Blogarchiv
Raumfahrt - KSC remembers Columbia, fallen astronauts

26.01.2018

636524941026168702-crb012518-m

When Columbia and its crew did not make it home to Kennedy Space Center 15 years ago, a young Tal Ramon returned to Israel and found refuge in the piano his father, Columbia astronaut Ilan Ramon, had bought as a young fighter pilot.

On Thursday, Tal Ramon performed two moving piano songs from his 2016 album, “Character,” during NASA’s annual tribute to fallen astronaut heroes at the KSC Visitor Complex.

FLORIDA TODAY's Rob Landers brings you some of today's top stories on the News in 90 Seconds. Video by Luann Manderville and Rob Landers. Posted Jan. 25, 2018.

“I’m just so emotional to be here with you,” Ramon told an audience at the Astronauts Memorial Foundation’s Center for Space Education, introducing an instrumental piece titled “Victoria.” “After everything that happened, even with the big tragedy, we believe that it’s such a big victory that we are here today to share their stories.”

KSC’s Day of Remembrance honored 24 astronauts killed in the line of duty, including the crews of Apollo 1 and the shuttles Challenger and Columbia.

“Many of the lessons learned in each case we had to learn again,” said Bob Cabana, KSC’s director and a four-time shuttle astronaut. “Now 15 years after Columbia, my goal is that we do not have to learn them yet again, that we do not repeat the mistakes of past as we move forward.”

636524941047384838-crb012518-m

636524941022424678-crb012518-m

636524941084201074-crb012518-m

In addition to Ramon, several astronaut family members shared memories of loved ones who died more than 50 years ago in training and test flights, and are often overshadowed by the Apollo and shuttle crews.

“He left the world with his smile,” said Beth Williams, widow of Clifton “C.C.” Williams. “He had the biggest, infectious smile on the face of the Earth. He walked in a room and he just spread joy.”

 

Williams, a backup Gemini 10 crew member whose family said had been promised an Apollo moon mission assignment, died when his T-38 training jet crashed near Tallahassee on Oct. 5, 1967.

Elliot See and Charles Bassett also died when their T-38 crashed in poor weather on Feb. 28, 1966, hitting the McDonnell Aircraft building near St. Louis where their Gemini 9 spacecraft was being built.

 

“I have never grown accustomed to missing dad,” said daughter Karen Bassett Stevenson, who was 8 when the accident happened. “I was just beginning to realize more than my daddy — that people cared about him, depended on him, trusted him, admired him. That he was smart and studious, gregarious, warm and funny and dedicated, and maybe just a teensy bit geeky.”

“He always wanted to fly and be on the cutting edge,” said Adams, of Monroe, Louisiana.

Eileen Collins, a four-time shuttle flier who heads the Astronauts Memorial Foundation board, said the early astronauts continue to inspire today. 

"We wanted to follow them reaching for the stars, exploring and going higher and faster and farther than anybody else before," she said.

Collins read the names of the 24 fallen astronauts. They included three Apollo 1 crew members killed in a flash fire during a launch pad training exercise on Jan. 27, 1967; the seven Challenger astronauts lost during an explosion 73 seconds after liftoff on Jan. 28, 1986; and the Columbia crew lost during re-entry on Feb. 1, 2003, minutes before their intended landing at KSC.

After a moment of silence concluded the hour-long ceremony, astronauts including Apollo 11 moonwalker Buzz Aldrin joined family members placing a wreath and flowers before the AMF's black granite Space Mirror Memorial, on which the 24 astronauts' names are engraved.

Elsewhere Thursday, acting NASA chief Robert Lightfoot and other senior officials marked the Day of Remembrance by placing a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.

Quelle: Florida Today

 

2814 Views
Raumfahrt+Astronomie-Blog von CENAP 0