped the spacecraft, causing Glenn to
lose radio contact with mission control. As mission control anxiously
waited for the resumption of radio transmissions that would indicate
Glenn's survival, he watched flaming chunks of retrorocket fly by
his window. After four minutes of radio silence, Glenn's voice crackled
through loudspeakers at mission control, and Friendship 7 splashed
down safely in the Atlantic Ocean. He was picked up by the USS destroyer
Noa, and his first words upon stepping out of the capsule and onto
the deck of the Noa were, "It was hot in there." He had
spent nearly five hours in space.
Glenn was hailed as a
national hero, and on February 23 President John F. Kennedy visited
him at Cape Canaveral. He later addressed Congress and was given
a ticker-tape parade in New York City.
Out of a reluctance to
risk the life of an astronaut as popular as Glenn, NASA essentially
grounded the "Clean Marine" in the years after his historic
flight. Frustrated with this uncharacteristic lack of activity,
Glenn turned to politics and in 1964 announced his candidacy for
the U.S. Senate from his home state of Ohio and formally left NASA.
Later that year, however, he withdrew his Senate bid after seriously
injuring his inner ear in fall. In 1970, following a stint as a
Royal Crown Cola executive, he ran for the Senate again but lost
the Democratic nomination to Howard Metzenbaum. Four years later,
he defeated Metzenbaum, won the general election, and went on to
win reelection three times. In 1984, he unsuccessfully sought the
Democratic nomination for president.
In early 1998,
NASA announced it had approved Glenn to serve as a payload specialist
on the space shuttle Discovery. On October 29, 1998, nearly four
decades after his famous orbital flight, the 77-year-old Glenn became
the oldest human ever to travel in space. During the nine-day mission,
he served as part of a NASA study on health problems associated
with aging. In 1999, he retired from his U.S. Senate seat after
four consecutive terms in office, a record for the state of Ohio.
- historychannel.com

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