Category Archives: Space History

The Right Stuff

Brian Binnie (who flew the first X-Prize flight) emails:

…this e-book:

The Right Stuff: Interviews with Icons of the 1960s, is available just in time for Father’s day. It’s the first in a series dealing with “adventurers” over the decades, many of whom are leaders in the space arena. I wrote the forward to it and the SpaceShipOne story will appear when the chronology finally gets to the 2000’s.

I met Jim via the eclectic Explorers Club and he is regular contributor to Forbes Magazine.

Cheers, Brian

You might want to check it out.

Lunar Orbit Rendezvous

The decision was made fifty years ago this month.

Historically, the decision was a disaster, from the standpoint of making the effort sustainable, though it’s what won the race. Unfortunately, it was inevitable once it became a race to the moon and back. There was simply no time to develop the LEO infrastructure that von Braun and others wanted to put into place that would have obviated the need for the Saturn V. And it created a myth — that we can’t explore without such a vehicle — that haunts us to this day.

Wernher Von Braun

He would have been a hundred years old today. Also, it’s the 29th anniversary of the announcement of the Strategic Defense Initiative. “Wouldn’t it be better to save lives than to avenge them?”

[Update a couple minutes later]

Related to last item: Japan prepares missile defense in anticipation of North Korean launch.

[Update a few minutes later]

Back to von Braun: a blog post from Roger Launius.

Gerry O’Neill

Today would have been his eighty-fifth birthday. Many of his dreams may have been unrealistic, in retrospect (they were based on the assumption that the Shuttle really would reduce the cost of space access, among other things), but he inspired, and reinspired a generation jaded by the letdown of Apollo.

On a related note, Alexis Madrigal has an interesting bit of space (and California) history, over at the Atlantic.

The Apollo Fire

It’s been forty-five years since Ed White, Roger Chaffee and gus Grissom were horribly incinerated on the launch pad, in a ground test. Clara Moskowitz has the story of the changes to the program that ensued as a result. And tomorrow will be the twenty-sixth anniversary of the loss of the Challenger. Where has the time gone?

[Update late morning]

More from Amy Teitel. Note that for both these young women, this is history — it happened before they were born.