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Grissom's widow heads home without space suit
Houston Chronicle ^
| Nov. 21, 2002
| Orlando Sentinel
Posted on 11/21/2002 1:37:48 PM PST by PAR35
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"the once not-for-profit Hall of Fame was taken over by Delaware North Park Services, which also has a contract with NASA to run the visitor center tourist attraction at Kennedy Space Center. "
1
posted on
11/21/2002 1:37:48 PM PST
by
PAR35
To: PAR35
"It never was an issue until September of this year when Betty Grissom refused to sign a new loan agreement" with the museum, he said. If it was government property, why would they need a loan agreement?
This episode once again proves that no good deed goes unpunished.
To: PAR35
Do they still have the spacesuits of the other astronauts that were with him on Mercury 7 or were they destroyed? That would pretty much settle the issue in my mind.
To: PAR35
The suit belongs to whomever paid to build it.
(I'm betting it wasn't Betty Grissom.)
4
posted on
11/21/2002 2:12:40 PM PST
by
dead
To: TX Bluebonnet
They want to keep the suit to keep Betty Grissom from proving that Gus didn't hit the 'chicken switch' and blow the hatch on Liberty Bell 7. Evidently, one triggered the hatch by pushing the button with the elbow, and always the resulting backblow from the button left a bruise on the arm and tore the suit. I can't believe that an experienced test pilot would make such a rookie mistake.
5
posted on
11/21/2002 2:15:52 PM PST
by
jaw1964a
To: PAR35
Rest in peace Gus.
6
posted on
11/21/2002 2:21:34 PM PST
by
mgstarr
To: TX Bluebonnet
Good question. We know Grissom's is at the Florida location. Glenn's is in the Smithsonian in DC. Sheppard's is/was on display in Houston. One of the 7 didn't make a Mercury flight. Schirra's is in San Diego. That leaves 2 still unaccounted for
http://www.chron.com/content/interactive/space/missions/sts-095/stories/mission/981030b.html
October 29, 1998, 06:11 p.m.
"On display at Space Center Houston are many artifacts from Glenn's own collection, such as the NASA flight suit he wore while an astronaut from 1959 to 1965 and the ID badge with "Mercury Astronaut" typed onto it like a crude early driver's license.
All that's missing is the actual spacesuit Glenn wore while flying America's first manned orbital mission aboard Friendship 7 Feb. 20, 1962. That suit is in the National Air and Space Museum at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
However, an almost identical silvery spacesuit worn by the late Alan Shepard on his suborbital Mercury flight -- America's first manned mission -- is shown with Glenn's artifacts. Shepard's suit is part of Space Center Houston's permanent collection. "
http://www.aerospacemuseum.org/2002newWEB/Exhibits/Exhibits.html
The Museum's collection of spacecraft and and artifacts, including Wally Schirra's spacesuit
7
posted on
11/21/2002 2:41:51 PM PST
by
PAR35
To: PAR35
Deke Slaton from my home state of Wisconsin was grounded due to a heart murmur. He had a long and distiguished career and finally made it to space on the shuttle, I believe.
To: dead
her husband, Gus Grissom burned up in a rocket, while working for the US. You don't think she paid enough for the suit? pinhead!
9
posted on
11/21/2002 3:55:36 PM PST
by
job
To: PAR35
Its interesting that after all this time Mrs. Grissom still has unanswered questions about the fire. Have you ever read the account of events that occurred leading up to the fire? Last I know, the account is on the NASA website. There is also a kind of failure analysis summary. Its very interesting. There were a lot of QC problems with the capsule...defects etc. Too many I think. Wasn't the command module/service module made by McDonnell-Douglas?
10
posted on
11/21/2002 3:56:22 PM PST
by
virgil
To: job
Why don't you throw in the space shuttle to boot, doofus?
11
posted on
11/21/2002 3:58:15 PM PST
by
dead
To: PAR35
BTTT
To: PAR35
That leaves 2 still unaccounted for. There's one at the Virgil *Gus* Grissom Memorial Museum at Spring Mill state Park in Indiana, near Grissom's Mitchell, Indiana boyhood home. The actual Gemini III space capsule is also on display at the modest but impressive Hoosier tribute.
I believe the Pima Air Museum in Arizona has the other Mercury astronaut suit.
13
posted on
11/21/2002 5:06:40 PM PST
by
archy
To: mgstarr
The Magnificent Seven:
14
posted on
11/21/2002 5:10:12 PM PST
by
archy
To: PAR35; dbolles
15
posted on
11/21/2002 5:16:53 PM PST
by
archy
To: PAR35
In your last posting, you mentioned the space suits of Al Sheppard, Gus Grissom, John Glenn, and Wally Schirra.
The three others were Deke Slayton (who got grounded), Malcolm Scott Carpenter, and Gordon Cooper.
Someone would have to locate Gordo's and Scott Carpenter's stuff.
To: Redleg Duke
>>Deke Slaton from my home state of Wisconsin was grounded due to a heart murmur. He had a long and distiguished career and finally made it to space on the shuttle, I believe.
Close. It was Apollo-Suyuz.
To: PAR35
Deke Slayton made his only spaceflight on the Apollo-Soyuz mission in 1975.
18
posted on
11/21/2002 8:08:22 PM PST
by
Pyro7480
To: virgil
"Wasn't the command module/service module made by McDonnell-Douglas?"
Rockwell built the command module, the service module, and the Saturn V second stage. Harrison Storms lost his job over Appolo I.
Grumman built the lunar module. I don't remember who built the S4-B.
Greg
To: PAR35
How long before the shuttles have "NEXTEL" or "TACO BELL" painted across their sides?
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