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Vance D. Brand

Vance DeVoe Brand (born May 9, 1931) is an American naval officer, aviator, aeronautical engineer, test pilot, and NASA astronaut. He served as command module pilot during the first U.S.-Soviet joint spaceflight in 1975, and as commander of three Space Shuttle missions.

Vance D. Brand
Brand in 1971
Born
Vance DeVoe Brand

(1931-05-09) May 9, 1931 (age 92)
StatusRetired
Alma mater
Occupations
AwardsNASA Distinguished Service Medal
Space career
NASA astronaut
RankMajor, United States Marine Corps Reserve
Time in space
31d 02h 02m
Selection1966 NASA Group 5
MissionsApollo–Soyuz Test Project, STS-5, STS-41-B, STS-35
Mission insignia
RetirementJanuary 2008
Signature

His flight experience includes 9,669 flying hours, which includes 8,089 hours in jets, 391 hours in helicopters, 746 hours in spacecraft, and checkout in more than 30 types of military aircraft.

Early life and education

Brand was born May 9, 1931, in Longmont, Colorado, and is the son of Rudolph William Brand (1903–1984) and Donna Mae Brand (née DeVoe; 1908–1998).[1] He was active in Troop 64 of the Boy Scouts of America in Longmont, where he achieved its second highest rank, Life Scout. Brand graduated at Longmont High School in 1949, and at the University of Colorado at Boulder he received a Bachelor of Science degree in business in 1953 and another B.S. degree, in aeronautical engineering, in 1960. He was a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity and of the International Order of DeMolay. In 1964 he completed a Master of Science degree in business administration at UCLA.

Military service

Brand was a commissioned officer and naval aviator with the United States Marine Corps from 1953 to 1957.[1] His military assignments included a 15-month tour in Japan as a jet fighter pilot. Following his release from active duty, Brand continued service in United States Marine Corps Reserve and Air National Guard jet fighter squadrons until 1964, reaching the rank of major.

Civilian test pilot

Employed as a civilian by the Lockheed Corporation from 1960 to 1966, he worked initially as a flight test engineer on the United States Navy's P-3 Orion aircraft. In 1963, Brand graduated from the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School (Class 33) and was assigned to Palmdale, California as an experimental test pilot on Canadian and German F-104 programs. Prior to selection to the astronaut program, Brand worked at the West German F-104G Flight Test Center at Istres, France as an experimental test pilot and leader of a Lockheed flight test advisory group.

NASA career

 
Brand (left) with Don Lind as a Skylab rescue crew

One of the 19 pilot astronauts selected by NASA in April 1966,[2] Brand initially was a crew member in the thermal vacuum chamber testing of the prototype command module (alongside astronauts Joe Engle and Dr. Joseph Kerwin) and support crewman on Apollos 8 and 13. During the Apollo 13 crisis, Brand was CAPCOM during the PC+2 burn.[3] Later he was backup Command Module Pilot for Apollo 15, and was likely to be named to the prime crew of Apollo 18 before that mission was canceled. Brand was backup commander for Skylabs 3 and 4. When Skylab 3's CSM had problems with its Reaction Control System, Brand was put on standby to command a rescue mission with backup Pilot Don Lind; however, the crew stood down when it was decided that the problem did not require the rescue mission to be launched. As an astronaut, he held management positions relating to spacecraft development, acquisition, flight safety and mission operations. Brand flew on four space missions; Apollo–Soyuz, STS-5, STS-41-B, and STS-35. He logged 746 hours in space and commanded three missions. Brand was the last member of his astronaut class to remain active with NASA, and was the only Apollo-era astronaut to pilot the Space Shuttle in the post-Challenger era.

Brand departed the Astronaut Office in 1992 to become Chief of Plans at the National Aerospace Plane (NASP) Joint Program Office at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. In September 1994, he moved to California to become Assistant Chief of Flight Operations at the Dryden Flight Research Center, then Acting Chief Engineer, Deputy Director for Aerospace Projects, and Acting Associate Center Director for Programs. He retired from NASA in January 2008.

Apollo–Soyuz Test Project

 
Brand (seated center) poses with the rest of the American and Soviet crew of Apollo–Soyuz

Brand was launched on his first space flight on July 15, 1975, as Apollo Command Module Pilot on the Apollo–Soyuz Test Project mission.[1] This flight resulted in the historic meeting in space between American astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts. Other crewmen on this nine-day Earth-orbital mission were Apollo Commander Thomas Stafford, Apollo Docking Module Pilot Deke Slayton, Soyuz Commander Alexei Leonov, and Soyuz Flight Engineer Valeri Kubasov. The Soyuz spacecraft was launched at Baikonur Cosmodrome, and the Apollo was launched 7½ hours later at the Kennedy Space Center. Two days later, the two spacecraft docked successfully. The linkup tested a new docking system and demonstrated international cooperation in space. There were 44 hours of docked joint activities which included four crew transfers between the Apollo and the Soyuz. Six records for docked and group flight were set on the mission and are recognized by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale. Apollo splashed down in the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii, on July 25, and was recovered by USS New Orleans, completing a 217-hour mission. The mission almost ended in disaster when, during the final stages of the mission, the crew was exposed to near fatal amounts of nitrogen tetroxide gas. The reaction control system had been inadvertently left on during descent, and the poisonous fumes were sucked into the capsule as it drew in outside air. Brand briefly lost consciousness and all three crewmen required hospitalization in Hawaii for a number of weeks after landing.

STS-5

 
Brand (second from left) with his STS-5 crewmates

Brand was commander of Space Shuttle Columbia for STS-5, the first fully operational flight of the Space Shuttle program, which launched on November 11, 1982.[1] His crew comprised Colonel Robert Overmyer, pilot, and two mission specialists, Dr. Joseph P. Allen and Dr. William B. Lenoir. STS-5, the first mission with a four-man crew, demonstrated the Shuttle as operational by the successful first deployment of two commercial communications satellites from the Shuttle's payload bay. The mission marked the Shuttle's first use of an upper-stage rocket for payloads, the Payload Assist Module (PAM-D). The satellites were deployed for Satellite Business Systems Corporation of McLean, Virginia, and TELESAT of Ottawa, Canada. Two FAI records for mass to altitude were set on the mission. Numerous flight tests were performed to ascertain Shuttle performance. STS-5 was the last flight to carry the Development Flight Instrumentation package to support extensive flight testing. The STS-5 crew concluded the 5-day orbital flight of Columbia with the landing approach through a cloud deck to Runway 22 at Edwards Air Force Base, California on November 16, 1982. Mission duration was 122 hours.

STS-41-B

Brand commanded Challenger with a crew of five on the tenth flight of the Space Shuttle program, STS-41-B.[1] The launch was on February 3, 1984.[4] His crew included Commander Robert L. Gibson, pilot, and 3 Mission Specialists, Captain Bruce McCandless II, Dr. Ronald McNair, and Lt. Col. Robert L. Stewart. The flight accomplished the deployment of two Hughes HS-376 communications satellites which failed to reach desired geosynchronous orbits due to upper-stage rocket failures. This mission marked the first flight checkout of the Manned Maneuvering Unit and the Manipulator Foot Restraint with McCandless and Stewart performing two untethered extravehicular activities. Shuttle rendezvous sensors and computer programs were flight-tested for the first time. The 8-day flight of Challenger ended with the first landing on the runway at the Kennedy Space Center on February 11, 1984.

Brand was training initially for STS-51-H on Atlantis in November 1985. That mission was canceled and re-manifested as STS-61-K, a Spacelab mission which would have launched on Columbia in October 1986. That mission was canceled by the Challenger disaster.

STS-35

 
Brand heads into orbit aboard Space Shuttle Columbia, 1990

Brand again commanded Columbia on the 38th flight of the shuttle, this time with a crew of seven, on STS-35.[1] The night launch on December 2, 1990, started a nine-day mission devoted to round-the-clock astronomical observations.[5] Crewmen included the pilot, Col. Guy Gardner; three mission specialists, John M. Lounge, Dr. Robert A. Parker and Dr. Jeffrey A. Hoffman; and two payload specialists, Dr. Samuel T. Durrance and Dr. Ronald A. Parise. The 13-ton payload consisted of the three ASTRO-1 ultraviolet (UV) telescopes and the Broadband X-ray Telescope. More than 200 Orbiter maneuvers were required to point the telescopes. This Shuttle flight, one of the first dedicated to astronomy, provided a rich return of science data with emphasis on observations of very active celestial objects. A night landing was made on December 10, to Runway 22 at Edwards Air Force Base. Mission duration was 215 hours.

Awards and honors

 
Brand (standing right) during the Apollo 13 crisis (April 1970)

Personal life

Brand is married to the former Beverly Ann Whitnel and has two daughters and four sons: Susan Nancy (born April 30, 1954), Stephanie Brand Lowery (born August 6, 1955), Patrick Richard (born March 22, 1958), Kevin Stephen (born December 1, 1963), Erik Ryan (May 11, 1981), and Dane Vance (born October 1, 1985). He currently resides with his wife in Tehachapi, California.[13][14]

Philanthropy

In 2019, Brand donated 40 acres of land to the Rocky Mountain Conservancy, which is the nonprofit arm of Rocky Mountain National Park, hoping to expand the national park that he has visited throughout his life. He had purchased the land in 1967. The 40 acres of rugged terrain, located near Estes Cone and roughly 4 miles from Longs Peak, borders Rocky Mountain National Park on two sides. The United States Congress will need to approve the boundary change for this acreage to be officially incorporated into the national park.[15][16]

See also

References

  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Government.   This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Biographical Data: Vance DeVoe Brand" (PDF). NASA. February 2010. Retrieved January 10, 2021.
  2. ^ Thompson, Ronald (April 5, 1966). "19 New Spacemen Are Named". The High Point Enterprise. High Point, North Carolina. p. 2A – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ Lovell, James (1994). Lost Moon. New York: Houghton Mifflin Company. pp. 244–245. ISBN 0-395-67029-2.
  4. ^ Stanley, Rick (February 4, 1984). "Backed Up Cars; Broken Down Bus; a Beautiful Launch". Florida Today. Cocoa, Florida. p. 3A – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ "Columbia Makes Successful Night Launch". Statesman Journal. Salem, Oregon. Gannett News Service. December 2, 1990. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Vance DeVoe Brand". NASA. February 1, 2008. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
  7. ^ a b c d e Halvorson, Todd; Banke, Jim (March 15, 1992). "Veteran Astronaut Hangs up Spacesuit". Florida Today. Cocoa, Florida. p. 57.
  8. ^ "Flew on the Apollo–Soyuz Test Project and the first operational flight of the Space Shuttle". New Mexico Museum of Space History. Retrieved January 22, 2019.
  9. ^ "Alamogordo". El Paso Times. El Paso, Texas. September 10, 1996. p. 11.
  10. ^ "Vance Brand". Astronaut Scholarship Foundation. Retrieved January 22, 2019.
  11. ^ Meyer, Marilyn (October 2, 1997). "Ceremony to Honor Astronauts". Florida Today. Cocoa, Florida. p. 2B – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ "Vince Brand on the DeMolay International Hall of Fame". DeMolay International.
  13. ^ "Former astronaut wants to make Rocky Mountain National Park a bit bigger. But first, Congress needs to pass legislation". December 17, 2019.
  14. ^ "Former astronaut wants to make Rocky Mountain National Park a bit bigger. But first, Congress needs to pass legislation". December 17, 2019.
  15. ^ Johnson, Pamela (November 12, 2019). "Former astronaut Vance Brand donates 40 acres to Rocky Mountain National Park". denverpost.com. Denver Post. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  16. ^ Johnson, Pamela (November 12, 2019). "Former astronaut Vance Brand donates 40 acres to Rocky Mountain National Park". reporterherald.com. Loveeland Reporter-Herald. Retrieved November 13, 2019.

External links

  • Spacefacts biography of Vance D. Brand
  • Brand at Encyclopedia of Science

vance, brand, vance, devoe, brand, born, 1931, american, naval, officer, aviator, aeronautical, engineer, test, pilot, nasa, astronaut, served, command, module, pilot, during, first, soviet, joint, spaceflight, 1975, commander, three, space, shuttle, missions,. Vance DeVoe Brand born May 9 1931 is an American naval officer aviator aeronautical engineer test pilot and NASA astronaut He served as command module pilot during the first U S Soviet joint spaceflight in 1975 and as commander of three Space Shuttle missions Vance D BrandBrand in 1971BornVance DeVoe Brand 1931 05 09 May 9 1931 age 92 Longmont Colorado U S StatusRetiredAlma materUniversity of Colorado Boulder BS BS University of California Los Angeles MS OccupationsNaval aviatorTest pilotEngineerAstronautAwardsNASA Distinguished Service MedalSpace careerNASA astronautRankMajor United States Marine Corps ReserveTime in space31d 02h 02mSelection1966 NASA Group 5MissionsApollo Soyuz Test Project STS 5 STS 41 B STS 35Mission insigniaRetirementJanuary 2008SignatureHis flight experience includes 9 669 flying hours which includes 8 089 hours in jets 391 hours in helicopters 746 hours in spacecraft and checkout in more than 30 types of military aircraft Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Military service 3 Civilian test pilot 4 NASA career 4 1 Apollo Soyuz Test Project 4 2 STS 5 4 3 STS 41 B 4 4 STS 35 5 Awards and honors 6 Personal life 6 1 Philanthropy 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education EditBrand was born May 9 1931 in Longmont Colorado and is the son of Rudolph William Brand 1903 1984 and Donna Mae Brand nee DeVoe 1908 1998 1 He was active in Troop 64 of the Boy Scouts of America in Longmont where he achieved its second highest rank Life Scout Brand graduated at Longmont High School in 1949 and at the University of Colorado at Boulder he received a Bachelor of Science degree in business in 1953 and another B S degree in aeronautical engineering in 1960 He was a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity and of the International Order of DeMolay In 1964 he completed a Master of Science degree in business administration at UCLA Military service EditBrand was a commissioned officer and naval aviator with the United States Marine Corps from 1953 to 1957 1 His military assignments included a 15 month tour in Japan as a jet fighter pilot Following his release from active duty Brand continued service in United States Marine Corps Reserve and Air National Guard jet fighter squadrons until 1964 reaching the rank of major Civilian test pilot EditEmployed as a civilian by the Lockheed Corporation from 1960 to 1966 he worked initially as a flight test engineer on the United States Navy s P 3 Orion aircraft In 1963 Brand graduated from the U S Naval Test Pilot School Class 33 and was assigned to Palmdale California as an experimental test pilot on Canadian and German F 104 programs Prior to selection to the astronaut program Brand worked at the West German F 104G Flight Test Center at Istres France as an experimental test pilot and leader of a Lockheed flight test advisory group NASA career Edit Brand left with Don Lind as a Skylab rescue crewOne of the 19 pilot astronauts selected by NASA in April 1966 2 Brand initially was a crew member in the thermal vacuum chamber testing of the prototype command module alongside astronauts Joe Engle and Dr Joseph Kerwin and support crewman on Apollos 8 and 13 During the Apollo 13 crisis Brand was CAPCOM during the PC 2 burn 3 Later he was backup Command Module Pilot for Apollo 15 and was likely to be named to the prime crew of Apollo 18 before that mission was canceled Brand was backup commander for Skylabs 3 and 4 When Skylab 3 s CSM had problems with its Reaction Control System Brand was put on standby to command a rescue mission with backup Pilot Don Lind however the crew stood down when it was decided that the problem did not require the rescue mission to be launched As an astronaut he held management positions relating to spacecraft development acquisition flight safety and mission operations Brand flew on four space missions Apollo Soyuz STS 5 STS 41 B and STS 35 He logged 746 hours in space and commanded three missions Brand was the last member of his astronaut class to remain active with NASA and was the only Apollo era astronaut to pilot the Space Shuttle in the post Challenger era Brand departed the Astronaut Office in 1992 to become Chief of Plans at the National Aerospace Plane NASP Joint Program Office at Wright Patterson Air Force Base In September 1994 he moved to California to become Assistant Chief of Flight Operations at the Dryden Flight Research Center then Acting Chief Engineer Deputy Director for Aerospace Projects and Acting Associate Center Director for Programs He retired from NASA in January 2008 Apollo Soyuz Test Project Edit Main article Apollo Soyuz Test Project Brand seated center poses with the rest of the American and Soviet crew of Apollo SoyuzBrand was launched on his first space flight on July 15 1975 as Apollo Command Module Pilot on the Apollo Soyuz Test Project mission 1 This flight resulted in the historic meeting in space between American astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts Other crewmen on this nine day Earth orbital mission were Apollo Commander Thomas Stafford Apollo Docking Module Pilot Deke Slayton Soyuz Commander Alexei Leonov and Soyuz Flight Engineer Valeri Kubasov The Soyuz spacecraft was launched at Baikonur Cosmodrome and the Apollo was launched 7 hours later at the Kennedy Space Center Two days later the two spacecraft docked successfully The linkup tested a new docking system and demonstrated international cooperation in space There were 44 hours of docked joint activities which included four crew transfers between the Apollo and the Soyuz Six records for docked and group flight were set on the mission and are recognized by the Federation Aeronautique Internationale Apollo splashed down in the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii on July 25 and was recovered by USS New Orleans completing a 217 hour mission The mission almost ended in disaster when during the final stages of the mission the crew was exposed to near fatal amounts of nitrogen tetroxide gas The reaction control system had been inadvertently left on during descent and the poisonous fumes were sucked into the capsule as it drew in outside air Brand briefly lost consciousness and all three crewmen required hospitalization in Hawaii for a number of weeks after landing STS 5 Edit Brand second from left with his STS 5 crewmatesMain article STS 5 Brand was commander of Space Shuttle Columbia for STS 5 the first fully operational flight of the Space Shuttle program which launched on November 11 1982 1 His crew comprised Colonel Robert Overmyer pilot and two mission specialists Dr Joseph P Allen and Dr William B Lenoir STS 5 the first mission with a four man crew demonstrated the Shuttle as operational by the successful first deployment of two commercial communications satellites from the Shuttle s payload bay The mission marked the Shuttle s first use of an upper stage rocket for payloads the Payload Assist Module PAM D The satellites were deployed for Satellite Business Systems Corporation of McLean Virginia and TELESAT of Ottawa Canada Two FAI records for mass to altitude were set on the mission Numerous flight tests were performed to ascertain Shuttle performance STS 5 was the last flight to carry the Development Flight Instrumentation package to support extensive flight testing The STS 5 crew concluded the 5 day orbital flight of Columbia with the landing approach through a cloud deck to Runway 22 at Edwards Air Force Base California on November 16 1982 Mission duration was 122 hours STS 41 B Edit Main article STS 41 B Brand commanded Challenger with a crew of five on the tenth flight of the Space Shuttle program STS 41 B 1 The launch was on February 3 1984 4 His crew included Commander Robert L Gibson pilot and 3 Mission Specialists Captain Bruce McCandless II Dr Ronald McNair and Lt Col Robert L Stewart The flight accomplished the deployment of two Hughes HS 376 communications satellites which failed to reach desired geosynchronous orbits due to upper stage rocket failures This mission marked the first flight checkout of the Manned Maneuvering Unit and the Manipulator Foot Restraint with McCandless and Stewart performing two untethered extravehicular activities Shuttle rendezvous sensors and computer programs were flight tested for the first time The 8 day flight of Challenger ended with the first landing on the runway at the Kennedy Space Center on February 11 1984 Brand was training initially for STS 51 H on Atlantis in November 1985 That mission was canceled and re manifested as STS 61 K a Spacelab mission which would have launched on Columbia in October 1986 That mission was canceled by the Challenger disaster STS 35 Edit Main article STS 35 Brand heads into orbit aboard Space Shuttle Columbia 1990Brand again commanded Columbia on the 38th flight of the shuttle this time with a crew of seven on STS 35 1 The night launch on December 2 1990 started a nine day mission devoted to round the clock astronomical observations 5 Crewmen included the pilot Col Guy Gardner three mission specialists John M Lounge Dr Robert A Parker and Dr Jeffrey A Hoffman and two payload specialists Dr Samuel T Durrance and Dr Ronald A Parise The 13 ton payload consisted of the three ASTRO 1 ultraviolet UV telescopes and the Broadband X ray Telescope More than 200 Orbiter maneuvers were required to point the telescopes This Shuttle flight one of the first dedicated to astronomy provided a rich return of science data with emphasis on observations of very active celestial objects A night landing was made on December 10 to Runway 22 at Edwards Air Force Base Mission duration was 215 hours Awards and honors Edit Brand standing right during the Apollo 13 crisis April 1970 JSC Certificate of Commendation 1970 Two NASA Distinguished Service Medals 1975 amp 1992 6 Two NASA Exceptional Service Medals 1974 amp 1988 6 Zeta Beta Tau s Richard Gottheil Medal 1975 Wright Brothers International Manned Space Flight Award 1975 two VFW National Space Award 1976 amp 1984 Sigma Nu Distinguished Alumnus of the Year Award 1976 University of Colorado Alumnus of the Century 1 of 12 1976 6 AIAA Special Presidential Citation 1977 7 two American Astronautical Society s Flight Achievement Award for 1976 7 AIAA Haley Astronautics Award 1978 JSC Special Achievement Award 1978 Harmon Trophy Astronaut 1993 6 FAI De la Vaulx Medal 1983 7 Three NASA Space Flight Medals 1983 7 1984 7 1992 Distinguished Visiting Lecturer at University of Colorado 1984 Vance Brand Airport in Longmont CO named in his honor 1988 De Molay Hall of Honor 1989 two FAI V M Komarov Diplomas 1983 amp 1991 University of Colorado George Norlin Award 1991 De Molay Legion of Honor 1993 International Space Hall of Fame 1996 8 9 U S Astronaut Hall of Fame 1997 10 11 Meritorious Executive U S Senior Executive Service 1997 Honorary Doctor of Science degree from University of Colorado 2000 6 International Aerospace Hall of Fame 2001 6 Oklahoma Aviation and Space Hall of Fame 2005 Tsiolkovsky Gold Medal of the International Aeronautical Federation 2005 ASE Crystal Helmet Award 2005 Sigma Nu Hall of Fame 2010 Honorary Citizen of Kaliningrad DeMolay International Hall of Fame 12 Personal life EditBrand is married to the former Beverly Ann Whitnel and has two daughters and four sons Susan Nancy born April 30 1954 Stephanie Brand Lowery born August 6 1955 Patrick Richard born March 22 1958 Kevin Stephen born December 1 1963 Erik Ryan May 11 1981 and Dane Vance born October 1 1985 He currently resides with his wife in Tehachapi California 13 14 Philanthropy Edit In 2019 Brand donated 40 acres of land to the Rocky Mountain Conservancy which is the nonprofit arm of Rocky Mountain National Park hoping to expand the national park that he has visited throughout his life He had purchased the land in 1967 The 40 acres of rugged terrain located near Estes Cone and roughly 4 miles from Longs Peak borders Rocky Mountain National Park on two sides The United States Congress will need to approve the boundary change for this acreage to be officially incorporated into the national park 15 16 See also EditApollo Soyuz Commemorative stamp List of spaceflight records The Astronaut MonumentReferences Edit This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Government This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration a b c d e f Biographical Data Vance DeVoe Brand PDF NASA February 2010 Retrieved January 10 2021 Thompson Ronald April 5 1966 19 New Spacemen Are Named The High Point Enterprise High Point North Carolina p 2A via Newspapers com Lovell James 1994 Lost Moon New York Houghton Mifflin Company pp 244 245 ISBN 0 395 67029 2 Stanley Rick February 4 1984 Backed Up Cars Broken Down Bus a Beautiful Launch Florida Today Cocoa Florida p 3A via Newspapers com Columbia Makes Successful Night Launch Statesman Journal Salem Oregon Gannett News Service December 2 1990 p 3 via Newspapers com a b c d e f Vance DeVoe Brand NASA February 1 2008 Retrieved April 17 2019 a b c d e Halvorson Todd Banke Jim March 15 1992 Veteran Astronaut Hangs up Spacesuit Florida Today Cocoa Florida p 57 Flew on the Apollo Soyuz Test Project and the first operational flight of the Space Shuttle New Mexico Museum of Space History Retrieved January 22 2019 Alamogordo El Paso Times El Paso Texas September 10 1996 p 11 Vance Brand Astronaut Scholarship Foundation Retrieved January 22 2019 Meyer Marilyn October 2 1997 Ceremony to Honor Astronauts Florida Today Cocoa Florida p 2B via Newspapers com Vince Brand on the DeMolay International Hall of Fame DeMolay International Former astronaut wants to make Rocky Mountain National Park a bit bigger But first Congress needs to pass legislation December 17 2019 Former astronaut wants to make Rocky Mountain National Park a bit bigger But first Congress needs to pass legislation December 17 2019 Johnson Pamela November 12 2019 Former astronaut Vance Brand donates 40 acres to Rocky Mountain National Park denverpost com Denver Post Retrieved November 13 2019 Johnson Pamela November 12 2019 Former astronaut Vance Brand donates 40 acres to Rocky Mountain National Park reporterherald com Loveeland Reporter Herald Retrieved November 13 2019 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vance D Brand Astronautix biography of Vance D Brand Spacefacts biography of Vance D Brand Brand at Encyclopedia of Science Portals Biography Aviation Spaceflight Colorado United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vance D Brand amp oldid 1157632545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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