Autor Wątek: Alan Shepard (1923-1998)  (Przeczytany 6292 razy)

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Alan Bartlett Shepard, Jr. (18.11.1923-21.07.1998)

Alan Shepard, Jr. chociaż uważany za pierwszego Amerykanina i drugiego człowieka , który odbył lot kosmiczny, to na lot niebalistyczny musial czekać 10 lat, stając się 49. człowiekiem na Ziemi, który tego dokonał i jednocześnie  został w wieku 47 lat najstarszym astronautą, który wówczas polecial w kosmos.

Załoga  Apollo 14 składała się z astronautów o najmniejszym w sumie nalocie (we wcześniejszych lotach w załogowych statkach kosmicznych) w historii programu księżycowego Apollo. Największym nalotem mógł się poszczycić Alan Shepard (15m 22s).

48. (2) człowiek w kosmosie.
Jego lot kosmiczny trwał 09d 00h 01m 57s.

https://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/shepard_alan.pdf

https://www.nasa.gov/former-astronaut-alan-shepard/ ??

http://www.spacefacts.de/bios/astronauts/english/shepard_alan.htm
http://www.astronautix.com/s/shepard.html
https://www.worldspaceflight.com/bios/s/shepard-a.php [22 July 1998 (Leukemia)]

https://mek.kosmo.cz/bio/usa/00048.htm
http://www.kozmo-data.sk/kozmonauti/shepard-jr-alan-bartlett.html  -28.11.1923
https://www.astronaut.ru/crossroad/048.htm
https://www.april12.eu/usaastron/shepard2ru.html  22.07.1998

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Shepard
https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Shepard

https://history.nasa.gov/40thmerc7/shepard.htm
https://www.thisdayinaviation.com/18-november-1923-21-july-1998/
https://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Alan_Shepard

                                               





wątki z lotami załogowymi, w których brał udział astronauta:
Mercury 3 https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=2449.msg92566#msg92566
Apollo 14 https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=501.msg135097#msg135097

Artykuły astronautyczne
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21 juillet 1998
25ème anniversaire de la disparition d'Alan B. Shepard à l'âge de 74 ans, le premier américain dans l'espace (5 mai 1961 avec Freedom 7) et le 5ème homme à marcher sur la Lune (Apollo 14 le 5 février 1971)...
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1682271939778191360
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Odp: Ostatni wywiad Alana Sheparda (1998)
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Alan Shepard, First American Astronaut, Dies at 74
Release: H98-131 July 22, 1998

Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American to fly in space and one of only 12 humans who walked on the Moon, died Tuesday night after a lengthy illness in Monterey, CA. He was 74.

Shepard died at Community Hospital on the Monterey Peninsula, according to his family. The cause of death was not disclosed. Funeral services are pending.

"The entire NASA family is deeply saddened by the passing of Alan Shepard. NASA has lost one of its greatest pioneers; America has lost a shining star," said NASA Administrator Daniel S. Goldin.

"Alan Shepard will be remembered, always, for his accomplishments of the past; being one of the original Mercury astronauts, for being the first American to fly in space, and for being one of only 12 Americans ever to step on the Moon. He should also be remembered as someone who, even in his final days, never lost sight of the future," Goldin added.

"On behalf of the space program Alan Shepard helped launch, and all those that the space program has and will inspire, we send our deepest condolences to his wife, Louise, their children, and the rest of the Shepard family.

Alan Shepard lived to explore the heavens. On this final journey, we wish him Godspeed."

"Alan Shepard is a true American hero, a pioneer, an original. He was part of a courageous corps of astronauts that allowed us to reach out into space and venture into the unknown," said George W.S. Abbey, Director of the Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX. "Alan Shepard gave all of us the privilege to participate in the beginnings of America's great adventure of human space exploration. He will be greatly missed. The program has lost one of its greatest supporters and a true friend. Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife, Louise, and their family."

Named as one of the nation's original seven Mercury astronauts in 1959, Shepard became the first to carry America's banner into space on May 5, 1961, riding a Redstone rocket on a 15-minute suborbital flight that took him and his Freedom 7 Mercury capsule 115 miles in altitude and 302 miles downrange from Cape Canaveral, FL.

His flight followed by three weeks the launch of Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, who on April 12, 1961, became the first human space traveler on a one-orbit flight lasting 108 minutes.

Although the flight of Freedom 7 was brief, it nevertheless was a major step forward for the U.S. in a rapidly-accelerating race with the Soviet Union for dominance in the new arena of space.

Buoyed by the overwhelming response to Shepard's flight, which made the astronaut an instant hero and a household name, President John F. Kennedy set the nation on a course to the Moon, declaring before a joint session of Congress just three weeks later, "I believe this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before the decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth."

Over a three and a half year period from July 1969 to December 1972, a dozen Americans explored the lunar surface. Shepard was the fifth man to walk on the Moon, and the oldest, at the age of 47.

Shepard, however, was almost bypassed for a trip to the moon. He had to overcome an inner ear problem called Meuniere's syndrome that grounded him for several years following his initial pioneering flight.

An operation eventually cured the problem and Shepard was named to command the Apollo 14 mission. On January 31, 1971, Shepard, Command Module pilot Stuart Roosa and Lunar Module pilot Edgar Mitchell embarked for the Moon atop a Saturn 5 rocket. Shepard and Mitchell landed the lunar module Antares on February 5 in the Fra Mauro highlands while Roosa orbited overhead in the command ship Kitty Hawk.

Shepard planted his feet on the lunar surface a few hours later, declaring, "Al is on the surface, and it's been a long way, but we're here." During two excursions on the surface totaling nine hours, Shepard and Mitchell set up a science station, collected 92 pounds of rocks and gathered soil samples from the mountainous region.

Near the end of the second moonwalk, and just before entering the lunar module for the last time, Shepard (an avid golfer) hit two golf balls with a makeshift club. The first landed in a nearby crater. The second was hit squarely, and in the one-sixth gravity of the moon, Shepard said it traveled "miles and miles and miles."

Shepard's death leaves only four survivors among the original Mercury 7 astronauts: Sen. John Glenn, Scott Carpenter, L. Gordon Cooper and Walter Schirra.

Born Alan Bartlett Shepard, Jr. on Nov. 18, 1923, in East Derry, NH, he received a Bachelor of Science degree from the United States Naval Academy in 1944. Upon graduation, he married Louise Brewer, whom he met while at Annapolis. Shepard received his wings as a Naval aviator in 1947 and served several tours aboard aircraft carriers. In 1950, he attended Naval Test Pilot School at Patuxent River, MDS, and became a test pilot and instructor there. He later attended the Naval War College at Newport, RI, and after graduating, was assigned to the staff of the commander-in-chief, Atlantic Fleet, as an aircraft readiness officer.

In August 1974, Shepard, then a rear admiral, retired from both NASA and the Navy and became chairman of Marathon Construction Corp. in Houston. He later founded his own business company, Seven Fourteen Enterprises, named for his two missions on Freedom 7 and Apollo 14.

In 1984, he and the other surviving Mercury astronauts, along with Betty Grissom, the widow of astronaut Virgil I. (Gus) Grissom, founded the Mercury Seven Foundation to raise money for scholarships for science and engineering students in college. In 1995, the organization was renamed the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation. Shepard was elected president and chairman of the foundation, posts he held until October 1997, when he turned over both positions to former astronaut James A. Lovell.

Survivors include his widow, Louise, daughters Julie, Laura and Alice and six grandchildren.

The family has requested that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation, 6225 Vectorspace Boulevard, Titusville, FL, 32780


https://www.nasa.gov/centers/johnson/news/releases/1996_1998/h98-131.html

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Odp: Ostatni wywiad Alana Sheparda (1998)
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Wife of astronaut Shepard dies a month after his death
By Deseret News  Aug 27, 1998, 12:00am MDT

Louise Shepard, wife of the pioneering Mercury astronaut Alan Shepard, died while traveling just a month after her husband's death, NASA officials said.

Friends said Louise Shepard suffered a heart attack Tuesday on a flight from San Francisco to her home in Monterey. She was believed to have been 74. She died while returning from a visit with a daughter in Colorado, friends said.

Her husband, one of the original seven astronauts on the United States' pioneering Freedom 7 Mercury voyage into space in 1961, died in his sleep last month at age 74 while being treated for leukemia.

https://www.deseret.com/1998/8/27/19398531/wife-of-astronaut-shepard-dies-a-month-after-his-death

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Alan Shepard, Astronaut, Dies
By MARK FRITZ JULY 23, 1998 12 AM

Alan Shepard, the first American to be rocketed into space during a Cold War contest to conquer the moon, a victory he would whimsically celebrate a decade later by hitting golf balls across the lunar landscape, died Tuesday. He was 74.

Shepard, who galvanized a breathless nation during 15 tense, thrilling minutes of suborbital flight aboard a tiny spaceship on May 5, 1961, died at Community Hospital outside Monterey. He had been suffering from several health problems, but a family spokesman declined to reveal the exact cause of death.

Shepard was one of the seven jet-fighter pilots selected by NASA to be the heroes of the Mercury manned space program, the first phase of the race to beat the Soviet Union into space, an ideological struggle as much as a scientific endeavor. Ten years later, as the commander of Apollo 14, he became the fifth human to walk on the moon. By then, space travel was becoming almost mundane, and manned lunar exploration would soon end.

Though the Apollo flight was a trip to another world, Shepard is remembered for his role in the rudimentary maiden voyage of the Mercury mission. When he was first strapped into a space capsule named “Freedom 7" and fired into the Florida sky aboard a thundering Redstone rocket, the magnitude of the moment gripped the imaginations of millions of awe-struck Americans. They lionized Shepard and the rest of the first generation of space travelers, laconic men in crew cuts who were chosen for a mission that captured the soaring possibilities of an idealistic age.

“Those of us who are old enough to remember the first space flights will always remember what an impression he made on us and on the world,” President Clinton said Wednesday.

Shepard was a man of medium height with blue eyes, brown hair and a passion for speedy cars. He was, by most accounts, ambitious, competitive, with a spiky wit he could turn into a weapon. Yet, like all the original astronaut cadre, he was at the outset homogenized into a taciturn American hero by a space agency intent on stage-managing its image.

Many Setbacks for Maiden Mercury Flight

Shepard’s brief voyage--he spent only five of his 15 minutes aloft in space--came 23 days after Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin had made the first space flight. The Communist mission was a stunning blow to Western prestige and a crushing disappointment to Shepard himself, who already had been picked to be the first American in space.

The start of Shepard’s maiden Mercury flight was fraught with nerve-racking setbacks at the launch site. The first attempt on May 2 was postponed because of stormy weather, and the second attempt was delayed for four hours while NASA technicians fixed computer, electrical and fuel problems with the astronaut waiting atop the booster.

The space shot took place in an era in which the risk was enormously high, at a time when unmanned rockets routinely blew up during launch, or went awry in the sky. It was during a period of near paranoia about Soviet aims and capabilities.

“The accomplishment of this was taking on the burden of representing the United States,” said Allan Needell, curator of manned space flight at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum in Washington. “He represented the aspirations of the whole American society.”

Shepard had awakened shortly after 1 a.m. on the day of the flight. Instruments were attached to his body to measure breathing and heart rate. He donned a 30-pound space suit and climbed into the capsule.

The rocket blasted off from Cape Canaveral at 9:34 a.m. The first stage fell away and the capsule continued until it was 115 miles up in the air. Millions of Americans stayed home from work or school to watch the flight, and thousands lined the beaches of the cape as the missile shot into the sky.

Ten minutes after takeoff, Shepard was in space, making a mental note to remember what weightlessness felt like--he later called it “a pleasant sensation"--because he knew he would be asked about to describe it.

He peered through the periscope and looked at a panorama extending from the Carolinas to the Bahamas. “What a beautiful view!” he exclaimed.

The capsule began to reenter the atmosphere and fall back to Earth, and Shepard experienced a force estimated at 10 times the normal gravitational pull. The capsule splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean 302 miles from Cape Canaveral. “Everything is A-OK!” Shepard radioed from his seat atop the sea.

He grinned as a helicopter hoist carried him from the bobbing, 10-foot capsule to a waiting aircraft carrier. “What a ride!” the 37-year-old Naval commander said after the flight.

Soon After, Kennedy Commits to the Moon

At the time, the flight was a vindication of American know-how and a time for rejoicing, even though Gagarin had actually orbited the earth, traveled three times as fast and spent nearly 90 minutes in flight. Still, as was noted at the time, Shepard had controlled a portion of the flight, while Gagarin was mere payload in a fully automated flight.

Twenty days later, President Kennedy gave a speech committing the country to sending a man to the moon before the decade was out. Shepard sat out the subsequent missions because of an inner-ear disorder that upset his equilibrium for nearly a decade. He subsequently recovered and was cleared for duty, and on Jan. 31, 1971, he commanded the third of the six missions to the moon.

The crew, which also included Edgar Mitchell and Stuart Roosa, spent nine days in space, and Shepard and Mitchell spent 33 hours on the lunar surface. Despite the rock samples and scientific studies undertaken, the most memorable images of that trip remain of Shepard, with golf balls and a makeshift six-iron he had smuggled aboard, lofting one lazy, low-gravity shot after another across the powdery lunar surface. He shanked his first shot into a crater, which he later called an “infamous hole-in-one.”

Shepard and the other original astronauts became celebrities in an era when national heroes were rarely examined for human foibles, rivalries or petty jealousies, though they had their share. The complex dynamics of the astronaut selection process and the rivalries of the “fighter jock” test pilots selected for the program were vividly recreated in the book “The Right Stuff,” by Tom Wolfe, and a subsequent movie.

Shepard in particular was portrayed as someone who could be alternatively cold and charming, with a boyish grin and a sometimes cutting wit. “Alan would act sarcastic and people would get a little upset with him, and then he would break into a broad smile,” said Frederick Ordway, a board member with the National Space Society who wrote a book about the space program.

Alan Bartlett Shepard Jr. was born Nov. 18, 1923, in East Derry, N.H., the son of an Army colonel who later went into the insurance business. He was a top student and good athlete who went on to the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md.

He served on a destroyer in the Pacific in the waning months of World War II and became a top test pilot in the 1950s, joining the select fraternity of jet jockeys, the ranks of which would be raided for the fledgling astronaut program.

Two Years of Grueling Training

In 1959, NASA announced that seven men had been chosen among a list of 110 invited applicants. The men were put through two years of grueling training, including desert survival, and were bombarded with lessons in disciplines ranging from astrophysics to aviation biology.

“My feelings about being in this program are really quite simple,” he said in a 1959 interview with Life magazine. “I’m here because it’s a chance to serve the country. I’m here, too, because it’s a great personal challenge.”

So personal, it turned out, that Shepard was often portrayed as the man most intent on becoming the first in space, though his popularity was eclipsed by the more publicly personable John Glenn, now a U.S. senator from Ohio, who in 1962 would become the first American to orbit the Earth.

Shepard was the third of the original seven Mercury astronauts to die. The first was Virgil “Gus” Grissom, who died in 1967, along with two other astronauts, when a fire broke out aboard Apollo I while it sat on the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center. Donald K. “Deke” Slayton died in 1993.

Slayton and Shepard collaborated on a joint memoir in which Shepard recalled his misery after learning that Gagarin had beaten him into space. He also revealed one aspect of the mission that the tenor of the times didn’t allow him to reveal.

“Man, I’ve got to pee,” he told mission control. Mission commanders wouldn’t let him off the ship, though, and Shepard urinated in a nylon space suit that wasn’t yet equipped for such bodily functions. “No science fiction writer ever had penned this scenario,” Shepard recounted in his book.

In addition to Glenn, the original astronauts who survive are Gordon Cooper, Scott Carpenter and Walter Schirra. A few of the original Mercury astronauts had a reunion in Orlando, Fla., earlier this year at a center for terminally ill children, said Patty Carpenter, Scott Carpenter’s wife.

She said the Shepard did not look well, although he said he was “festive and upbeat.”

“Scott took it very hard,” she said of Shepard’s death. “The original seven were like brothers. Scott was tearful and shocked.”

Depressed in Recent Days

Shepard, who lived in Pebble Beach, had been depressed in recent days, said family spokesman Howard Benedict, a former Associated Press reporter who covered the space program and who is now executive director of the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation in Titusville, Fla.

“I talked to him on Monday and he was at home,” he said. “I had seen him on television Sunday night [introducing a space-program documentary] and I told him he sure looked good. He said ‘I wish I felt as good as I looked.’ He was in one of his blue moods. Of course, the next day, he goes into the hospital and dies.”

Shepard was diagnosed with leukemia in 1996, but Benedict said the disease was in remission. “He was under treatment for several ailments,” he said. “The family just wants it said that he died after a lengthy illness.”

In Washington, Glenn told reporters that he had expected his friend, despite his illness, to live long enough to attend the launch when the senator returns to space for an October trip aboard the space shuttle.

But when the two spoke a few weeks ago, Shepard confided that he “was running about half throttle,” Glenn said. “Al is the one who started the whole thing and he is going to be sorely missed,” said Glenn, who was Shepard’s alternate on the first flight.

He recalled that when it was his turn to go into space, Shepard had mischievously planted a toy mouse in his capsule that floated weightlessly out from behind the first switch that Glenn tripped.

After his retirement from the program, Shepard served on the boards of several corporations. He was president of the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation, which raises money for scholarships for young people interested in science research.

Though his glory days were behind him, Shepard lectured and gave numerous interviews, including one on CNN less than a month ago, when he recalled his adventures with the sort of unvarnished insight that wasn’t often heard back in the ‘60s.

“Standing on the surface of the moon, looking up in the black sky, at a planet which is four times the size of the moon, as we see it, and thinking about the millions of people that are down there trying to get along, desperately trying to get along . . .,” he said. “What a shame it is that they can’t be put on the moon and let them look back at planet Earth for a while, so they could say ‘Hey, look, we got to take care of this place. . . .” He made millions in private business ventures, including a Houston construction company that built Kmarts across Texas, where he lived before moving to California five years ago. Benedict said Shepard had personally raised more than $500,000 for the foundation.

Benedict said a private service would be held. Shepard is survived by his wife, Louise, and three daughters.

Times staff writer Geraldine Baum in Washington and researchers Lisa Meyer, John Beckham and Lianne Hart contributed to this article.

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)

ALAN B. SHEPPARD JR., 1923-1998

Nov. 18, 1923: Born in East Derry, N.H.

1940: Graduated from Pinkerton Academy in Derry

1944: Graduated U.S. Naval Academy, went on to see action in World War II.

1945: Married Louise Brewer of Kennett Square, Pa. They had 3 daughters, Laura, Julie, and Alice.

1947: Earned Navy wings after training at Corpus Christi, Texas, and Pensacola, Fla.

1950: Attended Navy Test Pilot School at Patuxent River, Md.

1958: Graduated from the Naval War College, Newport, R.I.

April 1959: Selected one of the original Mercury astronauts.

May 5, 1961: Became first American in space.

1963: Grounded by NASA flight surgeons--after being awarded the command of the first orbital Gemini flight--following diagnosis of labyrinthitis, which caused dizziness and partial loss of hearing in his left ear.

May 7, 1969: Cleared again for flight.

Jan. 31-Feb. 9, 1971: Commanded Apollo 14 on nine-day flight, the third lunar landing mission. He was the only man ever to play golf on the moon, using a 6-iron for two shots.

1971: Served as a delegate by presidential appointment to the 26th United Nations General Assembly.

August 1974: Retired from NASA and the Navy.

1979: Awarded Congressional Space Medal of Honor.

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1998-jul-23-mn-6353-story.html

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Odp: Ostatni wywiad Alana Sheparda (1998)
« Odpowiedź #5 dnia: Stycznia 06, 2020, 13:43 »
13 Little Things NASA Did to Get Alan Shepard Ready for Space
Bacon, an early bedtime, and a few tattoos to mark where the electrodes go
ALEXIS C. MADRIGAL AUGUST 8, 2013


Alan Shepard getting pulled out of his capsule

I was digging around the NASA archives when I stumbled upon the flight surgeon's report for the Mercury-Redstone 3 mission, otherwise known as the second flight by a human into space, and the first by an American. Alan Shepard was the man chosen by the United States to leave Earth.

The astronauts were accompanied by doctors at all times. They were fed a strict diet. Their vitals were measured. They were monitored constantly.

But while I've known this in the abstract, it wasn't until reading the surgeon's report that I realized that these flights, from a biomedical perspective, were experiments playing out in the astronauts' bodies. As such, as many variables as possible had to be controlled, while still allowing the pilots to function normally.

Here are 13 tidbits I extracted from William K. Douglas' report detailing the pre-flight ritual.

1. For the three days before the flight, the pilot lived in the Crew Quarters of Hangar "S" at Cape Canaveral: "Here he is provided with a comfortable bed, pleasant surroundings, television, radio, reading materials and, above all, privacy. In addition to protection from the curious-minded public, the establishment of the pilot and the backup pilot in the Crew Quarters also provides a modicum of isolation from carriers of infectious disease organisms."

2. The pilot ate "in a special feeding facility" with a personal chef, "whose sole duty during this period is to prepare these meals."

3. The menu was specially prepared by "Miss Beatrice Finklestein of the Aerospace Medical Laboratory, Aeronautical Systems Division, U.S. Air Force Systems Command. The diet is tasty and palatable." Perhaps, but also boring. Here's a sample, including BACON:



4. The chef prepared identical meals at each feeding. One was given to the pilot. Several were given to other people "so that an epidemiological study can be facilitated if necessary." And one extra serving was kept in a refrigerator for 24 hours "so that it will be available for study in the event that the pilot develops a gastrointestinal illness during this period or subsequently."

5. NASA asked the pilots to go to bed early, but did not require it, or give them chill pills. "On the evening before the flight, the pilot is encouraged to retire at an early hour, but he is not required to do so. The pilot of MR-3 spacecraft retired at 10:15 p.m. e.s.t."

6. Neither Alan Shepard and Gus Grissom, the first two Americans in space, dreamed on the night before their trips. "Their sleep was sound, and insofar as they could remember, was dreamless."

7. Grissom, who flew after Shepard, got to wake up 65 minutes later. That's because they optimized the routine by allowing him to "shave and bathe before retiring instead of after awakening in the morning." (I feel like I used that trick in middle school.)

8. BRUTAL: "No coffee was permitted during the 24-hour period preceding the flight because of its tendency to inhibit sleep. No coffee was permitted for breakfast on launch morning because of its diuretic properties."

9.What were the astronauts wearing right before they put on their spacesuits? "After breakfast, the pilots donned bathrobes." Where are those pictures, NASA?

10. Even the flight surgeon had a little bit of a man crush on the astronauts: "The physiological bradycardia (pulse rate 60 to 70) and normotensive (blood pressure 110/70) state both give some indication of the calm reserved air of confidence which typifies both of these pilots." I bet they smelled good, too.

11. The Mercury astronauts had their electrode attachment locations tattooed onto their bodies! "The sensor locations have been previously marked on all Mercury pilots by the use of a tiny (about 2 millimeters in diameter) tattooed dot at each of the four electrode sites."


Alan Sheaerd suited up, sitting on a La-Z-Boy

12. As Shepard was strapped in, the flight surgeon hung around the capsule, in part to get "some indication of the pilot's emotional state at the last possible opportunity."

13. Once back from space and in the debriefing facility, the astronauts were examined by (in order) a flight surgeon, a surgeon, an internist, an ophthalmologist, a neurologist, and a psychiatrist. All the checkups had a dual purpose: to check up on the health of the astronaut and collect data on what the (possible) effects of space flight might be on the human body.

We want to hear what you think about this article. Submit a letter to the editor or write to letters@theatlantic.com.
ALEXIS C. MADRIGAL is a staff writer at The Atlantic and the author of Powering the Dream: The History and Promise of Green Technology.

https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2013/08/13-little-things-nasa-did-to-get-alan-shepard-ready-for-space/278500/
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« Odpowiedź #6 dnia: Stycznia 06, 2020, 13:43 »
Alan B. Shepard Jr. Is Dead at 74; First American to Travel in Space
By John Noble Wilford July 23, 1998

Alan B. Shepard Jr., the first American to fly in space, lifting national spirits at a decisive moment of cold war anxiety, and later one of only 12 astronauts to walk on the Moon, died late Tuesday night at a hospital in Monterey, Calif. He was 74 and lived in Houston and Pebble Beach, Calif.

The family would not disclose the cause of death, saying only that it came after a long illness. But another former astronaut, Senator John Glenn of Ohio, said Mr. Shepard had been suffering from leukemia.

On the morning of May 5, 1961, Mr. Shepard became an immediate American hero. A lean, crew-cut former Navy test pilot, then 37, he began the day lying on his back in a cramped Mercury capsule atop a seven-story Redstone rocket filled with explosive fuel. After four tense hours of weather and mechanical delays, he was shot into the sky on a 15-minute flight that grazed the fringes of space, at an altitude of 115 miles, and ended in a splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean 302 miles downrange from Cape Canaveral, Fla.

Though not much by today's standards, the brief suborbital flight had stopped a whole country in its tracks, waiting anxiously at radios and television sets. When the message of success came through -- with a phrase that would enter the idiom, ''Everything is A-O.K.!'' -- everyone seemed to let out a collective sigh of relief.

Yuri Gagarin of the Soviet Union may have been first into space, 23 days before, and have flown a full orbit, but with Mr. Shepard's flight the United States finally had reason to cheer. In fact, Mr. Shepard's success is credited with giving President John F. Kennedy the confidence to commit the nation to the goal of landing men on the Moon within the decade. He announced the goal to Congress on May 25.

Daniel S. Goldin, head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, said the Shepard flight was ''a tremendous statement about tenacity, courage and brilliance,'' adding with a tone of lingering awe: ''He crawled on top of that rocket that had never before flown into space with a person aboard and he did it. That was an unbelievable act of courage.''

Dr. John M. Logsdon, a political scientist at George Washington University and author of ''The Decision to Go to the Moon,'' said, ''One can make the argument that the success of the Shepard flight enabled the decision to go to the Moon.''

The historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., a member of the Kennedy White House staff, recalled that the Gagarin flight and then the Bay of Pigs fiasco in Cuba a few days later had given ''Americans a slight inferiority complex.'' Then the Shepard flight produced ''a great exhilaration and renewed our confidence in our capacity as a nation.''

President Clinton hailed Mr. Shepard as ''one of the great heroes of modern America.''

Ten years after the first flight, Mr. Shepard made a comeback from a serious inner-ear problem, called Meuniere's syndrome, that had grounded him. And it was also a comeback flight for the space program.

On Jan. 31, 1971, he took off for the Moon in Apollo 14, the first lunar mission since the near-disaster of Apollo 13 the year before. He and Edgar Mitchell spent 33 hours on the Moon, a visit made memorable by Mr. Shepard's taking several spirited whacks at golf balls with a makeshift six-iron he had taken along. In the weak lunar gravity, the balls sailed.

''He lived every golfer's dream,'' Mr. Clinton remarked, ''taking a six iron and hitting the ball, in his words, 'for miles and miles.' ''

Mr. Shepard was one of the original seven Mercury astronauts chosen in 1959 by the fledgling space agency and introduced with great fanfare. His death leaves four survivors: Scott Carpenter, L. Gordon Cooper, Walter Schirra and Senator Glenn, who at 77 is training for a kind of farewell flight on the space shuttle in October. Mr. Glenn in 1962 became the first American to orbit the earth. Virgil I. (Gus) Grissom died in a cockpit fire during a launching-pad training exercise in 1967. Donald K. (Deke) Slayton died of cancer in 1993.

In 1974, Mr. Shepard retired from both NASA and the Navy, where he had achieved the rank of rear admiral. Already wealthy from real estate and other investments, he became chairman of the Marathon Construction Corporation in Houston and later founded his own business company, Seven Fourteen Enterprises. The name recognized his two missions, Freedom 7 and Apollo 14.

Alan Bartlett Shepard Jr. was born on Nov. 18, 1923, in East Derry, N.H., where his father, a retired Army colonel, was in the insurance business. Young Alan took odd jobs at a local airfield to learn more about planes. His education began in a one-room country school, continued with high school at the Pinkerton Academy in nearby Derry and was completed at the United States Naval Academy, where he graduated in 1944. He served briefly on a destroyer in the Pacific in World War II before turning to aviation.

After flight training in Texas and Florida and service on aircraft carriers in the Mediterranean, he entered test-pilot training at Patuxent River, Md., elevating himself into the elite of military aviation. When NASA asked 110 test pilots to volunteer to be astronauts, Mr. Shepard made the list and was one of seven chosen.

Recalling the early days in the astronaut corps, Senator Glenn said yesterday: ''That group was tossed into a maelstrom of activity, attention, travel and training in preparation for those early Mercury flights. It became obvious to all of us very early in our training that Al was a highly intelligent, dedicated leader whose high motivation toward accomplishing our mission was a true inspiration to all.''

The seven astronauts were highly competitive, each vying to be first to fly in space, and Mr. Shepard often seemed to be the most determined and cockiest of the group.

As the author Tom Wolfe wrote years later in ''The Right Stuff,'' (Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1979) Mr. Shepard presented two different faces to his colleagues, ''both the Icy Commander and Smilin' Al,'' but he ''set a standard of coolness and competence that would be hard to top.''

Mr. Shepard made no secret of his intense dislike of Mr. Wolfe's book, particularly some of its character studies and its concentration on some of the astronauts' after-hours pursuits. On a tour promoting his own book, ''Moon Shot,'' (Turner Publishing) written with Mr. Slayton, Mr. Shepard often said, ''We wanted to call ours 'The Real Stuff,' since his was just fiction.''

Mr. Shepard was among three finalists for the first flight, the others being Mr. Grissom and Mr. Glenn. By May 2, when the decision was announced, Mr. Shepard knew he would be only the first American in space, not the first ever. American space managers had scheduled a piloted Mercury flight in March, but problems with a test in January troubled the engineers, who decided on another unmanned test.

On April 12, the Russians continued their string of space triumphs by putting Major Gagarin in space for a full orbit. The historian Dr. Walter A. McDougall, in his book ''The Heavens and the Earth: A Political History of the Space Age,'' wrote that ''Gagarin's flight was a second Sputnik'' and when Mr. Shepard's flight three weeks later lasted only 15 minutes on a suborbital trajectory, ''The space gap, in the eyes of the world, had widened.''

The Soviet press agency Tass sneered that the Freedom 7 flight ''cannot be compared with the flight of the Soviet space ship Vostok.''

In the power rivalry of the cold war, the space race had become a kind of moral equivalent of war, and in those early years after the first Sputnik satellite in October 1957, the Soviet space forces seemed to be winning hands down. The United States felt its prestige ebbing with each Soviet launch.

Dr. McDougall noted that a poll taken after the Shepard flight revealed that Western Europeans believed the Soviet Union to be ahead in total military strength by 41 percent to 19 percent, and in overall scientific achievement by 39 percent to 31 percent.

On that May 5th morning, these things were not on Mr. Shepard's mind. Because of the many delays, he had an unremitting urge to urinate, but no way to get relief in his cocoon of a silver space suit. He kept pleading with the controllers for a break. They would not relent.

Mr. Shepard described the experience in ''Moon Shot.'' ''You heard me,'' he radioed to the controllers. ''I've got to pee. I've been in here forever. The gantry is still right here, so why don't you guys let me out of here for a quick stretch?''

''No way, Alan,'' Gordon Cooper replied, after a consultation with Dr. Wernher von Braun, the rocket scientist. ''Wernher says no.''

Finally, Mr. Shepard suggested that he be allowed to urinate in his suit. But that might short-circuit the medical sensors. ''Tell 'em to turn the power off,'' the desperate astronaut ordered. They did, and relief finally came to Mr. Shepard, not long before he made history.

In a decision by President Kennedy, which contrasted with the Soviet policy of secrecy, the launch was broadcast live on radio and television. The capsule separated smoothly from the rocket. A few minutes into the mission, Mr. Shepard took over manual control from the autopilot, putting the craft through some prescribed maneuvers. For five minutes, at maximum altitude and traveling more than 5,000 miles an hour, the astronaut experienced the weightlessness of space. ''Boy, what a ride!'' he said later. Yet, he said, the trip was ''pleasant and relaxing,'' with no effect on his movements and efficiency.

The flight was almost flawless, and so was the splashdown in the Atlantic. ''On the way to the carrier I felt relieved and happy,'' the astronaut said later. ''I knew I had done a pretty good job.''

Whether or not he used the expression A-O.K. is problematic. Years later, a reporter asked Mr. Shepard if he had indeed said A-O.K., and where did the term come from. ''Ask Shorty Powers,'' he said enigmatically, referring to Col. John (Shorty) Powers, who was press officer to the first astronauts. It was Colonel Powers who had passed on the quote to reporters.

Three days later, Mr. Shepard and his wife, the former Louise Brewer, were entertained by the Kennedys at the White House, then whisked to New York for a ticker-tape parade in the old Lindbergh tradition.

Behind the scenes, space, military and budget officials were meeting to draw up recommendations for taking bold steps to catch and surpass Soviet space achievements. A memorandum, handed to President Kennedy the day of Mr. Shepard's White House visit, concluded, ''Of all the programs planned, perhaps the greatest unsurpassed prestige will accrue to the nation which first sends a man to the moon and returns him safely to earth.''

On May 25, Mr. Kennedy told Congress, ''This nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to earth. No single space project in this period will be more impressive to mankind or more important for the long-range exploration of space. And none will be so difficult or expensive to accomplish.''

Dr. Logsdon of George Washington University said it was doubtful that Mr. Kennedy would have issued such a challenge, if the Shepard flight had failed.

At a dinner celebrating the 30th anniversary of the flight, Mr. Glenn said: ''Al's flight and my flight -- it was almost like we turned a corner. There was a feeling we were coming back. There was a great outpouring of public spirit.''

Mr. Shepard called it ''just the first baby step, aiming for bigger and better things.'' His words would be echoed eight years later by Neil A. Armstrong as he stepped on the Moon with the declaration, ''One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.''

Mr. Shepard almost did not make it to the Moon himself. Before he could train for a second space flight in the Gemini Project, he developed inner-ear problems. Thomas P. Stafford, a retired astronaut, recalled yesterday that he and Mr. Shepard had been chosen for the first Gemini mission.

''It was a huge blow in his life,'' Mr. Stafford said of the medical problems that grounded Mr. Shepard. ''He was anxious to get back into space, to ride again.''

Instead, for nearly a decade, Mr. Shepard was firmly rooted to NASA managerial jobs, mainly directing the astronaut corps. Mr. Stafford recalled him as a natural leader, who operated ''with more stick than carrot and would lay down the law, saying here's how it's going to be, guys.''

After surgery to correct the ear problem in 1968, Mr. Shepard was cleared to fly again and was assigned to what turned out to be the third lunar landing. Although his first flight had been only 15 minutes, the Apollo 14 journey to the Moon added 216 hours to his log book and rounded out an astronaut career that also included a Congressional Space Medal of Honor.

In his last years, he still had time for work promoting the space program and had joined the other surviving Mercury astronauts, and Betty Grissom, the widow of Gus Grissom, in founding the Mercury Seven Foundation, based in Titusville, Fla., near Cape Canaveral. The foundation raises money for scholarships for science and engineering students in college. He was its president and chairman until last October.

Besides his wife of 53 years, the survivors include two daughters, Laura Snyder and Juliana Coleman Jenkins, and six grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending.

https://www.nytimes.com/1998/07/23/us/alan-b-shepard-jr-is-dead-at-74-first-american-to-travel-in-space.html
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Odp: Ostatni wywiad Alana Sheparda (1998)
« Odpowiedź #7 dnia: Stycznia 06, 2020, 13:44 »
Alan Shepard 1991


Al Shepard received the NASA Distinguished Service Medal from President Kennedy after his May 5, 1961 flight.


USA: ASTRONAUT ALAN SHEPARD DIES AGED 74 UPDATE (2)


ALAN SHEPARD FREEDOM 7, 25th anniversary, ABC CBS NBC coverage, May 5,1986


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Shepard Honored at 50th Anniversary Celebration of Freedom 7 Flight
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Odp: Ostatni wywiad Alana Sheparda (1998)
« Odpowiedź #8 dnia: Stycznia 06, 2020, 13:44 »
Alan Shepard:Landing in the Atlantic Ocean


1961: Mercury-Atlas 3 (NASA)


1971: Apollo 14 (NASA)


Apollo 14: Mission to Fra Mauro


Apollo 14 Alan Shepard Golf age 47 oldest American on the Moon
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Odp: Ostatni wywiad Alana Sheparda (1998)
« Odpowiedź #9 dnia: Stycznia 06, 2020, 15:57 »
Myślę że warto zmienić tytuł wątku na Alan Shepard. Bo są materiały nie tylko z ostatniego wywiadu.

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Odp: Alan Shepard (1923-1998)
« Odpowiedź #10 dnia: Listopada 18, 2023, 05:09 »
Najstarszy człowiek, który chodził po Księżycu, a także do 1975 najstarszy człowiek w kosmosie.
Jest 4. najdawniej urodzonym człowiekiem, który odbył co najmniej lot orbitalny (2. z 1921 i 2. z 1923).
https://www.fai.org/news/60-years-alan-shepard-became-first-american-space

https://twitter.com/ron_eisele/status/1725604135263760551
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Today is the centenary of the birth of Admiral Alan Bartlett Shepard, Jr., USN. Born 18 November 1923. American naval aviator, test pilot, flag officer and NASA astronaut, (Commander of Apollo 14). The second man, and first American, in space.
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18 novembre 1923
Il y a exactement 100 ans naissait Alan B. Shepard (1923-1998) qui allait devenir le 1er américain dans l'espace et le 5ème homme à marcher sur la Lune.
Ma biographie
https://spacemen1969.blogspot.com/2023/11/alan-b-shepard-jr-1923-1998-usa.html
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1725771318530904482
https://twitter.com/NASAhistory/status/1725921813719335164
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100 years ago today, the first American to travel into space was born! 🎉
Spaceflight pioneer Alan Shepard, born #OTD in 1923, is shown here prior to his May 1961 launch in the Mercury-Redstone 3 (MR-3) spacecraft: @NASA's first human spaceflight. More: https://go.nasa.gov/3R11zhM
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Odp: Alan Shepard (1923-1998)
« Odpowiedź #11 dnia: Listopada 18, 2023, 21:24 »
Nieco szczegółów o skafandrze kosmicznym Alana Sheparda
https://twitter.com/airandspace/status/1725937435559829934
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Astronaut Alan Shepard, the first American in space, was born today in 1923. He was one of the Mercury 7 and flew to space aboard Mercury Freedom 7 in 1961. Shepard later walked on the Moon during the Apollo 14 mission: https://s.si.edu/3hWsHQd
https://airandspace.si.edu/collection-objects/pressure-suit-mercury-shepard-mr-3-flown/nasm_A19770563000

2)
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Today marks 101 years since Alan Shepard was born in East Derry, NH. Shepard was one of NASA's first seven astronauts, the first American to go to space, and of course, the first person to golf on the Moon! https://go.nasa.gov/3O2Gwtb
https://twitter.com/NASAhistory/status/1858533124088500430

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Today marks the 101st birthday of astronaut Alan Shepard, born on November 18, 1923, in Derry, New Hampshire.
Notably, Shepard made history as the first American in space aboard the Freedom 7 mission and later became the 5th and oldest person to walk on the Moon on Apollo 14.
https://twitter.com/armstrongspace/status/1858550066845237345

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NASA STEM @NASASTEM 7:52 PM · Feb 6, 2025
Fore!🏌️‍♂️
#OTD in 1971, @NASA_Astronauts Alan Shepard golfed on the Moon. In the 1/6th gravity on the lunar surface, his 2nd shot went for "miles and miles and miles."
Learn more about him with these bios for students.
K-4: https://nasa.gov/learning-resources/for-kids-and-students/who-was-alan-shepard-grades-k-4/
5-8: https://nasa.gov/learning-resources/who-was-alan-shepard-grades-5-8/
https://twitter.com/NASASTEM/status/1887575017543655610
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Odp: Alan Shepard (1923-1998)
« Odpowiedź #11 dnia: Listopada 18, 2023, 21:24 »