Posted on 03/29/2007 12:19:15 AM PDT by quietolong
Doohan Memorial Spaceflight Set for April 27-28
The first rocket launch which will memorialize James Doohan by taking a portion of his cremated remains into space has been set for Saturday, April 28, in New Mexico, with a public memorial planned for the day prior.
The memorial service will be held at the New Mexico Museum of Space History in Alamogordo on Friday, April 27. The Saturday launch will take place at New Mexico's new "Spaceport America" location adjacent to the White Sands Missile Range. A specific time of day has not yet been set for either event. Both the memorial and viewing of the launch will be open to the general public. Doohan's widow, Wende, will be present at both events, and other special guests may be announced later.
While 'Scotty' lived this, Jimmy lived for this," Ms. Doohan said in a press release. "I will be there, to see the launch, knowing that Jimmy is participating in an industry which he loved so very much.
Space Services Inc. (SSI), aka Celestis, provides the memorial spaceflight service by partnering with a launch provider and attaching a canister of modules containing a "symbolic portion" of each participant's ashes seven grams or less to a rocket vehicle, usually as a "secondary payload."
The April launch is dubbed "The Legacy Flight," and will memorialize 201 deceased besides Doohan. John Meredyth Lucas, a writer/director/producer on the Original Series ("Elaan of Troyius," etc.), who died in 2002, will also be part of that flight. So will astronaut Gordon Cooper, who died in 2004, and he will also have a memorial service devoted to him at the museum on the 27th.
The Legacy Flight payload will include a disc containing about 10,000 messages of tribute to Doohan, which were submitted by fans at the SSI website (that forum is now closed).
Spaceport America the world's first commercial facility of its kind and the future home of Virgin Galactic is located roughly 45 miles north of Las Cruces, off Interstate 25 near the unincorporated town of Upham. Stay tuned for future postings giving more specific instructions on how to get there.
Alamogordo, where the Friday memorial will take place, is about 70 miles northeast of Las Cruces (click here for directions). The nearest major airport is El Paso, which is 50 miles south of Las Cruces. SSI will be keeping its base of operations in Las Cruces, since that is the most central location. If you plan to come for the entire weekend, that's probably the best place to reserve a room.
We'll be bringing you updates as the logistics of these events come together. But these dates and locations are firm, and you can start to make travel plans.
However, please be mindful that any rocket launch is at the mercy of the weather, so unfavorable conditions could force a delay or postponement. The memorial service, though, should go forward no matter what. Visit the links below for more information (updates to those sites will be ongoing).
The Legacy Flight originally was scheduled for October 21, but a test flight of the rocket a SpaceLoft XL a few weeks prior by the launch provider was unsuccessful. The firm, UP Aerospace, has analyzed the anomaly and has modified the vehicle. "The new design is robust and can handle very large deviations ... so we have built in a lot of margin in the new design," said the head of UP Aerospace in a related Space.com article. No further test flights are planned before April 28.
Officials from the State of New Mexico will formally announce the April 28 date at a press conference in Las Cruces this Friday, so you may be hearing more about it in the mainstream press.
Another memorial spaceflight called "The Explorers Flight" is still being planned for later this year, utilizing a Falcon rocket built by Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX). The Explorers Flight will put Doohan's remains into Earth orbit semi-permanently, whereas the Legacy Flight is an "Earth-return" mission, lifting the payload to a suborbital altitude then parachuting back to the ground. The modules are then returned to the families on a commemorative plaque.
James Doohan who played "Montgomery Scott" in the Original Series, the Animated Series (along with several other voices), seven "Star Trek" movies and an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation died in 2005 on July 20, which poetically is the anniversary of mankind's first steps on the Moon. The majority of Doohan's ashes were scattered over Puget Sound in Washington State, with a portion set aside for the memorial flights.
Gene Roddenberry, who died in 1991, was memorialized on SSI's "Founders Flight" in 1997.
Doohan was born on March 3, 1920, in Vancouver, British Columbia, and spent his early years in there and in Sarnia, Ontario. Surviving the anguish of living with an alcoholic father, he left home at age 19 to join the Canadian Forces, fighting with the Allies in World War II. After outscoring his fellow soldiers on an officer's exam, he became Captain in the Royal Canadian Artillery. While leading his men into battle on D-Day, Doohan was wounded in the leg and hand, and eventually lost a finger. For the remainder of the war, he became a pilot observer, and received the dubious distinction of being called the "craziest pilot in the Canadian Air Forces."
Sounds like he was closer to being the real Captain Kirk
Bio for James Doohan
http://www.startrek.com/startrek/view/series/TOS/cast/69073.html
click on link
Bio for James Doohan
http://www.startrek.com/startrek/view/series/TOS/cast/69073.html
Go where no man has gone before, Scotty!!!
Scotty,Warp Factor One.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.