Veteran Astronaut Walter Schirra Dies

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May 3, 2007

David Mould
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1898

RELEASE: 07-100

VETERAN ASTRONAUT WALTER SCHIRRA DIES

LA JOLLA, Calif. - Pioneering astronaut Walter "Wally" Schirra, the 
only man who flew in all three of America's first human space 
projects - Mercury, Gemini and Apollo - died Wednesday night. He was 
84. Schirra's family reported he died of natural causes. 

Schirra was one of America's original seven astronauts, selected in 
1959, and was commander of the first crew to fly into space aboard an 
Apollo capsule, Apollo 7, following the tragic launchpad fire that 
claimed the lives of the crew of Apollo 1. 

"With the passing of Wally Schirra, we at NASA note with sorrow the 
loss of yet another of the pioneers of human spaceflight," NASA 
Administrator Michael Griffin said. "As a Mercury astronaut, Wally 
was a member of the first group of astronauts to be selected, often 
referred to as the Original Seven." 

Schirra's first space flight was piloting the fifth Mercury mission on 
Oct. 3, 1962, orbiting Earth six times in 9 hours and 13 minutes. 
During the flight he took hundreds of photos of Earth and space 
phenomena. Schirra's capsule, Sigma 7, splashed down only 5 miles 
from the recovery carrier. 

As commander of Gemini 6-A, which launched on Dec. 15, 1965, Schirra 
flew with astronaut Tom Stafford on a mission that included the first 
rendezvous of two manned, maneuverable spacecraft. Gemini 6-A and 
Gemini 7 flew in formation for five hours, as close as one foot to 
one another. 

During his 11-day Apollo 7 flight, which began Oct. 11, 1968, he and 
fellow crewmembers Walt Cunningham and Donn Eisele tested the Apollo 
systems and proved Apollo was ready to take astronauts to the moon. 

"We shared a common dream to test the limits of man's imagination and 
daring," Schirra wrote of America's early astronauts. "Those early 
pioneering flights of Mercury, the performances of Gemini and the 
trips to the moon established us once and for all as what I like to 
call a spacefaring nation. Like England, Spain and Portugal crossing 
the seas in search of their nations' greatness, so we reached for the 
skies and ennobled our nation." 

Schirra retired from the Navy as a captain and from NASA in 1969 and 
became a commentator with CBS News. His enthusiasm and knowledge of 
the space program coupled with his charismatic on-the-air presence 
made him an even more widely known national and international figure. 


He complemented CBS anchorman Walter Cronkite and the two became a 
powerful space-coverage team. Schirra worked for CBS from 1969 to 
1975. He also engaged in a range of business activities and in 1979 
formed his own consultant company, Schirra Enterprises. 

Walter M. Schirra, Jr., was born in Hackensack, N.J., on March 12, 
1923. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1945, and from 
Naval Flight Training at Pensacola Naval Air Station, Fla., in 1947. 
After service as a carrier-based fighter pilot and operations 
officer, he attended the Naval Test Pilot School at Patuxent River, 
Md. During the Korean War he flew F-86 Sabres under an exchange 
program with the Air Force. 

Schirra was chosen as one of the original "Mercury Seven" from among 
110 selected test pilots from the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps 
after exhaustive physical and psychological examinations. 

Known for lively storytelling and practical jokes, one of his 
best-known anecdotes from astronaut training came when he and the 
others were continually being examined and subjected to demands for 
samples of body fluids. When one nurse insisted he provide a urine 
sample, Schirra reportedly filled a 5-gallon jug with warm water, 
detergent and iodine and left it on her desk. 

"Levity makes life a lot easier," he once told a Houston reporter. 

Griffin noted that "It was impossible to know Wally, even to meet him, 
without realizing at once that he was a man who relished the lighter 
side of life, the puns and jokes and pranks that can enliven a 
gathering. But this was a distraction from the true nature of the 
man. His record as a pioneering space pilot shows the real stuff of 
which he was made. We who have inherited today's space program will 
always be in his debt." 

The Mercury Seven trained initially at NASA's Langley Research Center 
in Hampton, Va. In 1961 they moved to the newly established Manned 
Spacecraft Center (now the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center) near 
Houston. 

Schirra's Sigma 7 mission was called "the perfect flight" by space 
reporter and author Howard Benedict. After Schirra's splashdown near 
the carrier USS Kearsarge near Midway Island in the Pacific, he 
pronounced himself "healthy as a bear" and "happy as a lark." 

Schirra's Gemini flight with Stafford was something of an 
improvisation. They had been scheduled to rendezvous in orbit with an 
unmanned Agena to be launched 90 minutes before the Gemini liftoff. 
But six minutes after the Atlas-Agena left the pad it exploded, and 
the Gemini 6-A launch was postponed. 

Eventually it was decided to use Gemini 7 as a rendezvous target for 
Gemini 6-A. Both were to be launched from Pad 19 at Cape Canaveral, 
so a record turnaround of the launch pad was necessary. Working 
around the clock, crews got the pad ready in just eight days after 
the Gemini 7 liftoff. 

The Gemini 6-A countdown reached zero on Dec. 12, 1965, and the rocket 
engines ignited - then shut down. The two astronauts had to wait 
almost half an hour atop the fueled rocket before getting out of the 
capsule. The problem turned out to be minor, the failure of an 
electrical connection. 

Three days later, Gemini 6-A was launched without a hitch. The mission 
proved the spacecraft could be readily maneuvered. It was an 
encouraging development in the race to reach the moon. 

By the launch of Apollo 7 in October 1968, the moon landing seemed to 
be coming within reach. The success of the flight proved that it was. 
Accomplishments of the mission commanded by Schirra resulted in the 
next flight, Apollo 8, being sent around the moon. 

Apollo 7 had not been all smooth sailing. All three astronauts had 
colds. Schirra was occasionally firm in rejecting requests from the 
ground to insert additional events in the already-crowded flight 
plan. 

"Television will be delayed, without any further discussion, until 
after the rendezvous" (with a spent rocket stage), he said. He 
subsequently was even more critical of efforts to add events to the 
flight plan. Eventually the almost daily television transmissions 
from Apollo 7 became popular mainstays of the mission coverage. 
Schirra subsequently apologized for the tone of some of his 
criticisms, though not for their content. 

After leaving NASA, he participated in a number of television 
presentations and films, and served as national spokesman for several 
organizations and companies. He also held numerous directorships for 
a variety of businesses, in addition to his consulting work. He also 
wrote two books, "We Seven" published in 1960 and "Schirra's Space" 
published in 1988. 

Schirra's military awards included the Navy Distinguished Service 
Medal, three Distinguished Flying Crosses, three Air Medals, two NASA 
Distinguished Service Medals, the NASA Exceptional Service Medal and 
the Philippines Legion of Honor. 

He was awarded honorary doctorates by several institutions of higher 
learning. 

He was active in a number of organizations. He was on the Advisory 
Committee of the Oceans Foundations, the Advisory Board/Council of 
U.S. National Parks, the Advisory Board of International "Up With 
People" and was a founding member and director of the Mercury Seven 
Foundation. 

He also was a director of the San Diego Aerospace Museum, a trustee of 
the Scripps Aquarium, and a member of the International Council of 
the Salk Institute. 

Schirra lived in Rancho Santa Fe, Calif. Survivors include his wife 
Josephine, his daughter Suzanne and son Walter Schirra III. 

Images and video from Schirra's years with NASA can be seen at: 

http://www.nasa.gov/vision/space/features/walter_schirra.html

	
-end-



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