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I was priviledged to have been aboard the USS Kearsarge in Oct, 1962 to
witness the first astronaut to re-enter earths atmosphere in full view of the recovery force. I took his picture climbing out of the 'Sigma 7' Mercury capsule, from the catwalk overlooking #3 elevator, and it, along with the two page spread from Look Magazine, has been on my office wall for the last 45 years. http://www.members.cox.net/drpics/shirra_oct62.jpg Six months later we picked up Gordon Cooper, and it was a carbon copy of Shirra's re-entry. About four years later I was working for Aeronautical Radio, Inc. (ARINC) in Kansas City, and discovered the station managers wife went to high school with Wally, back in the Seattle area I believe. It's a small world.. RIP Wally Shirra, and thanks for everything..... Don |
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A real American Hero. Unfortunately Rosie O'Donnel will
probably get more press coverage. |
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![]() "ManhattanMan" wrote RIP Wally Shirra, and thanks for everything..... Amen. Those guys in the early stages of the program really did have the right stuff. The definition of "spam in a can" really applies, as those were really "cans," and mighty thin cans, at that. Every time I see how those early spacecraft were constructed, it amazes me that any sane person would put themselves into one, and blast off into space. -- Jim in NC |
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The dinner seating at the Naval Test Pilot School reunions at Pax River NAS
in Maryland used to be a random seating affair where you just picked out a table and sat down with whoever ended up with you. I had occasion to attend several of these reunions as the guest of TPS back in the early seventies. One year, I believe it was 72, my wife and I ended up seated with several of the Mercury gang at the TPS reunion dinner . Among our group were Alan Shepard and Wally Shirra. My wife and I ended up seated between the two of them. For several pleasant hours we sat and ate our dinner with these two hilarious clowns. My wife kept kicking me under the table reminding me not to succumb to the temptation to talk shop. I complied, as strangely enough, none of us really seemed inclined to want to get into talking business. Instead, we heard just about every golf joke existing on the planet, and Shirra treated everybody to a first class tutorial on how to perform the world's most memorable practical jokes on just about everybody. The result was a wonderful day spent with the Mercury gang. We met as strangers and left as friends. In my opinion, these people were some of the brightest and finest, and truly the best of the best of their day. You are right. They will be missed. Dudley Henriques "ManhattanMan" wrote in message ... I was priviledged to have been aboard the USS Kearsarge in Oct, 1962 to witness the first astronaut to re-enter earths atmosphere in full view of the recovery force. I took his picture climbing out of the 'Sigma 7' Mercury capsule, from the catwalk overlooking #3 elevator, and it, along with the two page spread from Look Magazine, has been on my office wall for the last 45 years. http://www.members.cox.net/drpics/shirra_oct62.jpg Six months later we picked up Gordon Cooper, and it was a carbon copy of Shirra's re-entry. About four years later I was working for Aeronautical Radio, Inc. (ARINC) in Kansas City, and discovered the station managers wife went to high school with Wally, back in the Seattle area I believe. It's a small world.. RIP Wally Shirra, and thanks for everything..... Don |
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GodSpeed Wally..
BT "ManhattanMan" wrote in message ... I was priviledged to have been aboard the USS Kearsarge in Oct, 1962 to witness the first astronaut to re-enter earths atmosphere in full view of the recovery force. I took his picture climbing out of the 'Sigma 7' Mercury capsule, from the catwalk overlooking #3 elevator, and it, along with the two page spread from Look Magazine, has been on my office wall for the last 45 years. http://www.members.cox.net/drpics/shirra_oct62.jpg Six months later we picked up Gordon Cooper, and it was a carbon copy of Shirra's re-entry. About four years later I was working for Aeronautical Radio, Inc. (ARINC) in Kansas City, and discovered the station managers wife went to high school with Wally, back in the Seattle area I believe. It's a small world.. RIP Wally Shirra, and thanks for everything..... Don |
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I was working on the space program in San Diego where a nearby facility was
static testing the Atlas (nee Assless) rockets. Running joke was that you could tell the kids of the Atlas test crew because they all counted, "5, 4, 3, 2, 1, damn". THe folks who rode those roman candles into space had balls of solid brass. We'll all have a hell of a time swapping stories when we follow them into the great beyond. Jim (Wadda ya mean I'm going "down there"? Don't good engineerin' count for NUTHIN??" "Morgans" wrote in message ... "ManhattanMan" wrote RIP Wally Shirra, and thanks for everything..... Amen. Those guys in the early stages of the program really did have the right stuff. The definition of "spam in a can" really applies, as those were really "cans," and mighty thin cans, at that. Every time I see how those early spacecraft were constructed, it amazes me that any sane person would put themselves into one, and blast off into space. |
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RIP Wally Shirra, and thanks for everything.....
I received this today from Bill Fox, the fellow who ran Area 51 (and who donated all the amazing SR-71 stuff in our "Blackbird Suite": ************************************************** ******************* From: Michael Finneran, Head, PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICE ] Sent: Thursday, May 03, 2007 2:10 PM Subject: Message from Administrator on Wally Schirra's Passing The Passing of Wally Schirra Today is a sad day for NASA and our country, as we mourn the passing yesterday in California of astronaut Walter "Wally" Schirra. With Wally's passing, we at NASA note with sorrow the loss of yet another of the pioneers of human space flight. As a Mercury astronaut, Wally was a member of the first group of astronauts to be selected, often referred to as the "Original Seven." Wally is remembered in the close circle of the space community as the pilot who flew a "textbook flight" on his Mercury mission in October 1962. But Wally's space flight career went well beyond Mercury; on his next flight, in December 1965, he commanded the Gemini 6 mission with Tom Stafford as pilot. Wally and Tom carried out the first rendezvous in space, flying for hours in formation with Frank Borman and Jim Lovell in their Gemini 7 spacecraft, and completing one of the key steps along the path to the moon. The fact that this mission flew at all will always be known as a testimony to Wally's cool precision under stress, for Gemini 6 experienced the first on-pad engine shutdown in human space flight history. Worse, the crew had a liftoff indication triggered by a faulty umbilical connection; according to mission rules, they should have ejected from the spacecraft. But Wally did not feel what he thought he should have felt had the booster really begun to take flight, and so the crew stayed aboard, saving the mission and quite possibly the program. Wally's last flight was Apollo 7, the first to be conducted in the aftermath of the disastrous Apollo 1 fire. This flight was another enormous success, accomplishing "101 percent of its objectives," according to the post-flight debrief. It also made Wally the first man to command three different spacecraft, and the only one to fly Mercury, Gemini and Apollo. It was impossible to know Wally, even to meet him, without realizing at once that he was a man who relished the lighter side of life, the puns and jokes and pranks that can enliven a gathering. But this was a distraction from the true nature of the man. His record as a pioneering space pilot shows the real stuff of which he was made. We who have inherited today's space program will always be in his debt. Michael Griffin Administrator ************************************************** ******************* Godspeed, Mr. Schirra. You and your cohorts were my childhood heroes. I wish my kids had people like you to look up to and admire. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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On 3 May 2007 20:54:22 -0700, Jay Honeck wrote:
I wish my kids had people like you to look up to and admire. Very true. In fact, _I_ wish I had them. Tobias |
#9
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You're lucky to have been there. Indeed, we had many heroes back then.
I always liked his name, also. Just kind of sounds like a hero's name... To the stars, Wally Shirra, RIP. Dan "ManhattanMan" wrote in message ... I was priviledged to have been aboard the USS Kearsarge in Oct, 1962 to witness the first astronaut to re-enter earths atmosphere in full view of the recovery force. I took his picture climbing out of the 'Sigma 7' Mercury capsule, from the catwalk overlooking #3 elevator, and it, along with the two page spread from Look Magazine, has been on my office wall for the last 45 years. http://www.members.cox.net/drpics/shirra_oct62.jpg Six months later we picked up Gordon Cooper, and it was a carbon copy of Shirra's re-entry. About four years later I was working for Aeronautical Radio, Inc. (ARINC) in Kansas City, and discovered the station managers wife went to high school with Wally, back in the Seattle area I believe. It's a small world.. RIP Wally Shirra, and thanks for everything..... Don |
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kontiki wrote:
A real American Hero. Unfortunately Rosie O'Donnel will probably get more press coverage. Rosie O'Donnel died? |
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