Top row, left to right: Ellison Onizuka, Christa McAuliffe,
Greg Jarvis and Judy Resnik. Bottom row, left to right:
Michael J. Smith, Dick Scobee and Ron McNair.
January 28, 1986, 11:39 PM, 35 years ago: The Space Shuttle Challenger explodes, 1 minute and 13 seconds after liftoff from Cape Canaveral, Florida, killing all 7 astronauts aboard.
The 10th mission for the orbiter, and the 25th Shuttle mission overall, it was America's 1st in-flight space travel tragedy. Previously, on January 27, 1967, a fire during a ground test of Apollo 1 led to the deaths of 3 astronauts; 6 other astronauts had been killed in test flight crashes; and the Soviet space program had lost 5, including 3 in a single spaceflight in 1971.
The flight had already been delayed twice, and the decision was made to launch despite temperatures being lower than ideal. Even Florida has some days that can be classified as Winter. The low temperature caused a failure in the "O-ring" seals, allowing pressurized burning gas from within the solid rocket motor to reach the outside, and ignite the external fuel tank.
The crew:
* Captain Gregory B. Jarvis, U.S. Air Force, mission commander, 41, from Mohawk, New York.
* Lieutenant Colonel Francis "Dick" Scobee, 46, from Auburn, Washington.
* Captain Michael J. Smith, U.S. Navy, 40, from Beaufort, North Carolina.
* Colonel Ellison S. Onizuka, U.S. Air Force, 39, from Kona, Hawaii.
* Doctor Judith A. Resnik, civilian engineer, 36, from Akron, Ohio.
* Doctor Ronald E. McNair, civilian physicist, 35, from Lake City, South Carolina.
* Christa McAuliffe, 37, from Framingham, Massachusetts. A social studies teacher at Concord High School in Concord, the capital of New Hampshire, she had won a contest to be a "teacher in space." This made her the face of the mission, and, by extension, its greatest tragedy.
It was the 2nd spaceflight each for Onizuka, McNair and Resnik. The others were each on their 1st. Onizuka was the 1st Asian-American to fly in space, and also the 1st person of Japanese ancestry to do so. McNair was the 2nd African-American in space, after Guion Bluford in 1983; Arnaldo Tamayo Méndez, a pilot in the Cuban Air Force, was the 1st black person in space, aboard a Soviet mission in 1980.
Had the mission succeeded, Christa McAuliffe would have been the 10th woman in space. Judy Resnik was the 4th woman in space, following Soviets Valentina Tereshkova in 1963 and Sveltana Savitskaya in 1982, and American Sally Ride in 1983. Resnik was also the 1st Jewish American in space, and the 2nd of her faith to reach space, following the Soviets' Boris Volynov in 1969.
I was a junior at East Brunswick High School at the time. By a weird twist of events, one of our teachers had reached the semifinal round of the "teacher in space" project. I won't mention his name, because he later disgraced himself in a way that I won't mention, either.
I had just come back from lunch, and was about to start my English class when a friend ran up to me and said, "Mike, the Shuttle blew up!"
When the Columbia was the 1st Space Shuttle launched, in 1981, our local newspaper did a feature on myself and 2 other students at my elementary school who were particularly interested in spaceflight. It was the 1st U.S. spaceflight since the Apollo-Soyuz mission, 6 years earlier. It was the long-delayed next step in American spaceflight. It was a big deal.
But by 1986, Shuttle flights had become routine. No one even brought TV sets into classrooms to watch the launches anymore.
So when the friend said, "The Shuttle blew up!" I wasn't sure of what he was talking about. He explained. When the English class ended, I went home, skipping the rest of the day. I sat in front of the TV set, watching it over and over again.
For my generation, born after the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Senator Robert F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King -- and after the good news of the 1st Moon landing, and the good-and-bad news of the resignation of President Richard Nixon -- it was our first event like that, our first "Where were you when... " moment. Maybe it wouldn't have been, if Ronald Reagan, still President at this point, hadn't survived his assassination attempt in 1981.
But, for my generation, it would be that moment, until September 11, 2001. And, since that was a crime, the Challenger disaster remains our defining tragedy, even after the Columbia was similarly lost, 17 years to the week later.
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