Friday, July 18, 2014

Fwd: Hank Hartsfield, led first flight of space shuttle Discovery, dies at 80



Sent from my iPad

Begin forwarded message:

From: "Gary Johnson" <gjohnson144@comcast.net>
Date: July 18, 2014 12:06:52 PM CDT
To: "Gary Johnson" <gjohnson144@comcast.net>
Subject: FW: Hank Hartsfield, led first flight of space shuttle Discovery, dies at 80

I was so sorry to hear, as I knew Hank very well and he was the NASA HQ Independent Assessment Manager and located in our SR&QA Directorate Office suite after Challenger when Charlie Harlan was the Director and I was Harlan's Deputy.

 

Gary

 

Former NASA astronaut Hank Hartsfield dies from complications following surgery

Amy Lynn

July 17th, 2014

 

Spaceflight Insider is receiving reports that according to Astronaut Mike Mullane, USAF Colonel (ret.) and NASA astronaut (ret.) passed away from complications following a recent back surgery. Hartsfield served as Mullane's mission Commander on STS-41D.

 

Henry Warren "Hank" Hartsfield, Jr. was born and raised in Birmingham, Alabama where he attended Auburn University before joining the US Air Force. He was a graduate of the USAF Test Pilot School and later served as an instructor at Edwards Air Force Base. Soon after he was assigned to the USAF Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL) in 1966; however the program was cancelled a few years later.

 

Hartsfield then went on to Duke University where he completed his graduate work in Physics as well as Astronautics at the Air Force Institute of Technology at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. In 1969, after the cancellation of MOL, Hartsfield was accepted as a NASA Astronaut and served as a member of the Apollo 16 support crew and subsequently for the Skylab 2, 3 and 4 missions. He first flew on STS-4 along with Thomas K. Mattingly aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia on June 27, 1982. During their mission, the duo evaluated ascent and reentry phases of the shuttle missions as well as studied long-term thermal effects on the Orbiter's subsystems. They also analyzed Orbiter-induced contamination on the payload bay. During their mission, the crew successfully completed 112 orbits of Earth and landed the orbiter safely at Edwards Air Force Base on July 4, 1982.

 

Hartsfield's second mission, STS-41D, launched into space on August 30, 1984 aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery. The crew initiated the OAST-1 solar cell wing experiment, deployed three satellites (SBS-D, SYNCOM IV-2, and TELSTAR 3-C) as well as managed the CFES-III experiment. They returned to Earth on September 5, 1984 after 96 orbits.

 

Hartsfield's third mission, STS-61A, lifted off from Kennedy Space Center aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger on October 30, 1985. This mission was the first to carry a total of eight crew members into space and the first to have payload activities controlled outside of the United States, as part of the West German D-1 Spacelab mission. Over 75 science experiments were completed and the crew returned safely to Earth on November 6, 1985.

 

Hartsfield retired from the US Air Force after 22 years of service in 1977 and served as the Deputy Chief of the Astronaut Office from 1986 to 1987 before accepting a position as the Deputy Director for Flight Crew operations. He then received an assignment as Director of the Technical Integration and Analysis Division in the Office of Space Flight at NASA Headquarters. In 1990, Hartsfield accepted a short-term position as the Deputy Manager for Operations in Space Station Projects Office at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. The following year, he received another short-term assignment as the Man-Tended Capability Phase Manager at Johnson Space Center in Houston, where Hank represented the Deputy Director in providing the Space Shuttle Program with guidance and direction.

 

Hartsfield then moved on to become the manager of the International Space Station (ISS) Independent Assessment activities in 1993. His work included assessing the programs and projects of Human Exploration and Development of Space Enterprise. Hartsfield retired from NASA in 1998 and worked in the executive ranks at Raytheon Company from 1998 to his retirement in 2005.

 

"Hank was a standup guy, folks mentored by him were most fortunate. He will be sorely missed by the aerospace community in particular and the world in general," said Bob Springer, Mission Specialist for STS-29 and STS-38.

 

Hartsfield was inducted into the Astronaut Hall of Fame in 2006 along with Brewster Shaw and current NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden. Hank received many awards for his distinguished service including the Air Force Meritorious Service Medal, the Gen. Thomas D. White Space Trophy, the Distinguished Civilian Service Award, two NASA Distinguished Service Medals, three NASA Spaceflight Medals, and the NASA Exceptional Service Medal. In addition to the US Astronaut Hall of Fame, Hank is also a member of the Alabama Aviation Hall of Fame.

 

Stay tuned to Spaceflight Insider as we will provide more details as they become available.

 

© 2013-2014 Spaceflight Insider

 

                       

Astronaut Hank Hartsfield, led first flight of space shuttle Discovery, dies at 80

 

July 17, 2014 – NASA astronaut Henry "Hank" Hartsfield, who in 1984 commanded the maiden mission of the space shuttle Discovery, died on Thursday (July 17). He was 80.

 

Hartsfield's death came as a result of complications from back surgery he had several months ago, according to his fellow astronaut and STS-41D crewmember Mike Mullane.

 

"Obviously, I have many, many memories of my time with Hank," Mullane wrote online on Thursday. "He was a great commander and pilot and I'll always feel honored to have been a member of his crew."

 

Hartsfield became a NASA astronaut in September 1969, just two months after the first moon landing. He waited 13 years to make his first spaceflight, serving as the pilot on shuttle Columbia's STS-4 mission, the fourth and final test flight of the winged orbiter program.

 

Launching on Columbia on June 27, 1982, Hartsfield and commander Thomas "Ken" Mattingly circled the Earth 112 times while performing experiments and operating a pair of classified missile launch-detection systems. Returning to Earth a week later on Independence Day, the STS-4 crew was greeted by then-President and First Lady Ronald and Nancy Reagan at Edwards Air Force Base in California.

 

The STS-4 mission was the last to be flown before NASA declared the space shuttle operational.

 

"'Operational,' to me, is a tough term to explain," Hartsfield told collectSPACE.com in a 2006 interview. "In my view, the whole time we were flying [the space shuttle] it was a test vehicle, although we called it operational. We used it and did a lot of great things [but it was not] operational by the way I look at it, having been a test pilot and looking at airplanes."

 

Hartsfield's second shuttle mission assignment came two years later as the commander Discovery's first flight, but the STS-41D mission set another first before ever leaving the launch pad.

 

Originally scheduled to lift off in June 1984, Hartsfield and his crew of five were just four seconds from launch when a faulty main engine forced the shuttle program's first-ever abort, followed by a hydrogen fire on the pad. It took two months to recover, but Discovery safely launched on Aug. 30 on a six-day flight to deploy communication satellites and conduct science.

 

During the mission, Hartsfield and his crewmates gained a nickname, the "Icebusters," after using the shuttle robotic arm to successfully knock off a hazardous ice buildup on the outside of the orbiter.

 

"We had to get rid of the icicle because if it stayed on there, the concern was that when we started entry [back into the Earth atmosphere] it was just about the right place to break off and then hit the [Orbital Maneuvering System] pod," Hartsfield explained in a 2001 NASA interview. "If you hit the OMS pod and broke those tiles... that's where the propellant is for the OMS engines, you know, and that is not a good thing to have happen."

 

"I operated the arm and broke the icicle off," he recalled. "We were really relieved to see that go away."

 

Hartsfield returned to orbit for his third and final flight as commander of Challenger's STS-61A mission in October 1985. In addition to being the first flight to be funded and directed by a foreign country (the former West Germany, overseeing the European-built Spacelab module mounted in Challenger's payload bay), the eight-member 61A crew set the record for the most astronauts to launch and land on the same spacecraft.

 

The seven-day flight conducted more than 75 experiments over the course of 112 orbits, marking the last time space shuttle Challenger would fly in space. The orbiter was lost in flight in January 1986.

 

With STS-61A's landing, Hartsfield had logged a total of 20 days, 2 hours and 50 minutes in space, having circled the Earth 321 times.

 

"I flew on Columbia, Challenger and Discovery," Hartsfield told collectSPACE.com in 2009. "I was fortunate to be the commander of the first flight of Discovery, and [it] turned out to be a pretty doggoned good bird."

 

Henry Warren Hartsfield, Jr. was born on Nov. 21, 1933 in Birmingham, Alabama. He earned his bachelor of science degree in physics at Auburn University in 1954, performed graduate work in physics and astronautics at the Air Force Institute of Technology and Duke University, and received his master of science degree in engineering science from the University of Tennessee in 1971.

 

Hartsfield joined the Air Force in 1955 and graduated from the test pilot school at Edwards Air Force Base, where he was serving as an instructor when he was recruited as an astronaut trainee for the Manned Orbital Laboratory. The project would have seen Hartsfield fly to space onboard a Gemini spacecraft to work on a reconnaissance platform, had it not been canceled in 1969.

 

With the end of the MOL program, Hartsfield and six other trainees transferred to NASA's astronaut corps. Before his own three shuttle flights, Hartsfield served on the support crews for the fifth moon landing, Apollo 16 in April 1972, and for all three missions to the United States' first space station, Skylab, between May 1973 and February 1974.

 

Hartsfield retired from the Air Force in 1977 but continued at NASA well beyond his time flying in space. He served as the deputy chief of the astronaut office and the deputy director of flight crew operations at Johnson Space Center in Houston before holding management positions at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. and at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

 

Before leaving NASA in 1998 to become an executive at the Raytheon Corp., Hartsfield helped set the ground work for the International Space Station, serving as the deputy manager of the space station projects office, among other positions related to the orbiting laboratory. He retired from Raytheon in 2005.

 

Awarded Air Force and NASA medals and the recipient of the 1973 Gen. Thomas D. White Space Trophy, Hartsfield was inducted into the Alabama Aviation Hall of Fame in 1983 and U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame in 2006. Hartsfield was bestowed an honorary doctor of science degree from his alma mater, Auburn University, in 1986.

 

Hartsfield is survived by his wife Judy Frances Massey, daughter Judy and two grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his daughter Keely, who worked as a contractor to the space shuttle program and died in March 2014.

 

 

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