Jump to content

Deke Slayton: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 160: Line 160:
*[http://www.airfest.com/ Deke Slayton Airfest]
*[http://www.airfest.com/ Deke Slayton Airfest]
*[http://www.space-explorers.org/bios/slayton.html Deke Slayton] at the space-explorers.org
*[http://www.space-explorers.org/bios/slayton.html Deke Slayton] at the space-explorers.org
*[http://www.spaceacts.com/STARSHIP/seh/slayton.htm Slayton at Spaceacts]
*[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0805654/ Deke Slayton] at the [[Internet Movie Database]]
*[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0805654/ Deke Slayton] at the [[Internet Movie Database]]
*[http://nationalaviation.org/slayton-donald/ Deke Slayton] at the [[National Aviation Hall of Fame]]
*[http://nationalaviation.org/slayton-donald/ Deke Slayton] at the [[National Aviation Hall of Fame]]

Revision as of 19:10, 22 July 2014

Donald K. Slayton
Born(1924-03-01)March 1, 1924
StatusDeceased
DiedJune 13, 1993(1993-06-13) (aged 69)
NationalityAmerican
Other namesDonald Kent Slayton
Alma materUniversity of Minnesota, B.S. 1949
Awards
Collier Trophy
James H. Doolittle Award
Space career
NASA Astronaut
Previous occupation
Bomber pilot, test pilot
RankMajor, USAF
Time in space
9 days, 1 hour and 28 minutes
Selection1959 NASA Group 1
MissionsApollo–Soyuz Test Project
Mission insignia
RetirementFebruary 27, 1982

Donald Kent Slayton (March 1, 1924 – June 13, 1993), (Maj, USAF), better known as Deke Slayton, was an American World War II pilot, aeronautical engineer, test pilot, one of the original NASA Mercury Seven astronauts, and a NASA administrator.[1]

After joining NASA, Slayton was selected to pilot the second U.S. manned orbital spaceflight, but was grounded in 1962 by a heart murmur. He then served as NASA's director of flight crew operations, making him responsible for crew assignments at NASA from November 1963 until March 1972. At that time he was granted medical clearance to fly, and was assigned as the Docking Module pilot of the 1975 Apollo–Soyuz Test Project, becoming the oldest person to fly in space at age 51. This record was surpassed in 1983 by 53 year old John Young and in 1998 by his fellow Project Mercury astronaut John Glenn, who at the age of 77 flew on Space Shuttle mission STS-95.

Slayton died at the age of 69 on June 13, 1993, from malignant brain tumor.

Biography

Early life, education and military career

Slayton was born on March 1, 1924, on a farm near Sparta, Wisconsin, to parents Charles Sherman Slayton and Victoria Adelia (née Larson) Slayton.[2] A childhood farm equipment accident left him with a severed left ring finger. He attended elementary school in Leon, Wisconsin and graduated from Sparta High School in 1942.

He entered the United States Army Air Forces as a cadet in 1942, training as a B-25 bomber pilot and received his wings in April 1943 after completing flight training at Vernon and Waco, Texas. He flew 56 combat missions with the 340th Bombardment Group over Europe during World War II and later flew seven combat missions over Japan in a Douglas A-26 Invader as part of the 319th Bombardment Group. In the meantime, he returned to the United States in mid-1944 as a B-25 instructor pilot at Columbia, South Carolina, and later served with a unit responsible for checking pilot proficiency on the A-26 light bomber.[3]

After the war, Slayton graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Aeronautical Engineering from the University of Minnesota, in 1949. Following graduation, he worked for two years as an engineer with the Boeing Aircraft Corporation at Seattle, Washington before being recalled to active duty in 1951 with the Minnesota Air National Guard.

Upon reporting for duty, Slayton was a maintenance flight test officer of an F-51 squadron located in Minneapolis, then served eighteen months as a technical inspector at Headquarters Twelfth Air Force, and a tour as fighter pilot and maintenance officer with the 36th Fighter Day Wing at Bitburg Air Base, West Germany.[4]

Returning to the United States in June 1955, Slayton attended and graduated from USAF Test Pilot School to became a test pilot at Edwards Air Force Base in California. He tested supersonic Air Force fighters, including the F-101, F-102, F-105, and F-106,[5] and was responsible for determining stall-spin characteristics for the large F-105, which became the principal fighter bomber used by the USAF over North Vietnam.[6]

In his Air Force career, he logged 7,164 hours flying time including more than 5,100 hours in jet aircraft.

NASA career

Mercury Seven

File:Mercury Seven astronauts.jpg
Deke Slayton (sitting row, left) with fellow Mercury astronauts

In 1959, Slayton was one of 110 military test pilots selected by their commanding officers as candidates for the newly formed National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Project Mercury, the first U.S. manned space flight program. Following a gruelling series of physical and psychological tests, NASA selected Slayton to be one of the original group of seven Mercury astronauts.

He was scheduled to fly in 1962 on the second orbital flight Delta 7, the name coming from the mission being the fourth spaceflight—the fourth letter in the Greek alphabet and the seven astronauts), but because of an erratic heart rate (idiopathic atrial fibrillation), he was grounded in September 1962,[7] and his place was taken by Scott Carpenter aboard Aurora 7. Slayton was the only member of the Mercury Seven who did not fly in the Mercury program. He was one of the eight Paresev pilots.[8]

Gemini and Apollo selection

You're it.

— Telling Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins that they were to make the first manned lunar landing, Apollo 11.[9]

When NASA grounded Slayton, the Air Force followed suit. From September 1, 1962 until November 1963, he obtained the unofficial title of "chief astronaut" when he took on the position of Coordinator of Astronaut Activities, which would later officially become Chief of the Astronaut Office. Slayton resigned his Air Force commission in 1963 and then worked for NASA in a civilian capacity as head of astronaut selection. He had the decisive role in choosing the crews for the Gemini and Apollo programs, including the decision of who would be the first person on the Moon.

In 1972, Slayton was awarded the Society of Experimental Test Pilots James H. Doolittle Award.

Restored to full flight status

In the meantime, Slayton was trying everything, just to be restored to full flight status. Beside following a daily exercise program, he quit smoking cigarettes, drinking coffee and drastically reduced consumption of alcoholic drinks. He also took massive doses of vitamins, and for a time took daily doses of quinidine, a crystalline alkaloid.

After the fibrilation that caused him to be grounded eight years ago ceased in July 1970, a comprehensive review of his medical status followed by NASA's director of life sciences and the Federal Aviation Agency, and his full flight status was restored in March 1972, with Slayton celebrating it in an hour full of aerobatic maneuvers in a NASA T-38 jet trainer.[10]

Apollo–Soyuz flight

Deke Slayton (right) with cosmonaut Alexey Leonov in the Soyuz spacecraft

After he was restored to full flight status in 1972, Slayton was selected in February 1973 as Docking Module pilot for the Apollo–Soyuz Test Project, a docking between the American Apollo spacecraft and the Soyuz spacecraft of the Soviet Union. The crew immediately began an intensive two-year training program. The program included learning the Russian language and making frequent trips to the USSR, where astronauts trained for weeks at Star City, the cosmonaut training center near Moscow. Slayton resigned as director of flight crew operations in February 1974.[11]

On July 17, 1975, the two craft joined up in orbit, and astronauts Slayton, Thomas P. Stafford and Vance D. Brand conducted crew transfers with cosmonauts Alexey Leonov and Valeri Kubasov. At the end of the flight, an erroneous switch setting led to the introduction of noxious fumes into the Apollo cabin during landing, and the crew was hospitalized as a precaution in Honolulu, Hawaii, for two weeks. During hospitalization, a lesion was discovered on Slayton's lung and removed. It was determined to be benign.

During his first and only spaceflight, he spent 217 hours in space.

After the Apollo–Soyuz flight, he became head of the Approach and Landing Tests for NASA's space shuttle program.

Later years

Slayton retired from NASA in 1982. After retirement, he served as president of Space Services Inc., a Houston-based company earlier founded to develop rockets for small commercial payloads. He served as mission director for a rocket called the Conestoga, which was successfully launched on September 9, 1982, and was the world's first privately funded rocket to reach space.[12] Slayton also became interested in aviation racing. In addition to serving as a consultant to some aerospace corporations, he was president of International Formula One Pylon Air Racing and director of Columbia Astronautics. He also served on the Department of Transportation's Commercial Space Advisory Committee.[13]

Slayton penned an autobiography with space historian Michael Cassutt entitled Deke!: U.S. Manned Space from Mercury to the Shuttle.[14] As well as Slayton's own astronaut experiences, the book describes how Slayton made crew choice selections, including choosing the first person to walk on the Moon. Numerous astronauts have noted that only when reading this book did they learn why they had been selected for certain flights decades earlier.

Slayton's name also appears with three other co-authors, including fellow astronaut Alan Shepard, on the book Moon Shot: The Inside Story of America's Race to the Moon, published in 1994.[15] The book was also made into a documentary film of the same name. Slayton died before either Moon Shot project was finished or released, and the book did not receive any input from him. However, the film was narrated from Slayton's point of view (voiced by Barry Corbin) and includes a brief tribute to him at the very end.

Personal life

Slayton was a friend of fellow astronaut Gus Grissom.[16] He married Marjorie "Marge" Lunney in 1955, and they had one son, Kent Sherman, born April 8, 1957.[17] They eventually divorced, and Slayton later married Bobbie Belle Jones (1945–2010) in 1983. They remained married until his death.[18]

Shortly after he moved to League City, Texas, in 1992, Slayton was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor. He died from the illness, at the age of 69, on June 13, 1993.[19]

Organizations

Slayton was a member of numerous organizations. He was a fellow of the Society of Experimental Test Pilots and the American Astronautical Society; associate fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics; member of the Experimental Aircraft Association, the Space Pioneers, and the Confederate Air Force; life member of the Order of Daedalians, the National Rifle Association of America, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the Fraternal Order of Eagles; honorary member of the American Fighter Aces Association, the National WWII Glider Pilots Association and the Association of Space Explorers.[20]

Honors and awards

Slayton's other awards include -

The Collier Trophy; the SETP Iven C. Kincheloe Award; the Gen. Billy Mitchell Award; the SETP J.H. Doolittle Award (1972); the National Institute of Social Sciences Gold Medal (1975); the Zeta Beta Tau’s Richard Gottheil Medal (1975); the Wright Brothers International Manned Space Flight Award (1975); the Veterans of Foreign Wars National Space Award (1976); the American Heart Association’s Heart of the Year Award (1976); the FAI Yuri Gagarin Gold Medal (1976); 3the District 35-R Lions International American of the Year Award (1976); the AIAA Special Presidential Citation (1977); the University of Minnesota’s Outstanding Achievement Award (1977); the Houston Area Federal Business Association’s Civil Servant of the Year Award (1977); the AAS Flight Achievement Award for 1976 (1977); the AIAA Haley Astronautics Award for 1978; Honorary D.Sc. from Carthage College, Carthage, Illinois, in 1961; Honorary Doctorate in Engineering from Michigan Technological University in Houghton, Michigan, in 1965.

Legacy

With the other Mercury astronauts, Slayton was awarded the Collier Trophy in 1962 for "'for pioneering manned space flight in the United States.'"[21]

Deke Slayton was inducted into the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame on May 11, 1990.[22]

Slayton was enshrined in the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1996.[23]

The Texas Oncology-Deke Slayton Cancer Center (located on Medical Center Blvd. in Webster, Texas) was named in his honor in 2000.[24]

The main stretch of road in League City, Texas, FM 518, was renamed Deke Slayton Highway.[25]

The Deke Slayton Memorial Space & Bicycle Museum in Sparta, Wisconsin, was named in his honor.[26] The Slayton biographical exhibit includes his Mercury space suit, his Ambassador of Exploration Award, which showcases a lunar sample, and more. In nearby La Crosse, Wisconsin, an annual summer aircraft air show, the Deke Slayton Airfest, has been held in his honor, featuring modern and vintage military and civilian aircraft, along with NASA speakers.

In media

Physical description

  • Weight: 165 lb (75 kg)
  • Height: 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
  • Hair: Gray
  • Eyes: Blue

Books authored

  • Slayton, Donald K.; Cassutt, Michael (1994). Deke!: U.S. Manned Space: From Mercury to the Shuttle (1st ed.). New York: Forge. ISBN 0-312-85503-6. LCCN 94002463. OCLC 29845663.
  • ——; Cassutt, Michael (1995) [Originally copyrighted 1994]. Deke!. New York: Forge. ISBN 0-312-85918-X. LCCN 94002463. OCLC 42051303.
  • ——; Shepard, Alan B.; Barbree, Jay; Benedict, Howard (1994). Moon Shot: The Inside Story of America’s Race to the Moon. Introduction by Neil Armstrong (1st ed.). Atlanta: Turner Publishing Company. ISBN 1-878685-54-6. LCCN 94003027. OCLC 29846731. Author in name only.
  • ——; Carpenter, M. Scott; Cooper, L. Gordon, Jr.; Glenn, John H., Jr.; Grissom, Virgil I.; Schirra, Walter M., Jr.; Shepard, Alan B., Jr. (2010) [Originally published 1962]. We Seven: By the Astronauts Themselves. New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks. ISBN 978-1-4391-8103-4. LCCN 62019074. OCLC 429024791.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

See also

References

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

  1. ^ "Astronaut Bio: Deke Slayton 6/93". NASA. June 1993. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
  2. ^ Slayton's NASA long biography
  3. ^ Slayton's military career .history.nasa.gov
  4. ^ Donald K. Slayton at the New Mexico Museum of Space History
  5. ^ "Donald K "Deke" Slayton". Wisconsin Aviation Hall of Fame. Retrieved August 8, 2013. While at Edwards, Deke Slayton flew test flight missions on the F-101, F-102, F-105 and the F-106.
  6. ^ Kranz 2000
  7. ^ "Donald K. Slayton". International Space Hall of Fame. New Mexico Museum of Space History. Retrieved April 17, 2012.
  8. ^ history office, Peter W. Merlin, compilation done in 1998[clarification needed]
  9. ^ Donald K. Slayton at New Mexico Museum of Space History
  10. ^ Slayton's NASA long biography
  11. ^ Slayton's NASA long biography
  12. ^ Abell, John C. (September 9, 2009). "September 9, 1982: 3-2-1 … Liftoff! The First Private Rocket Launch". Wired.com. Condé Nast. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
  13. ^ Deke Slayton post-NASA career .history.nasa.gov
  14. ^ Slayton & Cassutt 1994
  15. ^ Shepard & Slayton 1994
  16. ^ Slayton & Cassutt 1995, p. 185
  17. ^ Burgess 2011, p. 345
  18. ^ Burgess 2011, p. 350
  19. ^ "Today in history". The New York Times. Associated Press. June 13, 2014. Retrieved June 13, 2014.
  20. ^ Deke's memberships .space-explorers.org
  21. ^ Warren-Findley, Jannelle (1998). "The Collier as Commemoration: The Project Mercury Astronauts and the Collier Trophy". In Mack, Pamela E. (ed.). From Engineering Science to Big Science: The NACA and NASA Collier Trophy Research Project Winners. The NASA History Series. Washington, D.C.: NASA History Office, Office of Policy and Plans. p. 165. ISBN 0-16-049640-3. LCCN 97027899. OCLC 37451762. NASA SP-4219. Retrieved January 10, 2011. {{cite book}}: External link in |chapterurl= (help); Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)
  22. ^ Deke Slayton inducted into the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame
  23. ^ "National Aviation Hall of fame: Our Enshrinees". National Aviation Hall of Fame. Retrieved February 10, 2011.
  24. ^ "Texas Oncology-Deke Slayton Cancer Center". Retrieved February 10, 2011.
  25. ^ "Bobbie Slayton dead at 65". Bay Area Citizen. Houston, TX: Houston Community Newspapers. November 29, 2010. Retrieved February 10, 2011.
  26. ^ "Deke Slayton Memorial Space & Bicycle Museum". Retrieved February 10, 2011.
  27. ^ The Right Stuff at IMDb
  28. ^ Apollo 13 at IMDb
  29. ^ Apollo 11 at IMDb
  30. ^ From The Earth to the Moon at IMDb
  31. ^ Moonshot at IMDb

Bibliography

Template:Persondata