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    50 Years Later, John Glenn's Space Legacy Still Circling Earth

    Fifty years ago Monday (Feb. 20), John Glenn made history by circling the Earth three times.

    He wasn't the first person in space, nor the first American. He wasn't even the first person to orbit the planet. But Glenn's five-hour flight onboard Friendship 7 set him apart from the space travelers who launched before him and established a lasting legacy that outshone many of those who followed.

    Not that Glenn understands the fascination or can explain why.

    "I really cannot answer that," Glenn told collectSPACE.com a week before his Mercury-Atlas 6 flight's 50th anniversary. "I think maybe, that it kind of started off perhaps by the fact that it was sort of an 'on-again, off-again' flight. Well, let me back up a little bit..."

    Glenn, now 90, was chosen in April 1959 to be one of the United States' first astronauts. Three years later, he was the pilot for the first orbital spaceflight by an American, following two orbital flights by Soviet cosmonauts and two suborbital launches by his fellow Mercury astronauts.

    "It was a pretty good jump," said Glenn of the transition from the 15-minute U.S. suborbital missions that preceded his. "I do not want to expand it to more than it was, but those flights of course, did not get up to orbital speed, the two flights ahead of mine. Mine got up to orbital speed and then had to come back in and make a re-entry from orbital speed, and so that was a major difference."

    "And the time in weightlessness extended of course, a lot. The flight was four hours and 55 minutes, so it gave three orbits — about an hour and 29 minutes for each orbit," he said.

    On-again, off-again

    Before he could launch into the history books however, he first needed to get off the ground, a trial that Glenn also attributes to launching his legacy. [Photos: John Glenn's Space Legacy]

    "I went on the 11th scheduled date," Glenn said. "I only suited up four times, but twice I was on top of the [launch] vehicle — once for about six hours, ready to go and then they had to cancel because of weather. The other time was [due to] equipment."

    "So when I finally did go, this had been several months of on-again, off-again, on-again, one problem after another. I think when we finally went, there was a big sigh of relief. Because it was [openly publicized] and because the press covered it completely, I think there was a world interest in it," he said.

    "And I think that was some of the reason why so much attention was paid to it back then. It sort of started things going as it has ever since," Glenn said.

    Still in orbit

    In the 50 years since he first flew, Glenn served as a U.S. Senator and in 1998, returned to space aboard the shuttle Discovery. At age 77, he set a new record as the oldest person to reach orbit.

    The legacy of his Mercury flight however, continues to live on in pop culture.

    "I think the duration that people have been interested in that, the first flight back then, has been somewhat of a surprise," Glenn said. "We are so used to the new and the untried in this country, that I think we have gotten used to that. So it has been a little bit of a surprise that attention has been and keeps coming back to some of those very early flights."

    Glenn and his 1962 flight has been celebrated and cited in movies and music, appeared on postage stamps and on magazine covers, and has been commemorated through a long line of memorabilia and collectibles released to the public over the half-century since. The latter even helped inspire at least one person to follow in Glenn's footsteps to space.

    "One of my fondest memories of John Glenn's flight came from a box of Red Ball Jets," Don Pettit, one of two NASA astronauts now on board the International Space Station (ISS), told collectSPACE. "Red Ball Jets were a particular brand of tennis shoes that kids loved to wear. They had a little red sticker on the side that would fall off after about the first week, but they were really cool shoes."

    "In this particular box of Red Ball Jets was one of these really flimsy vacuum formed records. And that record was a soundtrack recording of John Glenn describing what the Earth looked like during one of his orbits. I remember that as a kid," Pettit said.

    Continue reading at collectSPACE.com to learn what John Glenn thinks is the potential still waiting for astronauts in Earth orbit.

    Follow collectSPACE on Facebookand Twitter @collectSPACE and editor Robert Pearlman @robertpearlman. Copyright 2011 collectSPACE.com. All rights reserved.

     

    14 comments

    • CommonSense  •  Norwalk, Connecticut  •  3 mths ago
      Just awesome! We need to increase our NASA funding for more of this, not hide under budget restraints.
      • Monty C 3 mths ago
        we can increase NASA funding as long as they don't waste the money.
      • Emperor Khaldeesh Riessti ... 3 mths ago
        You can't do that.

        If you do, very loud and frequently obese voters will complain that the high-minded rocket scientists from NASA are wasting funds that could be spent for the starving and the poor (but they actually mean tax cuts, and really only for themselves). They will be communicating their beliefs on their new cell phones, of course, while driving obsolete forms of the humble sport utility vehicles and the pick up truck on suburban roads. On the back, I suspect there will be a allegedly witty remark or two on the relevant bumper stickers, and accompanying stick figure depictions of the occupants and their offspring and/or pets belonging to their number.

        Meanwhile, educated minds prevail and are thankful that manned space exploration gets any funding at all in a climate of blatant anti-intellectualism. Intelligent Design and the anti-Vaccine crowd was bad enough, but now we have to contend with the short sighted but enfranchised public for something that will one day decide the fate of humanity.
    • Milo Talon  •  Omaha, Nebraska  •  3 mths ago
      I was in 3rd grade when Glenn launched the whole school was watching it on tv. It was amazing.
    • Bim  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      I remember that snowy day in Iowa in 1962; John Glenn was sent into space on my birthday. We watched the launch on TV. My brother turned to me and stated rather enviously, "Some special people get a twentyone gun salute on their birthday; You got a man sent into space!". A sign of the times yet a national moment we will never forget.
    • danielg  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  3 mths ago
      All of these astronauts and cosmonauts are heroes in my book, and with other countries joining the space frontier, there are more to come.(Oh, if only I could have been one of them.)
    • 2muchBS  •  3 mths ago
      Gotta love Pioneers...those were exciting times
    • Astro  •  3 mths ago
      Gherman Titov was actually the first person to orbit the Earth, although Gagarin usually gets the credit. If you look at Gagarin's flight in detail you'll see that his actual landing spot was about 1000 miles short of his launch point, and thus he did not complete a full orbit with respect to the Earth. Titov spent about 24 hours in space and orbited the Earth about 16 times.
      • Kirstin 3 mths ago
        It depends on your criteria. The Soviets did conceal the specifics of Gagarin's flight in order to avoid that uncertainty. In terms of orbital mechanics, Gagarin was in a stable orbit. He just deorbited before completing an orbit -- analogous to an Abort Once Around in the Space Shuttle -- but if he had not, he could have remained up for quite some time. So, does that count as orbit? Depends on who you ask.
      • Kirstin 3 mths ago
        Oh, another cool thing about Titov -- he still holds the record for youngest spacefarer.
      • Not Here 2 mths ago
        Generally, back then people said five miles a second was orbital velocity, meaning you wouldn't fall back down-- except for atmospheric drag. If you were in space, going that fast you were said to be "in orbit", because you had to do de-orbit burn to slow you down enough to fall back (or you stayed up there). By that criteria Colonel Gargarin (or Gagarin) was first in orbit. There have always been rumors of earlier Russian manned attempts.
    • Cow  •  Austin, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Hopefully the "potential" will actually benefit people, and not just give us something else to fight about and overcharge people for.
    • the old red neck  •  Pyeongtaek-Si, South Korea  •  3 mths ago
      and now we sit back and watch China take the lead in space exploration it is truely a sad thing that my country has become
      • Emperor Khaldeesh Riessti ... 3 mths ago
        China has sent two people up into space in separate capsules and two years apart from one another; and the last one was SEVEN YEARS AGO. This is all from a program that was started back in 1992 . . .

        The United States did the one-man capsule thing back in the 60's before putting human beings on the Moon within the same decade, and has since had a Space Shuttle program and two very large Space Stations after that in addition to a massive program of general space exploration.

        Within a year or two, a privately built system of Western rockets will be launching astronauts into space on a regular basis: Not more than a single decade after being announced. If an eccentric billionaire can outpace and outperform a world superpower, the latter party has done something terribly wrong or doesn't really care.

        China will not be developing a lead over the American or Russian space program within our lifetimes. They are not even close to initiating a nostalgia filled Space Race with anything but imagination itself. The Communists are far too busy suppressing freedom of thought, entertaining paranoid illusions of an invasion from Taiwan and pretending to be a market economy to seriously concern themselves with manned space exploration.
    • PETER  •  Dubai, United Arab Emirates  •  3 mths ago
      Why are people facinated with the early astronauts and Glenn? To allow yourself to be put inside a tiny capsule, shot into space and then come back as a fireball to earth and land in the ocean, risking death the whole flight...he had to be either very brave or very crazy.
      • Kirstin 3 mths ago
        Brave, definitely. When the Mercury 7 first visited the Cape, it was to watch a test launch of the Atlas rocket that would later boost Glenn into orbit. It exploded. They kept with it anyway, believing that what they were doing was important.
      • Izzy 3 mths ago
        You answered your own question. Whether they were "very brave or very crazy", it WAS fascinating to watch. Tom Wolfe made an accurate analogy in The Right Stuff. They were the modern equivalent of the "single combat warrior". Thus, they got their fame and acclaim up front... just for being willing to volunteer.
      • 2muchBS 3 mths ago
        its called Brave
    • Bubba Delux  •  Santa Clara, California  •  3 mths ago
      I orbited 10 times from my couch.
      • Monty C 3 mths ago
        get off the drugs
      • Fred 3 mths ago
        Back away from the crack pipe.
    • Monty C  •  Sioux Falls, South Dakota  •  3 mths ago
      John Glenn is my great uncle on my daddy's side. I have never met the man but he had BALLS
    • Dick Hungwell  •  3 mths ago
      John Glenn. Former American Hero. Sold his old soul to help Bill Clinton. Tarnished legacy. Shame.
    • hey!  •  3 mths ago
      why would john glen be known for his space flights is it because he is socialist, there were others i can mention that did their job and never became a political mouthpiece ,virgil grissom for instance. more critters that one would never know which way their politics flow and you and glen can go to hell.
    • Jamal Jenkins  •  Beverly Hills, California  •  3 mths ago
      Wait, what?? He's been in space for 50 years? His right-hand must be all calloused. rofl!
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