NASA Mourns Loss of Former Kennedy Director Forrest McCartney

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July 18, 2012

Michael Curie
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
321-867-2468
michael.curie@nasa.gov

Allard Beutel
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1600
allard.beutel@nasa.gov

RELEASE: 39-12

NASA MOURNS LOSS OF FORMER KENNEDY DIRECTOR FORREST MCCARTNEY

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Forrest S. McCartney, former director of 
NASA's John F. Kennedy Space Center, died July 17, 2012, with his 
family in attendance. He was 81 years old. McCartney, of Indialantic, 
Fla., was Kennedy's director from Sept. 1, 1987, until Dec. 21, 1991.

"It is with great sadness that I learned of the passing of former 
Kennedy Space Center Director Forrest McCartney," said Kennedy 
Director Robert Cabana. "Forrest was one of the finest gentlemen I 
have ever known, and no one cared more for the KSC team than Gen. 
McCartney. He was always out in the processing areas talking with the 
troops and getting the pulse of KSC. He was a man with the highest 
integrity who always did the right thing. He will most certainly be 
missed."

McCartney served as director of Kennedy under detail from the U. S. 
Air Force beginning Oct. 1, 1986. He came to NASA from the position 
of commander, Air Force Space Division and concluded a distinguished 
35-year military career on Aug. 31, 1987, with a retirement ceremony 
at the office of the Secretary of the Air Force in the Pentagon.

Born March 23, 1931, in Ft. Payne, Ala., McCartney graduated from 
Gulfcoast Military Academy in 1949. He received a Bachelor of Science 
in electrical engineering from the Alabama Polytechnic Institute in 
1952. His first military assignment was with the Air Force Logistics 
Command at Robins Air Force Base, Ga.

McCartney earned a master's degree in nuclear engineering from the Air 
Force Institute of Technology, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, 
in 1955. Upon graduation he served as project officer for various 
special weapons programs, and for nuclear weapons safety systems 
studies at the Special Weapons Center, Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M. 
He also graduated from the Armed Forces Staff College, Norfolk, Va., 
in 1967.

McCartney's first Air Force assignments included duty as a satellite 
controller at the Satellite Control Facility, Sunnyvale, Calif., in 
1959 during early space operations; an assignment at the Office of 
Space Activities, Air Force Systems Command Headquarters, Andrews Air 
Force Base, Md., from 1961 to 1966; and service as a project officer 
in the Titan II program and various Air Force communication satellite 
programs. He was assigned to the Directorate of Space at U.S. Air 
Force Headquarters, Washington, D.C., in 1967, as the program element 
monitor for satellite communications programs and other selected 
space-related efforts.

Gen. McCartney transferred in 1971 to the Air Force Eastern Test 
Range, headquartered at Patrick Air Force Base, Fla., as the director 
of Range Engineering.

In June 1974, McCartney was assigned to the Space and Missile Systems 
Organization at Los Angeles Air Force Station as the systems program 
director for Fleet Satellite Communications Systems. In August 1976, 
he was reassigned within the organization as deputy for Space 
Communications Systems.

McCartney moved to Norton Air Force Base, Calif., in September 1979, 
as vice commander of the Ballistic Missile Office. In November 1980, 
he was named commander of the Ballistic Missile Office and MX Program 
director. He became vice commander of the Air Force Space Division in 
May 1982.

In May 1983, McCartney was promoted to his retirement rank of 
lieutenant general and named commander of the Air Force Space 
Division and vice commander of the new Air Force Space Command.

Spacecraft programs with which McCartney was directly associated 
include the FLTSATCOM series of military communications satellites, 
the DSCS communications satellites, the Navstar Global Positioning 
System, and the Inertial Upper Stage (IUS). He also participated in 
the construction program of the Consolidated Space Operations Center 
(CSOC), a command and control center for military space operations at 
Falcon Air Force Station, Colo.

His military decorations and awards included the Distinguished Service 
Medal, Legion of Merit with one oak leaf cluster, Meritorious Service 
Medal and Air Force Commendation Medal with three oak leaf clusters, 
and the Gen. Thomas D. White U. S. Air Force Space Trophy. He also 
wore the master missileman badge and the master space badge.

After joining NASA, he was the recipient the Military Astronautical 
Trophy in 1987; NASA's Distinguished Service Medal in 1989; the 
National Space Club's Goddard Memorial Trophy also in 1989; and the 
National Space Club Florida Committee's Kurt H. Debus award in 1992.

McCartney was active in the local community, previously serving on the 
board of trustees of the Florida Institute of Technology in 
Melbourne, Fla., which awarded him an honorary doctorate degree, and 
on the boards of the Space Coast Science Center and the Merritt 
Island Wildlife Association.

McCartney is survived by his wife, the former Ruth Griffis of Memphis, 
Tenn., and two daughters, Margaret and Worthy.

For more information about Kennedy Space Center, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/kennedy  

	
-end-



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