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Gus Grissom

Virgil Ivan "Gus" Grissom (April 3, 1926 – January 27, 1967) was an American engineer and pilot in the United States Air Force, as well as one of the original seven men, the Mercury Seven, selected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for Project Mercury, a program to train and launch astronauts into outer space. Grissom was also a Project Gemini and Apollo program astronaut for NASA. As a member of the NASA Astronaut Corps, Grissom was the second American to fly in space in 1961. He was also the second American to fly in space twice, preceded only by Joe Walker with his sub-orbital X-15 flights.

Gus Grissom
Grissom in 1964
Born
Virgil Ivan Grissom

(1926-04-03)April 3, 1926
DiedJanuary 27, 1967(1967-01-27) (aged 40)
Resting placeArlington National Cemetery
EducationPurdue University (BS)
Air University (BS)
Awards
Space career
NASA astronaut
RankLieutenant Colonel, USAF
Time in space
5h 7m
SelectionNASA Group 1 (1959)
Missions
Mission insignia

Grissom was a World War II and Korean War veteran, mechanical engineer, and USAF test pilot. He was a recipient of the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air Medal with an oak leaf cluster, two NASA Distinguished Service Medals, and, posthumously, the Congressional Space Medal of Honor.

As commander of AS-204 (Apollo 1), Grissom died with astronauts Ed White and Roger B. Chaffee on January 27, 1967, during a pre-launch test for the Apollo 1 mission at Cape Kennedy, Florida.

Early life edit

Virgil Ivan Grissom was born in the small town of Mitchell, Indiana, on April 3, 1926,[1] to Dennis David Grissom (1903–1994), a signalman for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and Cecile King Grissom (1901–1995), a homemaker. Virgil was the family's second child (an older sister died in infancy shortly before his birth). He was followed by three younger siblings: a sister, Wilma, and two brothers, Norman and Lowell.[2] Grissom started school at Riley grade school. His interest in flying began during that time, building model airplanes.[1] He received his nickname when his friend was reading his name on a scorecard upside down and misread "Griss" as "Gus".[1]

As a youth, Grissom attended the local Church of Christ, where he remained a lifelong member. He joined the local Boy Scout Troop and earned the rank of Star Scout.[3] Grissom credited the Scouts for his love of hunting and fishing. He was the leader of the honor guard in his troop.[4] His first jobs were delivering newspapers for The Indianapolis Star in the morning and the Bedford Times in the evening.[1] In the summer he picked fruit in area orchards and worked at a dry-goods store.[4] He also worked at a local meat market, a service station, and a clothing store in Mitchell.

Grissom started attending Mitchell High School in 1940.[4] He wanted to play varsity basketball but he was too short. His father encouraged him to find sports he was more suited for, and he joined the swimming team.[4] Although he excelled at mathematics, Grissom was an average high school student in other subjects.[5] He graduated from high school in 1944.

In addition, Grissom occasionally spent time at a local airport in Bedford, Indiana, where he first became interested in aviation. A local attorney who owned a small plane would take him on flights and taught him the basics of flying.[6]

Grissom was a Freemason.[7][8]

World War II edit

World War II began while Grissom was still in high school, but he was eager to join the armed services upon graduation. Grissom enlisted as an aviation cadet in the U.S. Army Air Forces during his senior year in high school, and completed an entrance exam in November 1943. Grissom was inducted into the U.S. Army Air Forces on August 8, 1944, at Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana. He was sent to Sheppard Field in Wichita Falls, Texas, for five weeks of basic flight training, and was later stationed at Brooks Field in San Antonio, Texas. In January 1945 Grissom was assigned to Boca Raton Army Airfield in Florida. Although he was interested in becoming a pilot, most of Grissom's time before his discharge in 1945 was spent as a clerk.[9]

Post-war employment edit

Grissom was discharged from military service in November 1945, after the war had ended, and returned to Mitchell, where he took a job at Carpenter Body Works, a local bus manufacturing business. Grissom was determined to make his career in aviation and attend college. Using the G.I. Bill for partial payment of his school tuition, Grissom enrolled at Purdue University in September 1946.[10]

Due to a shortage of campus housing during her husband's first semester in college in West Lafayette, Indiana, Grissom's wife, Betty, stayed in Mitchell living with her parents, while Grissom lived in a rented apartment with another male student. Betty Grissom joined her husband on campus during his second semester, and the couple settled into a small, one-bedroom apartment. Grissom continued his studies at Purdue, worked part-time as a cook at a local restaurant, and took summer classes to finish college early, while his wife worked the night shift as a long-distance operator for the Indiana Bell Telephone Company to help pay for his schooling and their living expenses. Grissom graduated from Purdue with a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering in February 1950.[11]

Korean War edit

 
Grissom in the United States Air Force

After he graduated from Purdue, Grissom re-enlisted in the newly formed U.S. Air Force. He was accepted into the Air Cadet Basic Training Program at Randolph Air Force Base in Universal City, Texas. Upon completion of the program, he was assigned to Williams Air Force Base in Mesa, Arizona, where his wife, Betty, and infant son, Scott, joined him, but the family remained there only briefly. In March 1951, Grissom received his pilot wings and a commission as a second lieutenant. Nine months later, in December 1951, Grissom and his family moved into new living quarters in Presque Isle, Maine, where he was assigned to Presque Isle Air Force Base and became a member of the 75th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron.[12]

With the ongoing Korean War, Grissom's squadron was dispatched to the war zone in February 1952. There he flew as an F-86 Sabre replacement pilot and was reassigned to the 334th Fighter Squadron of the 4th Fighter Interceptor Wing stationed at Kimpo Air Base.[13] He flew one hundred combat missions during approximately six months of service in Korea, including multiple occasions when he broke up air raids from North Korean MiGs. On March 11, 1952, Grissom was promoted to first lieutenant and was cited for his "superlative airmanship" for his actions on March 23, 1952, when he flew cover for a photo reconnaissance mission.[14] Grissom was also awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal with an oak leaf cluster for his military service in Korea.[15]

After flying his quota of one hundred missions, Grissom asked to remain in Korea to fly another twenty-five flights, but his request was denied. Grissom returned to the United States to serve as a flight instructor at Bryan AFB in Bryan, Texas, where he was joined by his wife, Betty, and son, Scott. The Grissoms' second child, Mark, was born there in 1953. Grissom soon learned that flight instructors faced their own set of on-the-job risks. During a training exercise with a cadet, the trainee pilot caused a flap to break off from their two-seat trainer, sending it into a roll. Grissom quickly climbed from the rear seat of the small aircraft to take over the controls and safely land it.[16]

In August 1955, Grissom was reassigned to the U.S. Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT) at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio of Air University. After completing the year-long course he earned a bachelor's degree in aeromechanics in 1956.[17] In October 1956, he entered the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base in California, and returned to Wright-Patterson AFB in Ohio in May 1957, after attaining the rank of captain. Grissom served as a test pilot assigned to the fighter branch.[18][19][20]

NASA career edit

 
Grissom (far left) with fellow Project Mercury astronauts and a model of the Atlas rocket, July 12, 1962

In 1959, Grissom received an official teletype message instructing him to report to an address in Washington, D.C., wearing civilian clothes. The message was classified "Top Secret" and Grissom was ordered not to discuss its contents with anyone. Of the 508 military candidates who were considered, he was one of 110 test pilots whose credentials had earned them an invitation to learn more about the U.S. space program in general and its Project Mercury. Grissom was intrigued by the program, but knew that competition for the final spots would be fierce.[21][22]

Grissom passed the initial screening in Washington, D.C., and was among the thirty-nine candidates sent to the Lovelace Clinic in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and the Aeromedical Laboratory of the Wright Air Development Center in Dayton, Ohio, to undergo extensive physical and psychological testing. He was nearly disqualified when doctors discovered that he suffered from hay fever, but was permitted to continue after he argued that his allergies would not be a problem due to the absence of ragweed pollen in space.[23]

On April 13, 1959, Grissom received official notification that he had been selected as one of the seven Project Mercury astronauts. Grissom and the six other men, after taking a leave of absence from their respective branches of the military service, reported to the Special Task Group at Langley Air Force Base in Virginia on April 27, 1959, to begin their astronaut training.[24][25][26]

Project Mercury edit

 
Grissom in front of the Liberty Bell 7 spacecraft

On July 21, 1961, Grissom was pilot of the second Project Mercury flight, Mercury-Redstone 4. Grissom's spacecraft, which he named Liberty Bell 7, was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, a sub-orbital flight that lasted 15 minutes and 37 seconds.[19][22] After splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean, the Liberty Bell 7's emergency explosive bolts unexpectedly fired, blowing off the hatch and causing water to flood into the spacecraft. Grissom quickly exited through the open hatch and into the ocean. While waiting for recovery helicopters from USS Randolph to pick him up, Grissom struggled to keep from drowning after his spacesuit began losing buoyancy due to an open air inlet. Grissom managed to stay afloat until he was pulled from the water by a helicopter and taken to the U.S. Navy ship. In the meantime another recovery helicopter tried to lift and retrieve the Liberty Bell 7, but the flooding spacecraft became too heavy, forcing the recovery crew to cut it loose, and it ultimately sank.[22]

 
Liberty Bell 7, recovered in 1999, was restored and is displayed at the Cosmosphere in Hutchinson, Kansas

When reporters at a news conference surrounded Grissom after his space flight to ask how he felt, Grissom replied, "Well, I was scared a good portion of the time; I guess that's a pretty good indication."[27] Grissom stated he had done nothing to cause the hatch to blow, and no definitive explanation for the incident was found.[22][28] Robert F. Thompson, director of Mercury operations, was dispatched to USS Randolph by Space Task Group Director Robert Gilruth and spoke with Grissom upon his arrival on the aircraft carrier. Grissom explained that he had gotten ahead in the mission timeline and had removed the detonator cap, and also pulled the safety pin. Once the pin was removed, the trigger was no longer held in place and could have inadvertently fired as a result of ocean wave action, bobbing as a result of helicopter rotor wash, or other activity. NASA officials concluded Grissom had not necessarily initiated the firing of the explosive hatch, which would have required pressing a plunger that required five pounds of force to depress.[29] Hitting this metal trigger with the hand typically left a large bruise,[30] but Grissom was found not to have any of the telltale hand bruising.[22]

While the debate continued about the premature detonation of Liberty Bell 7's hatch bolts, precautions were initiated for subsequent flights. Fellow Mercury astronaut Wally Schirra, at the end of his October 3, 1962, flight, remained inside his spacecraft until it was safely aboard the recovery ship, and made a point of deliberately blowing the hatch to get out of the spacecraft, bruising his hand.[22][31]

Grissom's spacecraft was recovered in 1999, but no evidence was found that could conclusively explain how the explosive hatch release had occurred. Later, Guenter Wendt, pad leader for the early American crewed space launches, wrote that he believed a small cover over the external release actuator was accidentally lost sometime during the flight or splashdown. Another possible explanation was that the hatch's T-handle may have been tugged by a stray parachute suspension line, or was perhaps damaged by the heat of re-entry, and after cooling upon splashdown it contracted and caught fire.[25][32] It has also been suggested that a static electricity discharge during initial contact between the spacecraft and the rescue helicopter may have caused the hatch's explosive bolts to blow. The co-pilot of the helicopter, U.S. Marine Corps Lieutenant John Reinhard, had the job of using a cutting pole to snip off an antenna before the helicopter could latch onto the capsule. In the 1990s, he told a researcher that he remembered seeing an electric arc jump between the capsule and his pole right before the hatch blew.[33] Jim Lewis, the pilot of Grissom's rescue helicopter, told Smithsonian Magazine that closer inspection of film footage made him remember the day in better detail. He recalled that "Reinhard must have cut the antenna a mere second or two before I got us in a position for him to attach our harness to the capsule lifting bale," indicating that the timing of the helicopter's approach aligned with the static discharge theory.[34]

Project Gemini edit

In early 1964, Alan Shepard was grounded after being diagnosed with Ménière's disease and Grissom was designated command pilot for Gemini 3, the first crewed Project Gemini flight, which flew on March 23, 1965.[22] This mission made Grissom the first human and thus first NASA astronaut to fly into space twice.[35] The two-man flight on Gemini 3 with Grissom and John W. Young made three revolutions of the Earth and lasted for 4 hours, 52 minutes and 31 seconds.[36] Grissom was one of the eight pilots of the NASA paraglider research vehicle (Paresev).[37]

Grissom, the shortest of the original seven astronauts at five feet seven inches tall, worked very closely with the engineers and technicians from McDonnell Aircraft who built the Gemini spacecraft. Because of his involvement in the design of the first three spacecraft, his fellow astronauts humorously referred to the craft as "the Gusmobile". By July 1963 NASA discovered 14 out of its 16 astronauts could not fit themselves into the cabin and the later cockpits were modified.[38][39] During this time Grissom invented the multi-axis translation thruster controller used to push the Gemini and Apollo spacecraft in linear directions for rendezvous and docking.[40]

In a joking nod to the sinking of his Mercury craft, Grissom named the first Gemini spacecraft Molly Brown (after the popular Broadway show, The Unsinkable Molly Brown).[22] Some NASA publicity officials were unhappy with this name and asked Grissom and his pilot, John Young, to come up with a new one. When they offered Titanic as an alternate,[22] NASA executives decided to allow them to use the name of Molly Brown for Gemini 3, but did not use it in official references. Much to the agency's chagrin, CAPCOM Gordon Cooper gave Gemini 3 its sendoff on launch with the remark to Grissom and Young, "You're on your way, Molly Brown!" Ground controllers also used it to refer to the spacecraft throughout its flight.[41]

After the safe return of Gemini 3, NASA announced new spacecraft would not be nicknamed. Hence, Gemini 4 was not called American Eagle as its crew had planned. The practice of nicknaming spacecraft resumed in 1967, when managers realized that the Apollo flights needed a name for each of two flight elements, the Command Module (CSM) and the Lunar Module. Lobbying by the astronauts and senior NASA administrators also had an effect. Apollo 9 used the name Gumdrop for the Command Module and Spider for the Lunar Module.[42] However, Wally Schirra was prevented from naming his Apollo 7 spacecraft Phoenix in honor of the Apollo 1 crew because some believed that its nickname as a metaphor for "fire" might be misunderstood.[43]

Apollo program edit

Grissom was backup command pilot for Gemini 6A when he was transferred to the Apollo program and was assigned as commander of the first crewed mission, AS-204, with Senior Pilot Ed White, who had flown in space on the Gemini 4 mission, when he became the first American to make a spacewalk, and Pilot Roger B. Chaffee.[22] The three men were granted permission to refer to their flight as "Apollo 1" on their mission insignia patch.

Problems with the simulator proved extremely annoying to Grissom, who told a reporter the problems with Apollo 1 came "in bushelfuls" and that he was skeptical of its chances to complete its fourteen-day mission.[44] Grissom earned the nickname "Gruff Gus" by being outspoken about the technical deficiencies of the spacecraft.[45] The engineers who programmed the Apollo training simulator had a difficult time keeping the simulator in sync with the continuous changes being made to the spacecraft. According to backup astronaut Walter Cunningham, "We knew that the spacecraft was, you know, in poor shape relative to what it ought to be. We felt like we could fly it, but let's face it, it just wasn't as good as it should have been for the job of flying the first crewed Apollo mission."[22]

NASA pressed on. In mid-January 1967, "preparations were being made for the final pre-flight tests of Spacecraft 012."[22] On January 22, 1967, before returning to Cape Kennedy to conduct the January 27 plugs-out test that ended his life, Grissom's wife, Betty, later recalled that he took a lemon from a tree in his back yard and explained that he intended to hang it on that spacecraft, although he actually hung the lemon on the simulator (a duplicate of the Apollo spacecraft).[46][47]

Personal life edit

Grissom met Betty Lavonne Moore (1927–2018), in high school.[48] They were married on July 6, 1945, at First Baptist Church in Mitchell when he was home on leave during World War II. The couple had two sons, Scott (1950), and Mark (1953).[49][50]

Two of Grissom's pastimes were hunting and fishing. The family also enjoyed water sports and skiing.[51]

Death edit

 
Charred remains of the Apollo 1 Command Module, in which Grissom was killed along with Roger B. Chaffee and Ed White

Before Apollo 1's planned launch on February 21, 1967, the Command Module interior caught fire and burned on January 27, 1967, during a pre-launch test on Launch Pad 34 at Cape Kennedy. Astronauts Grissom, White, and Chaffee, who were working inside the closed Command Module, were asphyxiated. Awaiting launch, Grissom said, "How are we going to get to the Moon if we can't talk between two or three buildings," then shouted "fire!"[52] The fire's ignition source was damaged wiring.[53] The pilots' deaths were attributed to lethal hazards in the early CSM design and conditions of the test, including a pressurized 100 percent oxygen prelaunch atmosphere, wiring and plumbing flaws, flammable materials used in the cockpit and in the astronauts' flight suits, and an inward-opening hatch that could not be opened quickly in an emergency and not at all with full internal pressure.[54]

 
Apollo 1 crew, Grissom, White, and Chaffee

Grissom's funeral services and burial at Arlington National Cemetery were held on January 31, 1967. Dignitaries in attendance included President Lyndon B. Johnson, members of the U.S. Congress, and fellow NASA astronauts, among others. Grissom was interred at Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington County, Virginia,[55] beside Roger Chaffee.[56] White's remains are interred at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York.[57]

 
Grissom's and Roger Chaffee's headstones during the NASA Day of Remembrance ceremony in 2013

Legacy edit

After the accident, NASA decided to give the flight the official designation of Apollo 1 and skip to Apollo 4 for the first uncrewed flight of the Saturn V, counting the two uncrewed suborbital tests, AS-201 and 202, as part of the sequence. The Apollo spacecraft problems were corrected, with Apollo 7, commanded by Wally Schirra, launched on October 11, 1968, more than a year after the Apollo 1 accident. The Apollo program reached its objective of successfully landing men on the Moon on July 20, 1969, with Apollo 11.[58][59]

At the time of his death, Grissom had attained the rank of lieutenant colonel and had logged a total of 4,600 hours flying time, including 3,500 hours in jet airplanes.[19] Some contend that Grissom could have been selected as one of the astronauts to walk on the Moon. Deke Slayton wrote that he had hoped for one of the original Mercury astronauts to go to the Moon, noting: "It wasn't just a cut-and-dried decision as to who should make the first steps on the Moon. If I had to select on that basis, my first choice would have been Gus, which both Chris Kraft and Bob Gilruth seconded."[60] Ultimately, Alan Shepard, one of the original seven NASA astronauts, would receive the honor of commanding the Apollo 14 lunar landing.[61]

Liberty Bell 7 spacesuit controversy edit

 
Grissom's Project Mercury spacesuit on display at the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame

When the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame opened in 1990, his family lent it the spacesuit worn by Grissom during Mercury 4 along with other personal artifacts belonging to the astronaut. In 2002, the museum went into bankruptcy and was taken over by a NASA contractor, whereupon the family sought the exhibit's return.[62] All the artifacts were returned to them except the spacesuit, which NASA claimed was government property.[63] NASA insisted Grissom got authorization to use the spacesuit for a show and tell at his son's school in 1965 and never returned it, but some of Grissom family members claimed the astronaut rescued the spacesuit from a scrap heap.[64] As of December 2016, the space suit was part of the Kennedy Space Center Hall of Fame's Heroes and Legends exhibit.[65]

Awards and honors edit

 
Grissom in his Mercury spacesuit
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   

To celebrate his spaceflight in 1961, Grissom was made honorary Mayor of Newport News, Virginia, and a new library was dubbed the Virgil I. Grissom Library in the Denbigh section of Newport News, Virginia.[68]

The airport in Bedford, Indiana, where Grissom flew as a teenager was renamed Virgil I. Grissom Municipal Airport in 1965. A three-ton piece of limestone, inscribed with his name, was unveiled at the airport. His fellow astronauts ribbed him about the name, saying that airports were normally named for dead aviators. Grissom replied, "But this time they've named one for a live one."[69] Virgil Grissom Elementary School in Old Bridge, New Jersey, was named for Grissom the year before his death.[70] His death forced the cancellation of a student project to design a flag to represent Grissom and their school, which would have flown on the mission.[71]

Grissom was awarded the NASA Distinguished Service Medal for his Mercury flight and was awarded it a second time for his role in Gemini 3.[72] The Apollo 1 crew was awarded the medal posthumously in a 1969 presentation of the Presidential Medal of Freedom to the Apollo 11 crew.[73]

Grissom's family received the Congressional Space Medal of Honor in 1978 from President Carter (White's and Chaffee's families received it in 1997).[74]

Grissom was granted an honorary doctorate from Florida Institute of Technology in 1962, the first-ever awarded by the university.[75] Grissom was inducted into the International Space Hall of Fame in 1981,[76][77] and the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1987.[78] Grissom was posthumously inducted into the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame in 1990.[79][80] His wife, Betty Lavonne Moore, donated his Congressional Space Medal of Honor to the accompanying museum.[81]

Grissom posthumously received AIAA's Haley Astronautics Award for 1968.[82]

Memorials edit

If we die, we want people to accept it. We are in a risky business and we hope that if anything happens to us it will not delay the program. The conquest of space is worth the risk of life.

—Grissom, after his Gemini mission, March 1965[83][a]

 
Grissom's name with Roger Chaffee's and Ed White's on the Space Mirror Memorial
 
One of two Apollo 1 memorial plaques at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Launch Complex 34
 
Launch Complex 34 plaque

The dismantled Launch Pad 34 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station bears two memorial plaques to the crew of Apollo 1.[84] The Kennedy Space Center features a memorial exhibit honoring the Apollo 1 crew in the Apollo/Saturn V Center, which includes artifacts and personal mementos of Grissom, Chaffee, and White. Grissom's name is included on the plaque left on the Moon with the Fallen Astronaut statue in 1971 by the crew of Apollo 15.[85]

The Grissom Memorial, a 44-foot (13 m) tall limestone monument representing the Redstone rocket and his Mercury space capsule was dedicated in downtown Mitchell, Indiana, in 1981.[86] The Virgil I. Grissom Memorial in Spring Mill State Park, near Grissom's hometown of Mitchell, Indiana, was dedicated in 1971, the tenth anniversary of his Mercury flight.[86][87] The governor declared it a state holiday for the second year in a row.[88] The Gus Grissom Stakes is a thoroughbred horse race run in Indiana each fall; originally held at Hoosier Park in Anderson, it was moved to Horseshoe Indianapolis in Shelbyville in 2014.[66]

Grissom Island is an artificial island off of Long Beach, California, created in 1966 for drilling oil (along with White, Chaffee and Freeman Islands).[89][90][91] Virgil "Gus" Grissom Park opened in 1971 in Fullerton, California. His widow and son were invited to the dedication ceremony and planted the first large tree in the park.[92] Grissom is named with his Apollo 1 crewmates on the Space Mirror Memorial, which was dedicated in 1991. His son, Gary Grissom, said, "When I was younger, I thought NASA would do something. It's a shame it has taken this long".[93][94]

Navi (Ivan spelled backwards), is a seldom-used nickname for the star Gamma Cassiopeiae. Grissom used this name, plus two others for White and Chaffee, on his Apollo 1 mission planning star charts as a joke, and the succeeding Apollo astronauts kept using the names as a memorial.[95][96] Grissom crater is one of several located on the far side of the Moon named for Apollo astronauts. The name was created and used unofficially by the Apollo 8 astronauts and was adopted as the official name by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) in 1970.[97][98] 2161 Grissom is a main belt asteroid that was discovered in 1963 and officially designated in 1981.[99] The name references his launch date of July 21, 1961.[100] Grissom Hill, one of the Apollo 1 Hills on Mars was named by NASA on January 27, 2004, the 37th anniversary of the Apollo 1 fire.[101][102]

Bunker Hill Air Force Base in Peru, Indiana, was renamed on May 12, 1968, to Grissom Air Force Base. During the dedication ceremony, his son said, "Of all the honors he won, none would please him more than this one today."[103] In 1994, it was again renamed to Grissom Air Reserve Base following the USAF's realignment program.[104] The three-letter identifier of the VHF Omni Directional Radio Range (VOR) located at Grissom Air Reserve Base is GUS. In 2000, classes of the United States Air Force Academy began selecting a Class Exemplar who embodies the type of person they strive to be. The class of 2007 selected Grissom.[105] An academic building was renamed Grissom Hall in 1968 at the former Chanute Air Force Base, Rantoul, Illinois, where Minuteman missile maintenance training was conducted. It was one of five buildings renamed for deceased Air Force personnel.[106][107]

The Virgil I. Grissom Museum, dedicated in 1971 by Governor Edgar Whitcomb,[108] is located just inside the entrance to Spring Mill State Park in Mitchell, Indiana.[109] The Molly Brown was transferred to be displayed in the museum in 1974.[110] His boyhood home in Mitchell, Indiana, is located on Grissom Avenue. The street was renamed in his honor after his Mercury flight.[111][112]

Schools edit

Florida Institute of Technology dedicated Grissom Hall, a residence hall, in 1967.[113] State University of New York at Fredonia dubbed their new residence hall Grissom Hall in 1967.[114] Grissom Hall, dedicated in 1968 at Purdue University, was the home of the School of Aeronautics and Astronautics for several decades. It is currently home of the Purdue department of Industrial Engineering.[115][116]

Virgil I. Grissom Elementary School was built in Houston, Texas, in 1967.[117] Virgil Grissom Elementary School in Princeton, Iowa was one of four schools in Iowa named after astronauts in late 1967.[118][119] Grissom's family members attended the 1968 dedication of Virgil I. Grissom Middle School in Mishawaka, Indiana.[120] School No. 7 in Rochester, New York, was named for Grissom in April 1968.[121] Devault Elementary School in Gary, Indiana, was renamed Grissom Elementary School in 1969 after Devault was convicted of conspiring to forge purchase orders.[122] Virgil I. Grissom Middle School was dedicated in November 1969 in Sterling Heights, Michigan.[123] Virgil I. Grissom High School was built in 1969 in Huntsville, Alabama.[124] The school board in the Hegewisch community of Chicago, Illinois, voted to name their new school under construction Virgil I. Grissom Elementary School in March 1969.[125] Grissom Elementary School in Tulsa, Oklahoma, was founded in 1969[126][127] and dedicated by Betty Grissom in 1970.[128] Grissom Memorial Elementary School was dedicated in 1973 in Muncie, Indiana.[129] Virgil I. Grissom Middle School was founded in Tinley Park, Illinois, in 1975.[130]

Virgil I. "Gus" Grissom Elementary School was operated by the Department of Defense Dependents Schools at the former Clark Air Base, Philippines.[131] Originally named the Wurtsmith Hill School, it was renamed on November 14, 1968.[132] It housed 3rd and 4th grade students. The school was severely damaged by the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in 1991.[133]

  • Virgil I. Grissom Junior High School 226, South Ozone Park, Queens, New York City[134]

Film and television edit

Grissom has been noted and remembered in many film and television productions. Before he became widely known as an astronaut, the film Air Cadet (1951) starring Richard Long and Rock Hudson briefly featured Grissom early in the movie as a U.S. Air Force candidate for flight school at Randolph Field, San Antonio, Texas.[135] Grissom was depicted by Fred Ward in the film The Right Stuff (1983)[136] and (very briefly) in the film Apollo 13 (1995) by Steve Bernie.[137]: 43  He was portrayed in the 1998 HBO miniseries From the Earth to the Moon (1998) by Mark Rolston.[138] Actor Kevin McCorkle played Grissom in the third-season finale of the NBC television show American Dreams.[139] Bryan Cranston played Grissom as a variety-show guest in the film That Thing You Do![140][141] Actor Joel Johnstone portrays Gus Grissom in the 2015 ABC TV series The Astronaut Wives Club.[142] In 2016 Gus Grissom was included in the narrative of the movie Hidden Figures. In 2018, he was portrayed by Shea Whigham in First Man.[143] In 2020's Disney+ miniseries The Right Stuff, Grissom is portrayed by Michael Trotter.

In the 1984 film Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, the Federation starship USS Grissom is named for Grissom.[144] Another USS Grissom was featured in a 1990 episode of the TV series Star Trek: The Next Generation,[145] and was mentioned in a 1999 episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.[146] The character Gil Grissom in the CBS television series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and the character Virgil Tracy in the British television series Thunderbirds are also named after the astronaut.[147][148] NASA footage, including Grissom's Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo missions, was released in high definition on the Discovery Channel in June 2008 in the television series When We Left Earth: The NASA Missions.[25]

When Grissom died, he was in the process of writing a book about Gemini.[149]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The provenance of this quote is uncertain. See Leopold 2016, pp. 209–214.
  1. ^ a b c d Burgess, Doolan & Vis 2008, p. 88.
  2. ^ Boomhower 2004, pp. 39–40.
  3. ^ . Boy Scouts of America. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved June 25, 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d Burgess, Doolan & Vis 2008, p. 89.
  5. ^ Boomhower 2004, pp. 42–43.
  6. ^ Boomhower 2004, p. 47.
  7. ^ MacKeen, Jason (May 24, 2022). "Famous Freemason - Virgil Grissom". Fellowship Lodge. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
  8. ^ "Famous Freemasons in History | Freemason Information". February 20, 2009. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
  9. ^ Boomhower 2004, pp. 48–49.
  10. ^ Boomhower 2004, pp. 50–53.
  11. ^ Boomhower 2004, pp. 55–57.
  12. ^ Boomhower 2004, pp. 57–60.
  13. ^ Boomhower 2004, p. 63.
  14. ^ Boomhower 2004, pp. 63–68.
  15. ^ Burgess 2014, p. 59.
  16. ^ Boomhower 2004, pp. 68–69.
  17. ^ Boomhower 2004, p. 71.
  18. ^ . U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on October 8, 2007. Retrieved January 23, 2008.
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References edit

  • Boomhower, Ray E. (2004). Gus Grissom: The Lost Astronaut. Indiana Biography Series. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. ISBN 0-87195-176-2.
  • Burgess, Colin; Doolan, Kate; Vis, Bert (2008). Fallen Astronauts: Heroes Who Died Reaching the Moon. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska. ISBN 978-0-8032-1332-6.
  • Burgess, Colin (2014). Liberty Bell 7: the suborbital Mercury flight of Virgil I. Grissom. Cham: Springer-Praxis books in space exploration. ISBN 978-3-319-04390-6. OCLC 868042180.
  • Burgess, Colin (2015). Aurora 7: The Mercury Space Flight of M. Scott Carpenter. Springer Praxis Books. ISBN 978-3-319-20438-3.
  • Collins, Michael (2001). Carrying the Fire: an Astronaut's Journey. Rowman and Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8154-1028-7.
  • French, Francis; Burgess, Colin (2007). Into That Silent Sea: Trailblazers of the Space Era, 1961–1965. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-1146-9.
  • Leopold, George (2016). Calculated Risk: The Supersonic Life and Times of Gus Grissom. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. ISBN 978-1-55753-745-4.
  • Shayler, David (2001). Gemini: Steps to the Moon. Chichester, United Kingdom: Praxis Publishing. ISBN 1-85233-405-3.
  • Slayton, Donald K.; Cassutt, Michael (1994). Deke!: U.S. Manned Space from Mercury to the Shuttle. New York City: Forge: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-85503-6. LCCN 94-2463. OCLC 29845663.
  • Taylor, Robert M. Jr.; Stevens, Errol Wayne; Ponder, Mary Ann; Brockman, Paul (1989). Indiana: A New Historical Guide. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. ISBN 0-87195-048-0.
  • Vito, John De; Tropea, Frank (2010). Epic Television Miniseries: A Critical History. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland and Company. ISBN 978-0-7864-4149-5.

Further reading edit

  • Bredeson, Carmen (1998). Gus Grissom: A Space Biography. Countdown to Space. Springfield, NJ: Enslow Publishers. ISBN 0-89490-974-6. LCCN 97-21343. (For children.)
  • Greenberger, Robert (2004). Gus Grissom: The Tragedy of Apollo 1. The Library of Astronaut Biographies. New York: The Rosen Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8239-4458-1. LCCN 2003011980. (For children.)
  • Grissom, Virgil I. (1968). Gemini: A Personal Account of Man's Venture into Space. New York: MacMillan Publishing Company. ISBN 0-02-545800-0. OCLC 442293.

External links edit

  • Letter from Grissom thanking students for naming their school after him
  • Beddingfield, Sam. . SpySpace. Archived from the original on March 28, 2013. Retrieved December 19, 2007.
  • Grissom's Gemini G3-C Pressure Suit, National Air and Space Museum
  • Grissom's Liberty Bell 7 Pressure Suit June 18, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, National Air and Space Museum
  • "Gus Grissom Collection, 1960–1967, N.D.", at the Indiana Historical Society, Indianapolis
  • "Gus Grissom Liberty Bell 7 Flight" July 30, 2018, at the Wayback Machine (video), Sen Corporation, Ltd.
  • IHS Staff. "Virgil "Gus" Grissom" (PDF). Indiana Historical Society. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved July 30, 2018.
  • Virgil (Gus) I. Grissom collection June 18, 2019, at the Wayback Machine at the Smithsonian, National Air and Space Museum, Washington, D.C.

grissom, virgil, ivan, grissom, april, 1926, january, 1967, american, engineer, pilot, united, states, force, well, original, seven, mercury, seven, selected, national, aeronautics, space, administration, project, mercury, program, train, launch, astronauts, i. Virgil Ivan Gus Grissom April 3 1926 January 27 1967 was an American engineer and pilot in the United States Air Force as well as one of the original seven men the Mercury Seven selected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for Project Mercury a program to train and launch astronauts into outer space Grissom was also a Project Gemini and Apollo program astronaut for NASA As a member of the NASA Astronaut Corps Grissom was the second American to fly in space in 1961 He was also the second American to fly in space twice preceded only by Joe Walker with his sub orbital X 15 flights Gus GrissomGrissom in 1964BornVirgil Ivan Grissom 1926 04 03 April 3 1926Mitchell Indiana U S DiedJanuary 27 1967 1967 01 27 aged 40 Cape Canaveral Florida U S Resting placeArlington National CemeteryEducationPurdue University BS Air University BS AwardsDistinguished Flying Cross Congressional Space Medal of Honor NASA Distinguished Service MedalSpace careerNASA astronautRankLieutenant Colonel USAFTime in space5h 7mSelectionNASA Group 1 1959 MissionsMercury Redstone 4 Gemini 3 Apollo 1Mission insigniaGrissom was a World War II and Korean War veteran mechanical engineer and USAF test pilot He was a recipient of the Distinguished Flying Cross the Air Medal with an oak leaf cluster two NASA Distinguished Service Medals and posthumously the Congressional Space Medal of Honor As commander of AS 204 Apollo 1 Grissom died with astronauts Ed White and Roger B Chaffee on January 27 1967 during a pre launch test for the Apollo 1 mission at Cape Kennedy Florida Contents 1 Early life 2 World War II 3 Post war employment 4 Korean War 5 NASA career 5 1 Project Mercury 5 2 Project Gemini 5 3 Apollo program 6 Personal life 7 Death 8 Legacy 9 Liberty Bell 7 spacesuit controversy 10 Awards and honors 11 Memorials 11 1 Schools 12 Film and television 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life editVirgil Ivan Grissom was born in the small town of Mitchell Indiana on April 3 1926 1 to Dennis David Grissom 1903 1994 a signalman for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and Cecile King Grissom 1901 1995 a homemaker Virgil was the family s second child an older sister died in infancy shortly before his birth He was followed by three younger siblings a sister Wilma and two brothers Norman and Lowell 2 Grissom started school at Riley grade school His interest in flying began during that time building model airplanes 1 He received his nickname when his friend was reading his name on a scorecard upside down and misread Griss as Gus 1 As a youth Grissom attended the local Church of Christ where he remained a lifelong member He joined the local Boy Scout Troop and earned the rank of Star Scout 3 Grissom credited the Scouts for his love of hunting and fishing He was the leader of the honor guard in his troop 4 His first jobs were delivering newspapers for The Indianapolis Star in the morning and the Bedford Times in the evening 1 In the summer he picked fruit in area orchards and worked at a dry goods store 4 He also worked at a local meat market a service station and a clothing store in Mitchell Grissom started attending Mitchell High School in 1940 4 He wanted to play varsity basketball but he was too short His father encouraged him to find sports he was more suited for and he joined the swimming team 4 Although he excelled at mathematics Grissom was an average high school student in other subjects 5 He graduated from high school in 1944 In addition Grissom occasionally spent time at a local airport in Bedford Indiana where he first became interested in aviation A local attorney who owned a small plane would take him on flights and taught him the basics of flying 6 Grissom was a Freemason 7 8 World War II editWorld War II began while Grissom was still in high school but he was eager to join the armed services upon graduation Grissom enlisted as an aviation cadet in the U S Army Air Forces during his senior year in high school and completed an entrance exam in November 1943 Grissom was inducted into the U S Army Air Forces on August 8 1944 at Fort Benjamin Harrison Indiana He was sent to Sheppard Field in Wichita Falls Texas for five weeks of basic flight training and was later stationed at Brooks Field in San Antonio Texas In January 1945 Grissom was assigned to Boca Raton Army Airfield in Florida Although he was interested in becoming a pilot most of Grissom s time before his discharge in 1945 was spent as a clerk 9 Post war employment editGrissom was discharged from military service in November 1945 after the war had ended and returned to Mitchell where he took a job at Carpenter Body Works a local bus manufacturing business Grissom was determined to make his career in aviation and attend college Using the G I Bill for partial payment of his school tuition Grissom enrolled at Purdue University in September 1946 10 Due to a shortage of campus housing during her husband s first semester in college in West Lafayette Indiana Grissom s wife Betty stayed in Mitchell living with her parents while Grissom lived in a rented apartment with another male student Betty Grissom joined her husband on campus during his second semester and the couple settled into a small one bedroom apartment Grissom continued his studies at Purdue worked part time as a cook at a local restaurant and took summer classes to finish college early while his wife worked the night shift as a long distance operator for the Indiana Bell Telephone Company to help pay for his schooling and their living expenses Grissom graduated from Purdue with a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering in February 1950 11 Korean War edit nbsp Grissom in the United States Air ForceAfter he graduated from Purdue Grissom re enlisted in the newly formed U S Air Force He was accepted into the Air Cadet Basic Training Program at Randolph Air Force Base in Universal City Texas Upon completion of the program he was assigned to Williams Air Force Base in Mesa Arizona where his wife Betty and infant son Scott joined him but the family remained there only briefly In March 1951 Grissom received his pilot wings and a commission as a second lieutenant Nine months later in December 1951 Grissom and his family moved into new living quarters in Presque Isle Maine where he was assigned to Presque Isle Air Force Base and became a member of the 75th Fighter Interceptor Squadron 12 With the ongoing Korean War Grissom s squadron was dispatched to the war zone in February 1952 There he flew as an F 86 Sabre replacement pilot and was reassigned to the 334th Fighter Squadron of the 4th Fighter Interceptor Wing stationed at Kimpo Air Base 13 He flew one hundred combat missions during approximately six months of service in Korea including multiple occasions when he broke up air raids from North Korean MiGs On March 11 1952 Grissom was promoted to first lieutenant and was cited for his superlative airmanship for his actions on March 23 1952 when he flew cover for a photo reconnaissance mission 14 Grissom was also awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal with an oak leaf cluster for his military service in Korea 15 After flying his quota of one hundred missions Grissom asked to remain in Korea to fly another twenty five flights but his request was denied Grissom returned to the United States to serve as a flight instructor at Bryan AFB in Bryan Texas where he was joined by his wife Betty and son Scott The Grissoms second child Mark was born there in 1953 Grissom soon learned that flight instructors faced their own set of on the job risks During a training exercise with a cadet the trainee pilot caused a flap to break off from their two seat trainer sending it into a roll Grissom quickly climbed from the rear seat of the small aircraft to take over the controls and safely land it 16 In August 1955 Grissom was reassigned to the U S Air Force Institute of Technology AFIT at Wright Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton Ohio of Air University After completing the year long course he earned a bachelor s degree in aeromechanics in 1956 17 In October 1956 he entered the U S Air Force Test Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base in California and returned to Wright Patterson AFB in Ohio in May 1957 after attaining the rank of captain Grissom served as a test pilot assigned to the fighter branch 18 19 20 NASA career edit nbsp Grissom far left with fellow Project Mercury astronauts and a model of the Atlas rocket July 12 1962In 1959 Grissom received an official teletype message instructing him to report to an address in Washington D C wearing civilian clothes The message was classified Top Secret and Grissom was ordered not to discuss its contents with anyone Of the 508 military candidates who were considered he was one of 110 test pilots whose credentials had earned them an invitation to learn more about the U S space program in general and its Project Mercury Grissom was intrigued by the program but knew that competition for the final spots would be fierce 21 22 Grissom passed the initial screening in Washington D C and was among the thirty nine candidates sent to the Lovelace Clinic in Albuquerque New Mexico and the Aeromedical Laboratory of the Wright Air Development Center in Dayton Ohio to undergo extensive physical and psychological testing He was nearly disqualified when doctors discovered that he suffered from hay fever but was permitted to continue after he argued that his allergies would not be a problem due to the absence of ragweed pollen in space 23 On April 13 1959 Grissom received official notification that he had been selected as one of the seven Project Mercury astronauts Grissom and the six other men after taking a leave of absence from their respective branches of the military service reported to the Special Task Group at Langley Air Force Base in Virginia on April 27 1959 to begin their astronaut training 24 25 26 Project Mercury edit Main article Mercury Redstone 4 nbsp Grissom in front of the Liberty Bell 7 spacecraftOn July 21 1961 Grissom was pilot of the second Project Mercury flight Mercury Redstone 4 Grissom s spacecraft which he named Liberty Bell 7 was launched from Cape Canaveral Florida a sub orbital flight that lasted 15 minutes and 37 seconds 19 22 After splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean the Liberty Bell 7 s emergency explosive bolts unexpectedly fired blowing off the hatch and causing water to flood into the spacecraft Grissom quickly exited through the open hatch and into the ocean While waiting for recovery helicopters from USS Randolph to pick him up Grissom struggled to keep from drowning after his spacesuit began losing buoyancy due to an open air inlet Grissom managed to stay afloat until he was pulled from the water by a helicopter and taken to the U S Navy ship In the meantime another recovery helicopter tried to lift and retrieve the Liberty Bell 7 but the flooding spacecraft became too heavy forcing the recovery crew to cut it loose and it ultimately sank 22 nbsp Liberty Bell 7 recovered in 1999 was restored and is displayed at the Cosmosphere in Hutchinson KansasWhen reporters at a news conference surrounded Grissom after his space flight to ask how he felt Grissom replied Well I was scared a good portion of the time I guess that s a pretty good indication 27 Grissom stated he had done nothing to cause the hatch to blow and no definitive explanation for the incident was found 22 28 Robert F Thompson director of Mercury operations was dispatched to USS Randolph by Space Task Group Director Robert Gilruth and spoke with Grissom upon his arrival on the aircraft carrier Grissom explained that he had gotten ahead in the mission timeline and had removed the detonator cap and also pulled the safety pin Once the pin was removed the trigger was no longer held in place and could have inadvertently fired as a result of ocean wave action bobbing as a result of helicopter rotor wash or other activity NASA officials concluded Grissom had not necessarily initiated the firing of the explosive hatch which would have required pressing a plunger that required five pounds of force to depress 29 Hitting this metal trigger with the hand typically left a large bruise 30 but Grissom was found not to have any of the telltale hand bruising 22 While the debate continued about the premature detonation of Liberty Bell 7 s hatch bolts precautions were initiated for subsequent flights Fellow Mercury astronaut Wally Schirra at the end of his October 3 1962 flight remained inside his spacecraft until it was safely aboard the recovery ship and made a point of deliberately blowing the hatch to get out of the spacecraft bruising his hand 22 31 Grissom s spacecraft was recovered in 1999 but no evidence was found that could conclusively explain how the explosive hatch release had occurred Later Guenter Wendt pad leader for the early American crewed space launches wrote that he believed a small cover over the external release actuator was accidentally lost sometime during the flight or splashdown Another possible explanation was that the hatch s T handle may have been tugged by a stray parachute suspension line or was perhaps damaged by the heat of re entry and after cooling upon splashdown it contracted and caught fire 25 32 It has also been suggested that a static electricity discharge during initial contact between the spacecraft and the rescue helicopter may have caused the hatch s explosive bolts to blow The co pilot of the helicopter U S Marine Corps Lieutenant John Reinhard had the job of using a cutting pole to snip off an antenna before the helicopter could latch onto the capsule In the 1990s he told a researcher that he remembered seeing an electric arc jump between the capsule and his pole right before the hatch blew 33 Jim Lewis the pilot of Grissom s rescue helicopter told Smithsonian Magazine that closer inspection of film footage made him remember the day in better detail He recalled that Reinhard must have cut the antenna a mere second or two before I got us in a position for him to attach our harness to the capsule lifting bale indicating that the timing of the helicopter s approach aligned with the static discharge theory 34 Project Gemini edit Main article Gemini 3 In early 1964 Alan Shepard was grounded after being diagnosed with Meniere s disease and Grissom was designated command pilot for Gemini 3 the first crewed Project Gemini flight which flew on March 23 1965 22 This mission made Grissom the first human and thus first NASA astronaut to fly into space twice 35 The two man flight on Gemini 3 with Grissom and John W Young made three revolutions of the Earth and lasted for 4 hours 52 minutes and 31 seconds 36 Grissom was one of the eight pilots of the NASA paraglider research vehicle Paresev 37 Grissom the shortest of the original seven astronauts at five feet seven inches tall worked very closely with the engineers and technicians from McDonnell Aircraft who built the Gemini spacecraft Because of his involvement in the design of the first three spacecraft his fellow astronauts humorously referred to the craft as the Gusmobile By July 1963 NASA discovered 14 out of its 16 astronauts could not fit themselves into the cabin and the later cockpits were modified 38 39 During this time Grissom invented the multi axis translation thruster controller used to push the Gemini and Apollo spacecraft in linear directions for rendezvous and docking 40 In a joking nod to the sinking of his Mercury craft Grissom named the first Gemini spacecraft Molly Brown after the popular Broadway show The Unsinkable Molly Brown 22 Some NASA publicity officials were unhappy with this name and asked Grissom and his pilot John Young to come up with a new one When they offered Titanic as an alternate 22 NASA executives decided to allow them to use the name of Molly Brown for Gemini 3 but did not use it in official references Much to the agency s chagrin CAPCOM Gordon Cooper gave Gemini 3 its sendoff on launch with the remark to Grissom and Young You re on your way Molly Brown Ground controllers also used it to refer to the spacecraft throughout its flight 41 After the safe return of Gemini 3 NASA announced new spacecraft would not be nicknamed Hence Gemini 4 was not called American Eagle as its crew had planned The practice of nicknaming spacecraft resumed in 1967 when managers realized that the Apollo flights needed a name for each of two flight elements the Command Module CSM and the Lunar Module Lobbying by the astronauts and senior NASA administrators also had an effect Apollo 9 used the name Gumdrop for the Command Module and Spider for the Lunar Module 42 However Wally Schirra was prevented from naming his Apollo 7 spacecraft Phoenix in honor of the Apollo 1 crew because some believed that its nickname as a metaphor for fire might be misunderstood 43 Apollo program edit Grissom was backup command pilot for Gemini 6A when he was transferred to the Apollo program and was assigned as commander of the first crewed mission AS 204 with Senior Pilot Ed White who had flown in space on the Gemini 4 mission when he became the first American to make a spacewalk and Pilot Roger B Chaffee 22 The three men were granted permission to refer to their flight as Apollo 1 on their mission insignia patch Problems with the simulator proved extremely annoying to Grissom who told a reporter the problems with Apollo 1 came in bushelfuls and that he was skeptical of its chances to complete its fourteen day mission 44 Grissom earned the nickname Gruff Gus by being outspoken about the technical deficiencies of the spacecraft 45 The engineers who programmed the Apollo training simulator had a difficult time keeping the simulator in sync with the continuous changes being made to the spacecraft According to backup astronaut Walter Cunningham We knew that the spacecraft was you know in poor shape relative to what it ought to be We felt like we could fly it but let s face it it just wasn t as good as it should have been for the job of flying the first crewed Apollo mission 22 NASA pressed on In mid January 1967 preparations were being made for the final pre flight tests of Spacecraft 012 22 On January 22 1967 before returning to Cape Kennedy to conduct the January 27 plugs out test that ended his life Grissom s wife Betty later recalled that he took a lemon from a tree in his back yard and explained that he intended to hang it on that spacecraft although he actually hung the lemon on the simulator a duplicate of the Apollo spacecraft 46 47 Personal life editGrissom met Betty Lavonne Moore 1927 2018 in high school 48 They were married on July 6 1945 at First Baptist Church in Mitchell when he was home on leave during World War II The couple had two sons Scott 1950 and Mark 1953 49 50 Two of Grissom s pastimes were hunting and fishing The family also enjoyed water sports and skiing 51 Death editMain article Apollo 1 nbsp Charred remains of the Apollo 1 Command Module in which Grissom was killed along with Roger B Chaffee and Ed WhiteBefore Apollo 1 s planned launch on February 21 1967 the Command Module interior caught fire and burned on January 27 1967 during a pre launch test on Launch Pad 34 at Cape Kennedy Astronauts Grissom White and Chaffee who were working inside the closed Command Module were asphyxiated Awaiting launch Grissom said How are we going to get to the Moon if we can t talk between two or three buildings then shouted fire 52 The fire s ignition source was damaged wiring 53 The pilots deaths were attributed to lethal hazards in the early CSM design and conditions of the test including a pressurized 100 percent oxygen prelaunch atmosphere wiring and plumbing flaws flammable materials used in the cockpit and in the astronauts flight suits and an inward opening hatch that could not be opened quickly in an emergency and not at all with full internal pressure 54 nbsp Apollo 1 crew Grissom White and ChaffeeGrissom s funeral services and burial at Arlington National Cemetery were held on January 31 1967 Dignitaries in attendance included President Lyndon B Johnson members of the U S Congress and fellow NASA astronauts among others Grissom was interred at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County Virginia 55 beside Roger Chaffee 56 White s remains are interred at the U S Military Academy at West Point New York 57 nbsp Grissom s and Roger Chaffee s headstones during the NASA Day of Remembrance ceremony in 2013Legacy editAfter the accident NASA decided to give the flight the official designation of Apollo 1 and skip to Apollo 4 for the first uncrewed flight of the Saturn V counting the two uncrewed suborbital tests AS 201 and 202 as part of the sequence The Apollo spacecraft problems were corrected with Apollo 7 commanded by Wally Schirra launched on October 11 1968 more than a year after the Apollo 1 accident The Apollo program reached its objective of successfully landing men on the Moon on July 20 1969 with Apollo 11 58 59 At the time of his death Grissom had attained the rank of lieutenant colonel and had logged a total of 4 600 hours flying time including 3 500 hours in jet airplanes 19 Some contend that Grissom could have been selected as one of the astronauts to walk on the Moon Deke Slayton wrote that he had hoped for one of the original Mercury astronauts to go to the Moon noting It wasn t just a cut and dried decision as to who should make the first steps on the Moon If I had to select on that basis my first choice would have been Gus which both Chris Kraft and Bob Gilruth seconded 60 Ultimately Alan Shepard one of the original seven NASA astronauts would receive the honor of commanding the Apollo 14 lunar landing 61 Liberty Bell 7 spacesuit controversy edit nbsp Grissom s Project Mercury spacesuit on display at the U S Astronaut Hall of FameWhen the U S Astronaut Hall of Fame opened in 1990 his family lent it the spacesuit worn by Grissom during Mercury 4 along with other personal artifacts belonging to the astronaut In 2002 the museum went into bankruptcy and was taken over by a NASA contractor whereupon the family sought the exhibit s return 62 All the artifacts were returned to them except the spacesuit which NASA claimed was government property 63 NASA insisted Grissom got authorization to use the spacesuit for a show and tell at his son s school in 1965 and never returned it but some of Grissom family members claimed the astronaut rescued the spacesuit from a scrap heap 64 As of December 2016 update the space suit was part of the Kennedy Space Center Hall of Fame s Heroes and Legends exhibit 65 Awards and honors edit nbsp Grissom in his Mercury spacesuit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Air Force Command Pilot Astronaut Wings 19 Distinguished Flying Cross 66 Air Medal with cluster 66 Army Good Conduct Medal 66 Congressional Space Medal of Honor 66 NASA Distinguished Service Medal 22 with one star NASA Exceptional Service Medal 66 American Campaign Medal 66 World War II Victory Medal 66 National Defense Service Medalwith one star 66 Korean Service Medalwith two stars 66 Air Force Longevity Service Awardwith three bronze oak leaves United Nations Korea Medal 66 Korean War Service Medal 66 John J Montgomery Award 67 465 To celebrate his spaceflight in 1961 Grissom was made honorary Mayor of Newport News Virginia and a new library was dubbed the Virgil I Grissom Library in the Denbigh section of Newport News Virginia 68 The airport in Bedford Indiana where Grissom flew as a teenager was renamed Virgil I Grissom Municipal Airport in 1965 A three ton piece of limestone inscribed with his name was unveiled at the airport His fellow astronauts ribbed him about the name saying that airports were normally named for dead aviators Grissom replied But this time they ve named one for a live one 69 Virgil Grissom Elementary School in Old Bridge New Jersey was named for Grissom the year before his death 70 His death forced the cancellation of a student project to design a flag to represent Grissom and their school which would have flown on the mission 71 Grissom was awarded the NASA Distinguished Service Medal for his Mercury flight and was awarded it a second time for his role in Gemini 3 72 The Apollo 1 crew was awarded the medal posthumously in a 1969 presentation of the Presidential Medal of Freedom to the Apollo 11 crew 73 Grissom s family received the Congressional Space Medal of Honor in 1978 from President Carter White s and Chaffee s families received it in 1997 74 Grissom was granted an honorary doctorate from Florida Institute of Technology in 1962 the first ever awarded by the university 75 Grissom was inducted into the International Space Hall of Fame in 1981 76 77 and the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1987 78 Grissom was posthumously inducted into the U S Astronaut Hall of Fame in 1990 79 80 His wife Betty Lavonne Moore donated his Congressional Space Medal of Honor to the accompanying museum 81 Grissom posthumously received AIAA s Haley Astronautics Award for 1968 82 Memorials editIf we die we want people to accept it We are in a risky business and we hope that if anything happens to us it will not delay the program The conquest of space is worth the risk of life Grissom after his Gemini mission March 1965 83 a nbsp Grissom s name with Roger Chaffee s and Ed White s on the Space Mirror Memorial nbsp One of two Apollo 1 memorial plaques at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Launch Complex 34 nbsp Launch Complex 34 plaqueThe dismantled Launch Pad 34 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station bears two memorial plaques to the crew of Apollo 1 84 The Kennedy Space Center features a memorial exhibit honoring the Apollo 1 crew in the Apollo Saturn V Center which includes artifacts and personal mementos of Grissom Chaffee and White Grissom s name is included on the plaque left on the Moon with the Fallen Astronaut statue in 1971 by the crew of Apollo 15 85 The Grissom Memorial a 44 foot 13 m tall limestone monument representing the Redstone rocket and his Mercury space capsule was dedicated in downtown Mitchell Indiana in 1981 86 The Virgil I Grissom Memorial in Spring Mill State Park near Grissom s hometown of Mitchell Indiana was dedicated in 1971 the tenth anniversary of his Mercury flight 86 87 The governor declared it a state holiday for the second year in a row 88 The Gus Grissom Stakes is a thoroughbred horse race run in Indiana each fall originally held at Hoosier Park in Anderson it was moved to Horseshoe Indianapolis in Shelbyville in 2014 66 Grissom Island is an artificial island off of Long Beach California created in 1966 for drilling oil along with White Chaffee and Freeman Islands 89 90 91 Virgil Gus Grissom Park opened in 1971 in Fullerton California His widow and son were invited to the dedication ceremony and planted the first large tree in the park 92 Grissom is named with his Apollo 1 crewmates on the Space Mirror Memorial which was dedicated in 1991 His son Gary Grissom said When I was younger I thought NASA would do something It s a shame it has taken this long 93 94 Navi Ivan spelled backwards is a seldom used nickname for the star Gamma Cassiopeiae Grissom used this name plus two others for White and Chaffee on his Apollo 1 mission planning star charts as a joke and the succeeding Apollo astronauts kept using the names as a memorial 95 96 Grissom crater is one of several located on the far side of the Moon named for Apollo astronauts The name was created and used unofficially by the Apollo 8 astronauts and was adopted as the official name by the International Astronomical Union IAU in 1970 97 98 2161 Grissom is a main belt asteroid that was discovered in 1963 and officially designated in 1981 99 The name references his launch date of July 21 1961 100 Grissom Hill one of the Apollo 1 Hills on Mars was named by NASA on January 27 2004 the 37th anniversary of the Apollo 1 fire 101 102 Bunker Hill Air Force Base in Peru Indiana was renamed on May 12 1968 to Grissom Air Force Base During the dedication ceremony his son said Of all the honors he won none would please him more than this one today 103 In 1994 it was again renamed to Grissom Air Reserve Base following the USAF s realignment program 104 The three letter identifier of the VHF Omni Directional Radio Range VOR located at Grissom Air Reserve Base is GUS In 2000 classes of the United States Air Force Academy began selecting a Class Exemplar who embodies the type of person they strive to be The class of 2007 selected Grissom 105 An academic building was renamed Grissom Hall in 1968 at the former Chanute Air Force Base Rantoul Illinois where Minuteman missile maintenance training was conducted It was one of five buildings renamed for deceased Air Force personnel 106 107 The Virgil I Grissom Museum dedicated in 1971 by Governor Edgar Whitcomb 108 is located just inside the entrance to Spring Mill State Park in Mitchell Indiana 109 The Molly Brown was transferred to be displayed in the museum in 1974 110 His boyhood home in Mitchell Indiana is located on Grissom Avenue The street was renamed in his honor after his Mercury flight 111 112 Schools edit Florida Institute of Technology dedicated Grissom Hall a residence hall in 1967 113 State University of New York at Fredonia dubbed their new residence hall Grissom Hall in 1967 114 Grissom Hall dedicated in 1968 at Purdue University was the home of the School of Aeronautics and Astronautics for several decades It is currently home of the Purdue department of Industrial Engineering 115 116 Virgil I Grissom Elementary School was built in Houston Texas in 1967 117 Virgil Grissom Elementary School in Princeton Iowa was one of four schools in Iowa named after astronauts in late 1967 118 119 Grissom s family members attended the 1968 dedication of Virgil I Grissom Middle School in Mishawaka Indiana 120 School No 7 in Rochester New York was named for Grissom in April 1968 121 Devault Elementary School in Gary Indiana was renamed Grissom Elementary School in 1969 after Devault was convicted of conspiring to forge purchase orders 122 Virgil I Grissom Middle School was dedicated in November 1969 in Sterling Heights Michigan 123 Virgil I Grissom High School was built in 1969 in Huntsville Alabama 124 The school board in the Hegewisch community of Chicago Illinois voted to name their new school under construction Virgil I Grissom Elementary School in March 1969 125 Grissom Elementary School in Tulsa Oklahoma was founded in 1969 126 127 and dedicated by Betty Grissom in 1970 128 Grissom Memorial Elementary School was dedicated in 1973 in Muncie Indiana 129 Virgil I Grissom Middle School was founded in Tinley Park Illinois in 1975 130 Virgil I Gus Grissom Elementary School was operated by the Department of Defense Dependents Schools at the former Clark Air Base Philippines 131 Originally named the Wurtsmith Hill School it was renamed on November 14 1968 132 It housed 3rd and 4th grade students The school was severely damaged by the eruption of Mt Pinatubo in 1991 133 Virgil I Grissom Junior High School 226 South Ozone Park Queens New York City 134 Film and television editGrissom has been noted and remembered in many film and television productions Before he became widely known as an astronaut the film Air Cadet 1951 starring Richard Long and Rock Hudson briefly featured Grissom early in the movie as a U S Air Force candidate for flight school at Randolph Field San Antonio Texas 135 Grissom was depicted by Fred Ward in the film The Right Stuff 1983 136 and very briefly in the film Apollo 13 1995 by Steve Bernie 137 43 He was portrayed in the 1998 HBO miniseries From the Earth to the Moon 1998 by Mark Rolston 138 Actor Kevin McCorkle played Grissom in the third season finale of the NBC television show American Dreams 139 Bryan Cranston played Grissom as a variety show guest in the film That Thing You Do 140 141 Actor Joel Johnstone portrays Gus Grissom in the 2015 ABC TV series The Astronaut Wives Club 142 In 2016 Gus Grissom was included in the narrative of the movie Hidden Figures In 2018 he was portrayed by Shea Whigham in First Man 143 In 2020 s Disney miniseries The Right Stuff Grissom is portrayed by Michael Trotter In the 1984 film Star Trek III The Search for Spock the Federation starship USS Grissom is named for Grissom 144 Another USS Grissom was featured in a 1990 episode of the TV series Star Trek The Next Generation 145 and was mentioned in a 1999 episode of Star Trek Deep Space Nine 146 The character Gil Grissom in the CBS television series CSI Crime Scene Investigation and the character Virgil Tracy in the British television series Thunderbirds are also named after the astronaut 147 148 NASA footage including Grissom s Mercury Gemini and Apollo missions was released in high definition on the Discovery Channel in June 2008 in the television series When We Left Earth The NASA Missions 25 When Grissom died he was in the process of writing a book about Gemini 149 Notes edit The provenance of this quote is uncertain See Leopold 2016 pp 209 214 a b c d Burgess Doolan amp Vis 2008 p 88 Boomhower 2004 pp 39 40 Scouting and Space Exploration Boy Scouts of America Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved June 25 2014 a b c d Burgess Doolan amp Vis 2008 p 89 Boomhower 2004 pp 42 43 Boomhower 2004 p 47 MacKeen Jason May 24 2022 Famous Freemason Virgil Grissom Fellowship Lodge Retrieved March 14 2023 Famous Freemasons in History Freemason Information February 20 2009 Retrieved March 14 2023 Boomhower 2004 pp 48 49 Boomhower 2004 pp 50 53 Boomhower 2004 pp 55 57 Boomhower 2004 pp 57 60 Boomhower 2004 p 63 Boomhower 2004 pp 63 68 Burgess 2014 p 59 Boomhower 2004 pp 68 69 Boomhower 2004 p 71 Astronaut Biographies Virgil I Gus Grissom U S Astronaut Hall of Fame Archived from the original on October 8 2007 Retrieved January 23 2008 a b c d Astronaut Bio Virgil I Grissom PDF NASA December 1997 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved February 19 2021 Boomhower 2004 pp 72 74 Boomhower 2004 pp 88 91 a b c d e f g h i j k l m White Mary Detailed Biographies of Apollo I Crew Gus Grissom NASA History Program Office Retrieved February 21 2017 Boomhower 2004 pp 92 93 Boomhower 2004 p 117 a b c Discovery Channel When We Left Earth The NASA Missions Ordinary Supermen airdate June 8 2008 season 1 Zornio Mary C Virgil Ivan Gus Grissom NASA History Program Office Retrieved November 16 2014 U S in Space Year in Review UPI com Retrieved July 12 2015 Liberty Bell 7 Yields Clues to Its Sinking Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on March 27 2017 Retrieved January 29 2017 Berger Eric November 8 2016 Gus Grissom taught NASA a hard lesson You can hurt yourself in the ocean Ars Technica Retrieved March 26 2017 French amp Burgess 2007 p 93 Alexander C C Grimwood J M Swenson L S Jr 1966 Chapter 14 Climax of Project Mercury The Textbook Flight This New Ocean A History of Project Mercury NASA p 484 hdl 2060 19670005605 HTML copy Retrieved July 12 2015 Banke Jim June 17 2000 Gus Grissom didn t sink the Liberty Bell 7 Mercury capsule Space com Archived from the original on November 15 2010 Retrieved February 11 2023 Leopold George Saunders Andy July 21 2021 Did static electricity not Gus Grissom blow the hatch of the Liberty Bell 7 spacecraft Astronomy com Retrieved December 4 2022 Reichhardt Tony New Evidence Shows That Gus Grissom Did Not Accidentally Sink His Own Spacecraft 60 Years Ago Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved December 4 2022 The first person to reach space twice was Joseph A Walker a NASA test pilot who made two X 15 flights in 1963 which exceeded 100 kilometers 54 nmi altitude the internationally recognized definition of outer space Virgil Gus Grissom Honored Astronaut Memorial Foundation Archived from the original on July 6 2017 Retrieved May 4 2017 Photo Paresev Contact Sheet NASA Dryden Flight Research Center Retrieved November 28 2016 Boomhower 2004 p 100 Hacker Barton C James M Grimwood 1977 On the Shoulders of Titans A History of Project Gemini NASA History Series 4203 NASA Special Publications Archived from the original on November 30 2007 Retrieved January 23 2008 Agle D C September 1 1998 Flying the Gusmobile Air amp Space Smithsonian Institution Shayler 2001 p 186 Collins 2001 pp 138 139 Alternate Apollo 7 Astronaut s anniversary patch recalls Flight of the Phoenix collectSPACE Retrieved May 31 2017 Boomhower 2004 p 293 Burgess Doolan amp Vis 2008 p 82 Boomhower 2004 p 290 Brooks Grimwood Swenson 1979 Preparations for the First Manned Apollo Mission Chariots for Apollo Archived from the original on February 9 2008 Retrieved April 22 2016 Callahan Rick October 10 2018 Betty Grissom widow of astronaut Virgil Gus Grissom dies Associated Press Retrieved January 26 2019 Boomhower 2004 pp 59 68 In Memoriam Lt Col Virgil Ivan Gus Grissom USAF Archived from the original on July 23 2014 40th Anniversary of Mercury 7 Virgil Ivan Gus Grissom NASA Retrieved July 11 2018 File Apollo One Recording ogg Wikipedia commons wikimedia org January 27 1967 Retrieved December 23 2022 Sen Nina September 4 2012 What Happened to NASA s Apollo 1 Mission LiveScience Purch Retrieved February 11 2021 Findings Determinations And Recommendations Report of Apollo 204 Review Board NASA April 5 1967 Archived from the original on December 31 2016 Retrieved July 9 2008 No single ignition source of the fire was conclusively identified Grissom Virgil Ivan Section 3 Grave 2503 E ANC Explorer Arlington National Cemetery Official website Chaffee Roger B Section 3 Grave 2502 F ANC Explorer Arlington National Cemetery Official website Boomhower 2004 pp 315 317 The Apollo 1 Tragedy NASA Retrieved April 16 2017 Dunbar Brian January 9 2018 Apollo 7 NASA Retrieved July 9 2018 See also Apollo 11 Mission Summary The Apollo Program Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Archived from the original on August 29 2013 Retrieved July 9 2018 Slayton amp Cassutt 1994 p 223 Slayton amp Cassutt 1994 pp 235 237 Kelly John November 20 2002 Gus Grissom s Family NASA Fight Over Spacesuit Florida Today Archived from the original on May 21 2008 Retrieved May 27 2007 Luckless Gus Grissom in the hot seat again RoadsideAmerica com November 24 2002 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved May 4 2007 Lee Christopher August 24 2005 Grissom Spacesuit in Tug of War The Washington Post Retrieved May 27 2007 Cauley H M December 8 2016 Kennedy Space Center offers new Heroes and Legends hall much more The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved April 17 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l Burgess 2014 p 264 Astronautical and Aeronautical Events of 1963 Report of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to the Committee on Science and Astronautics PDF Washington D C U S House of Representatives 89th Congress 1963 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Greiff John B July 25 1961 Astronaut Grissom is Honorary Mayor Library Gets Name Daily Press Newport News Virginia p 3 via Newspapers com Snapp Raymond November 20 1965 Bedford Airpor Named in Honor of Grissom The Indianapolis Star Indianapolis Indiana p 1 via Newspapers com Welcome to Virgil Grissom Elementary School Old Bridge Township Public Schools Archived from the original on June 3 2001 Retrieved January 23 2008 Heffernan William January 28 1967 Madison Schools Living Memorials The Central New Jersey Home News New Brunswick New Jersey p 1 via Newspapers com Medal Winners The Palm Beach Post Palm Beach Florida August 25 1966 p 72 via Newspapers com Smith Merriman August 14 1969 Astronauts Awed by the Acclaim The Honolulu Advertiser Honolulu Hawaii UPI p 1 via Newspapers com Congressional Space Medal of Honor C SPAN December 17 1997 Archived from the original on October 16 2012 Retrieved June 16 2016 Salamon Milt January 30 1997 1st Astronaut Doctorate Given Locally Florida Today Cocoa Florida p 26 via Newspapers com Second American to travel in space first person to enter space twice New Mexico Museum of Space History Retrieved January 27 2019 Harbert Nancy September 27 1981 Hall to Induct Seven Space Pioneers Albuquerque Journal Albuquerque New Mexico p 53 via Newspapers com National Aviation Hall of fame Our Enshrinees National Aviation Hall of Fame Archived from the original on March 12 2011 Retrieved February 10 2011 Virgil I Gus Grissom Astronaut Scholarship Foundation Retrieved January 27 2019 Mercury Astronauts Dedicate Hall of Fame at Florida Site Victoria Advocate Victoria Texas Associated Press May 12 1990 p 38 via Newspapers com Clarke Jay June 10 1990 Astronaut Hall of Fame is Blast from the Past The Cincinnati Enquirer Knight News Service p 66 via Newspapers com Grissom Named for Posthumous Award The Bedford Daily Times Mail Bedford Indiana Associated Press March 23 1968 p 2 via Newspapers com Early Apollo Apollo to the Moon To Reach the Moon Building a Moon Rocket Smithsonian Institution National Air and Space Museum July 1999 Archived from the original on May 24 2011 Retrieved April 3 2011 The Official Site of Edward White II Archived from the original on December 3 2013 Retrieved February 16 2011 2 Added Moonshots Called for by Scott Harford Courant Hartford Connecticut Associated Press August 13 1971 p 5 via Newspapers com a b Taylor et al 1989 pp 335 336 Memorial Dedication Today The Courier Journal Louisville Kentucky July 21 1971 p 40 via Newspapers com Grissom Memorial Dedication at Spring Hill Wednesday Journal and Courier Lafayette Indiana UPI July 20 1971 p 8 via Newspapers com Oil Biz A Touch of Disney The Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia Pennsylvania Los Angeles Times Service May 27 1978 p 14 via Newspapers com Gore Robert J May 19 1978 Is This An Apartment Complex or an Oil Drilling Island Tampa Bay Times St Petersburg Florida Los Angeles Times p 14 via Newspapers com U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Island Grissom Astronaut s Widow Dedicates New Gus Grissom Park Independent Press Telegram Long Beach California April 3 1971 p 46 Hoosier Among Astronauts Honored Muncie Evening Press Muncie Indiana Associated Press October 13 1989 p 11 via Newspapers com Dunn Marcia May 10 1991 Space Mirror Memorial for 15 Dead Astronauts Unveiled at Kennedy Space Center Muncie Evening Press Muncie Indiana Associated Press via Newspapers com Post landing Activities Apollo 15 Lunar Surface Journal NASA commentary at 105 11 33 Rao Joe September 5 2008 Derf Dnoces and other strange star names Space com NBC News Retrieved January 28 2019 Lunar Backside Craters Get Apollo Names The Fresno Bee Fresno California UPI December 26 1968 p 8 via Newspapers com Grissom USGS Retrieved January 28 2019 2161 Grissom 1963 UD Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL Retrieved January 28 2019 Asteroid Named After Grissom The Tribune Seymour Indiana Associated Press March 30 1981 p 12 via Newspapers com Fallen Apollo 1 astronauts honored on Mars collectSPACE Retrieved January 28 2019 Wallheimer Brian October 23 2007 Space Experts Say Apollo 1 Deaths Not in Vain Journal and Courier Lafayette Indiana p 2 Rename Base for Grissom The South Bend Tribune South Bend Indiana Associated Press May 13 1968 p 4 via Newspapers com Questions About Grissom Grissom Air Reserve Base USAF Archived from the original on November 3 2007 Retrieved January 23 2008 USAFA Class Exemplars United States Air Force Academy Retrieved February 25 2019 Chanute AFB to Honor Five Heroes on Armed Forces Day The Pantagraph Bloomington Illinois May 14 1968 p 7 via Newspapers com Armed Forces Day at Chanute AF Base Gibson City Courier Gibson City Illinois May 15 1975 p 11 via Newspapers com Grissom Memorial to be Set The Republic Columbus Indiana July 10 1971 p 10 via Newspapers com DNR Gus Grissom Memorial Archived from the original on July 24 2015 Retrieved July 24 2015 Apollo 15 s Module at AF Museum The Journal Herald Dayton Ohio October 24 1974 p 44 via Newspapers com Wasik John W April 4 1965 Virgil Grissom and John Young Our Trail Blazing Twin Astronauts Family Weekly The Herald Tribune p 4 Retrieved January 28 2010 Dibell Kathie June 16 1962 Welsh Hovde Head Group Honoring Virgil Grissom Vidette Messenger of Porter County Valparaiso Indiana p 1 via Newspapers com FIT Dedicates Grissom Hall The Orlando Sentinel Orlando Florida January 31 1967 p 16 via Newspapers com Grissom Hall State University of New York at Fredonia Retrieved February 28 2019 Sequin Cynthia October 14 2005 Purdue industrial engineering kicks off Grissom renovation celebrates gifts Purdue University News Retrieved January 23 2008 Grissom Chaffee Dedications to Honor Fallen Astronauts Journal and Courier Lafayette Indiana April 26 1968 p 14 via Newspapers com Grissom at a Glance Virgil Ivan Grissom Elementary School Retrieved February 28 2019 Lazio Virginia November 7 1967 Fulton Will Attend N Scott Dedication Quad City Times p 3 via Newspapers com Bustos Cheryl January 29 1987 Shuttle Anniversary Touches Student s Hearts Quad City Times Davenport Iowa p 3 via Newspapers com Miller John D October 7 1968 P H M Corp Lauded at Grissom School Dedication The South Bend Tribune South Bend Indiana via Newspapers com Naming of New School No 7 Democrat and Chronicle Rochester New York April 5 1968 p 29 via Newspapers com School Named for Astronaut The Evening Sun Baltimore Maryland Associated Press p 4 About Us Virgil I Grissom Middle School Retrieved February 27 2019 Whitmire Olivia August 24 2018 Sidewalk on Old Grissom High campus holds 40 year old memories WHNT 19 News Retrieved February 27 2019 School Council Plan Reported a Failure Chicago Tribune Chicago Illinois March 27 1969 p 14 via Newspapers com History Tulsa Public Schools Retrieved July 13 2013 Kovar Claudia September 21 1994 Grissom Celebrates 25th Anniversary Tulsa World Tulsa Oklahoma Mrs Grissom to Aid in School Dedication The Courier Journal Louisville Kentucky Associated Press April 18 1970 p 3 via newspapers com Grissom School Dedication is October 28 The Star Press Muncie Indiana October 17 1973 p 5 via Newspapers com About Us Virgil I Grissom Middle School Retrieved February 28 2019 The History of Clark Air Base Schools www whoa org Retrieved April 3 2019 Rosmer David L 1986 Table of Contents An Annotated Pictorial History of Clark Air Base www whoa org p 312 Retrieved April 3 2019 Drogin Bob June 24 1991 Volcano Clouds Future of Strategic Clark Base Philippines Mt Pinatubo may remain active for up to three years endangering lives and equipment Los Angeles Times Pugh Thomas July 2 1980 Pupils D C Trip is Memorial to Grissom Hero Astronaut Daily News New York City p 782 Gus Grissom at IMDb Seelye Katharine Betty Grissom at 91 Husband Died in Apollo Fire The New York Times New York p C9 via The Boston Globe Rosales Jean Jobe Michael 2003 DC Goes to the Movies A Unique Guide to the Reel Washington New York Writer s Club Press ISBN 978 0 595 26797 2 Vito amp Tropea 2010 p 195 Kevin McCorkle at IMDb Epstein Leonora August 26 2013 9 of Bryan Cranston s Forgotten Roles Buzzfeed Retrieved February 23 2017 Leopold Todd September 19 2013 Emmys 2013 Bryan Cranston man of the moment CNN Retrieved April 28 2018 Joel Johnstone Joins ABC s The Astronaut Wives Club Rahart Adams in Nickelodeon s Every Witch Way Deadline Hollywood April 25 2014 Retrieved February 23 2017 Jensen Erin October 4 2018 Christian Bale s Vice co star Shea Whigham was blown away with Dick Cheney makeover The Herald Mail Retrieved December 23 2018 Okuda Michael October 22 2002 Star Trek III The Search for Spock Special Collector s Edition Text commentary DVD Disc 1 2 Paramount Pictures Roddenberry Gene May 1990 The Most Toys Star Trek The Next Generation Season 3 Episode 22 Berman Rick February 1999 Field of Fire Star Trek Deep Space Nine Season 7 Episode 13 Burgess 2015 p 232 Gabettas Chris Spring 2010 William Petersen From ISU to CSI Idaho State University Magazine Vol 20 no 2 Idaho State University Archived from the original on April 14 2013 Retrieved October 19 2015 Excerpts from Gus Grissom s Gemini Story The Minneapolis Star Minneapolis Minnesota May 13 1968 p 12B via Newspapers com References editBoomhower Ray E 2004 Gus Grissom The Lost Astronaut Indiana Biography Series Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society ISBN 0 87195 176 2 Burgess Colin Doolan Kate Vis Bert 2008 Fallen Astronauts Heroes Who Died Reaching the Moon Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska ISBN 978 0 8032 1332 6 Burgess Colin 2014 Liberty Bell 7 the suborbital Mercury flight of Virgil I Grissom Cham Springer Praxis books in space exploration ISBN 978 3 319 04390 6 OCLC 868042180 Burgess Colin 2015 Aurora 7 The Mercury Space Flight of M Scott Carpenter Springer Praxis Books ISBN 978 3 319 20438 3 Collins Michael 2001 Carrying the Fire an Astronaut s Journey Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8154 1028 7 French Francis Burgess Colin 2007 Into That Silent Sea Trailblazers of the Space Era 1961 1965 Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 1146 9 Leopold George 2016 Calculated Risk The Supersonic Life and Times of Gus Grissom West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 745 4 Shayler David 2001 Gemini Steps to the Moon Chichester United Kingdom Praxis Publishing ISBN 1 85233 405 3 Slayton Donald K Cassutt Michael 1994 Deke U S Manned Space from Mercury to the Shuttle New York City Forge St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 85503 6 LCCN 94 2463 OCLC 29845663 Taylor Robert M Jr Stevens Errol Wayne Ponder Mary Ann Brockman Paul 1989 Indiana A New Historical Guide Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society ISBN 0 87195 048 0 Vito John De Tropea Frank 2010 Epic Television Miniseries A Critical History Jefferson N C McFarland and Company ISBN 978 0 7864 4149 5 Further reading editBredeson Carmen 1998 Gus Grissom A Space Biography Countdown to Space Springfield NJ Enslow Publishers ISBN 0 89490 974 6 LCCN 97 21343 For children Greenberger Robert 2004 Gus Grissom The Tragedy ofApollo 1 The Library of Astronaut Biographies New York The Rosen Publishing Group ISBN 0 8239 4458 1 LCCN 2003011980 For children Grissom Virgil I 1968 Gemini A Personal Account of Man s Venture into Space New York MacMillan Publishing Company ISBN 0 02 545800 0 OCLC 442293 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gus Grissom nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Gus Grissom Letter from Grissom thanking students for naming their school after him Beddingfield Sam Astronaut Virgil Gus Grissom SpySpace Archived from the original on March 28 2013 Retrieved December 19 2007 Grissom s Gemini G3 C Pressure Suit National Air and Space Museum Grissom s Liberty Bell 7 Pressure Suit Archived June 18 2019 at the Wayback Machine National Air and Space Museum Gus Grissom Collection 1960 1967 N D at the Indiana Historical Society Indianapolis Gus Grissom Liberty Bell 7 Flight Archived July 30 2018 at the Wayback Machine video Sen Corporation Ltd IHS Staff Virgil Gus Grissom PDF Indiana Historical Society Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved July 30 2018 Virgil Gus I Grissom collection Archived June 18 2019 at the Wayback Machine at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Washington D C Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Aviation nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Indiana nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gus Grissom amp oldid 1212360148, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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