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The small town atmosphere gave Glenn a sense of
community and the firm belief in an individual’s responsibility to
that community. Patriotism also was a key ingredient in Glenn’s
childhood. His father served as a bugler during his years in the
army and continued to play the instrument in New Concord during
celebrations marking patriotic holidays. As a young boy, John
Glenn, Jr. learned to play the trumpet and would join with his
father in the playing of echo taps on Memorial Day. The Great
Depression also had a large impact on Glenn’s childhood. The Glenn
family plumbing business, like most small businesses, struggled to
survive during the severe economic hardships of the early 1930s. In
living through these years, Glenn learned by necessity to appreciate
the values of both frugality and hard work.
Educated in the local schools, Glenn played
varsity football, basketball, and tennis in high school and was
president of his junior class. He was a member of the town band,
was active in the Hi-Y organization sponsored by the local YMCA, and
had a lead role in the senior class play. High school further
shaped Glenn’s concepts of citizenship and patriotism. His high
school civics teacher, Harford Steele, brought history, politics and
government to life for Glenn and instilled in Glenn the idea that
within a democracy one person truly could make a difference in
improving the lives of the average citizen.
Another factor in Glenn’s childhood, and
arguably the biggest influence in his life, was a girl named Anna
Margaret Castor. Known as Annie, she was the daughter of Dr. Homer
Castor, the town dentist. He and his wife, Margaret, were good
friends of John and Clara Glenn. Due to this friendship, John
Glenn, Jr. and Annie Castor grew up together from infancy. The
couple starting dating seriously while in high school, were married
on April 6, 1943, and became the parents of John David Glenn and
Carolyn Ann Glenn in the late 1940s. A talented musician, Annie
played the trombone, piano, and pipe organ and graduated in 1942
from Muskingum College with a degree in music. Although hampered
most of her life by a severe stuttering problem, Annie never let her
disability impinge upon her independence. In March 1964, for
example, when John Glenn became bedridden due to an accident during
his first run for the U.S. Senate she undertook a full schedule of
public appearances in an effort to keep his campaign active. She
overcame her impediment in the late 1970s through extensive speech
therapy and became a national spokesperson advocating programs for
those with speech and hearing disabilities. As she has done
throughout her life, Annie continues to be John Glenn’s biggest
supporter and most insightful critic.
Ever since his first ride on an airplane, taken
with his father on a barnstormer’s WACO aircraft when he was eight
years old, John Glenn had an affinity for aviation. After
graduating from high school in 1939, Glenn entered Muskingum College
initially planning on a degree in chemistry. Having second thoughts
about his major during his sophomore year, Glenn jumped at a chance
to gain his pilot’s license through the Civilian Pilot Training
Program funded by the U.S. Department of Commerce. Administered
through the college’s physics department, the program paid the cost
of the flight instructions and gave college credits in physics.
Glenn applied for the program, gained admission, and earned his
private pilot’s license on June 26, 1941.
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on
December 7, 1941, Glenn determined to use his newly acquired flying
skills in the war effort. He left Muskingum College in the middle
of his junior year and enlisted in the Army Air Corps, which sent
him back to New Concord to await orders for military flight school.
After waiting three months for his orders from the Army, in March
1942 Glenn enlisted again, this time with the Navy as an aviation
cadet. Two weeks later he arrived at the Navy’s pre-flight school
located at the University of Iowa in Iowa City. After the
three-month course in Iowa, Glenn moved on to primary flight
training in Olathe, Kansas and then to basic and advanced training
in Corpus Christi, Texas. Glenn transferred from the Navy into the
U.S. Marine Corps during his training in Corpus Christi and earned
his wings as a second lieutenant at the end of March 1943.
Eventually assigned after graduation to VMO-155, a Marine fighter
squadron flying the new F4U Corsair, Glenn spent the next months in
California training with his new squadron. In February 1944, the
squadron received orders for overseas duty in the Pacific Theater of
the war.
After an initial assignment on Midway Island,
VMO-155 arrived at Majuro Atoll in the Marshall Islands in July 1944
for its first combat duty. The squadron’s primary mission consisted
of strafing and bombing runs on military installations located on
various Japanese controlled atolls bypassed during the American
advance up the island chain. In keeping with this advance the
squadron moved to Kwajalein Atoll in November 1944. Glenn completed
his overseas tour of duty in February 1945 with the rank of captain,
having flown fifty-nine combat missions and sustaining damage to his
Corsair by anti-aircraft fire on five occasions. For his
meritorious service Glenn received two Distinguished Flying Crosses
and ten Air Medals.
Assigned upon his return to the United States
to Cherry Point, North Carolina, and later to the Naval Air Test
Center at Patuxent River, Maryland, Glenn spent the remainder of the
war test flying aircraft. After the war ended in August 1945, Glenn
decided to stay in the military. He enjoyed life in the U.S. Marine
Corps, had considerable skills as a pilot, and thrived on the
challenges inherent in flying the latest developments in military
aircraft. During the late 1940s Glenn went through a number of duty
assignments, most notably in 1946 and 1947 with VMF-218, a Marine
fighter squadron based at Nan Yuan Field outside the Chinese capital
of Peiping. Glenn spent much of the early 1950s furthering his
military and aviation training. He completed the Naval School of
All-Weather Flight at Corpus Christi, Texas in 1950 and graduated
from the Amphibious Warfare School located in Quantico, Virginia in
1951. Glenn obtained the rank of major in June 1952.
In early 1953, after numerous attempts to
transfer from training assignments to a fighter squadron, Glenn
received orders for combat duty in Korea. Arriving at the airbase
near P’ohang, Korea in February 1953, Glenn spent the next four
months as the operations officer of VFM-311, a Marine squadron
flying the F9F Panther jet fighter-bomber. While with the squadron
Glenn flew sixty-three combat missions bombing and strafing enemy
positions and infrastructure in North Korea. Severely hit during
two missions by anti-aircraft fire, Glenn earned two more
Distinguished Flying Crosses and an additional eight Air Medals for
his steadiness under fire. Baseball star Ted Williams, called up
for active duty from the Marine Corps Reserve, often flew as Glenn’s
wingman during missions.
In the late spring of 1953, Glenn applied for
and gained admission into the U.S. Air Force pilot exchange
program. Transferred temporarily to an air base near Suwon, Korea,
he became a pilot with the Air Force’s 25th Fighter-Interceptor
Squadron flying the F-86 Sabre jet fighter. Glenn flew twenty-seven
missions during June and July with the 25th FIS, usually patrolling
for enemy aircraft along the border between China and North Korea.
While on these patrols Glenn shot down three enemy MiG jet fighters
and earned the nickname, “MiG Mad Marine.”
When Glenn returned from Korea at the end of
1953, he obtained a coveted assignment to the test pilot program at
the Naval Air Test Center at Patuxent River, Maryland. After an
intense six-month course of study Glenn graduated from the test
pilot school in July 1954 and spent the next two years testing the
armament design on new Navy and Marine aircraft. Transferred in
November 1956 to the Fighter Design Branch of the Navy Department’s
Bureau of Aeronautics in Washington, D.C., Glenn continued to be
involved in the development of new aircraft. Most of his work was
with the new Chance Vought F8U Crusader jet fighter he had flown as
a test pilot in Maryland. While with the Fighter Design Branch,
Glenn conceived the idea of using the F8U Crusader in an attempt to
break the existing transcontinental speed record. His plan called
for an average speed above the supersonic level and faster than the
586 miles per hour traveled by a bullet fired from a .45-caliber
pistol. Glenn named his proposal “Project Bullet.”
After many months spent planning the project
and persuading the military of its merits, Glenn took off in an
F8U-1P Crusader from Los Alamitos Naval Air Station in California at
6:04 am on July 16, 1957. Three hours and twenty-three minutes
later, in a flight involving refueling in mid-air three times, Glenn
landed at Floyd Bennett Field on Long Island. He broke the existing
record by twenty-one minutes, averaging 723 miles per hour in the
first coast-to-coast supersonic flight. Project Bullet earned Glenn
his fifth Distinguished Flying Cross and brought him to the
attention of the general public for the first time. Newspapers
across the country published his picture and a story on the flight,
with The New York Times writing that at thirty-six Glenn was
close to the “practical age limit for piloting complicated pieces of
machinery through the air.” New Concord, Ohio held its first parade
in Glenn’s honor and he appeared on the television program “Name
That Tune,” where he split $25,000 in winnings with his partner,
child actor Eddie Hodges.
Two years later John Glenn was in the public
spotlight once again, but this time the publicity was far more
intense and lasting. On October 4, 1957, with the launch by the
Soviet Union of Sputnik, the world’s first Earth satellite,
the United States entered into a competition with the Soviets for
technological superiority in the eyes of the world. In July 1958,
President Dwight Eisenhower signed legislation establishing the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), with the main
objective of placing an American into space. Later that year Glenn
became one of the more than one hundred military test pilots to
volunteer for selection into Project Mercury, NASA’s first manned
space program. On April 8, 1959, Glenn joined Lt. M. Scott
Carpenter, Lt. Commander Walter M. Schirra, Jr., and Lt. Commander
Alan B. Shepard, Jr. of the U.S. Navy and Captain L. Gordon Cooper,
Captain Virgil I. “Gus” Grissom, and Captain Donald K. “Deke”
Slayton of the U.S. Air Force at a press conference introducing the
newly appointed Project Mercury astronauts. Of the seven
astronauts, Glenn, recently promoted to Lt. Colonel, was the sole
representative from the U.S. Marine Corps.
During the selection process the seven
astronauts underwent extensive medical examinations at the Lovelace
Clinic in Albuquerque, New Mexico, followed by equally intense
physical and psychological testing at Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base in Dayton, Ohio. Following their selection into the NASA space
program the Mercury astronauts began a full schedule of training
designed to prepare them for what scientists could then only
speculate would be the conditions encountered in space. Other
training familiarized the astronauts with the Mercury spacecraft in
which they would travel into orbit. From the beginning of their
training the seven astronauts insisted they be directly involved in
the development of Project Mercury, especially in the design of the
spacecraft itself. Early in the program, for example, the
astronauts demanded unanimously that the spacecraft be equipped with
a window rather than just a retractable telescope. All were test
pilots who believed strongly in the necessity of having the means to
actively control their spacecraft, rather than simply be passengers
in some automated system. Due to their demands, each astronaut
became involved in some aspect in the design of the spacecraft.
During his first two years with NASA, when he was not undergoing
some aspect of his training, Glenn worked with the team of engineers
developing the instrument control panel for the Mercury spacecraft.
From the beginning of Project Mercury each of
the seven astronauts, being competitive by nature, vied to become
the first American launched into orbit. To John Glenn’s
disappointment, early in 1961 NASA officials chose Alan Shepard to
pilot the first space flight, followed by Gus Grissom and then
Glenn. Circumstances surrounding events in space that year,
however, made Glenn’s spot as the astronaut for the third space
flight fortuitous. NASA originally planned for the first three
Mercury launches to be sub-orbital flights in which the spacecraft
would arch briefly into space before splashing down in the Atlantic
Ocean east of Cape Canaveral. NASA’s first two manned launches,
Alan Shepard’s flight on May 5, 1961 aboard Freedom 7 and Gus
Grissom’s flight aboard Liberty Bell 7 on July 21, 1961, both
successfully obtained such sub-orbital journeys into space. NASA’s
plans for the third flight changed when on August 6, 1961 Gherman
Titov became the second cosmonaut to orbit the Earth for the Soviet
Union. Titov’s 24-hour, seventeen-orbit space flight followed
closely after the one orbit flight of cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin
launched on April 12, 1961. The success of the Shepard and Grissom
flights, plus the need to match the Soviet Union’s space exploits,
convinced NASA administrators to make the agency’s third space
flight the first attempt to place an American into orbit. In
November 1961, NASA announced that John Glenn would pilot the first
American attempt at orbital space flight.
Tentatively scheduled for launch sometime in
December 1961, weather and technical problems forced repeated
cancellations of Glenn’s space flight. On one occasion, January 27,
1962, Glenn spent six hours strapped on his back inside the
spacecraft waiting for weather conditions to clear before NASA
officials cancelled the launch. Finally, after ten postponements
NASA successfully launched its Mercury-Atlas Mission Number 6 on
February 20, 1962. At 9:47 in the morning, after a two-hour weather
delay, Glenn rode his Friendship 7 spacecraft into orbit atop
the Atlas booster rocket number 109-D. Over the course of the next
four hours and fifty-six minutes Glenn, flying between 160 and 256
kilometers above the Earth’s surface at a rate of more than 28,000
kilometers per hour, orbited Earth three times and splashed down
without incident into the Atlantic Ocean near Grand Turk Island in
the Bahamas.
Although an
overall success, Glenn’s time in space was not without incident and
a fair amount of suspense. Toward the end of the first orbit the
spacecraft’s automatic control system malfunctioned throwing the
capsule’s yaw attitude some 20 degrees to the right. Glenn spent
much of the remaining two orbits on manual control as he tried
repeatedly to reset the gyros of the automatic control system.
Toward the end of the flight a warning light, which subsequently
turned out to be a false reading, indicated the heat shield on Friendship 7 was loose. This warning caused some nervous
moments for the flight’s controllers since a damaged heat shield
could result in the disintegration of the spacecraft and its pilot
during the 3,000-degree heat of re-entry. To cope with the
perceived problem technicians decided to keep the retro-rocket pack
attached to the heat shield to help secure it. The normal procedure
called for jettisoning the pack after the rockets fired to slow the
spacecraft for re-entry. The result was what Glenn called “a real
fireball” as the pack burned away during his re-entry through the
atmosphere.
Despite these
glitches, Glenn’s flight aboard Friendship 7 proved a triumph
for the fledgling NASA manned space program. During his flight
Glenn performed a series of experiments designed to test man’s
ability to function in the weightlessness of space. Prior to the
flight of Friendship 7 scientists outside of the Soviet Union
could only speculate on the affects upon the human body of prolonged
exposure to zero gravity. There were doubts as to a person’s
ability to breath properly, to coordinate physical tasks, or to
swallow food in a weightless environment. Some scientists theorized
that a person’s eyes would not maintain their proper shape, while
others thought zero gravity would cause havoc with the equilibrium
in the inner ear, causing debilitating nausea. None of these
theories proved correct. Glenn ate solid malt tablets and food from
tubes as he orbited Earth and underwent a variety of physical
tests. Asked repeatedly how he felt throughout the flight by
doctors and ground controllers, Glenn reported no symptoms of
nausea.
Although much
of his time in space was taken up by the problems caused by the
malfunctioned control system, Glenn did provide observations on his
view of Earth from space to the sixteen ground control stations
located around the globe. He noted a large dust storm over the
Sahara desert, commented on the lights of Perth, Australia turned on
as an experiment to test his night vision, and gave detailed
descriptions of the three sunsets and sunrises he went through
during the course of the space flight. He also took photographs of
Earth through the spacecraft’s window with a handheld camera, using
up four rolls of film during his time in space. The Friendship 7 space flight ended at 2:43 pm EST after a flawless re-entry and
splashdown. Twenty-one minutes later the destroyer U.S.S. Noa hoisted the spacecraft with Glenn still inside onto its deck.
Glenn later transferred by helicopter to the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Randolph, where he spent some time debriefing before
being flown that evening to Grand Turk Island for two days of more
extensive debriefings and medical tests.
The space flight of John Glenn aboard the Friendship 7 spacecraft came at a time of increased Cold War
tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union. The Berlin
Wall was built during the year prior to the launch and in the autumn
of 1962 the world witnessed the Cuban missile crisis. In 1961, the
Soviet Union surged ahead of the United States in the “Space Race”
with the orbital flights of cosmonauts Yuri Gagarin and Gherman
Titov. Public expectations in the United States, therefore, were
high as NASA attempted to match Soviet achievements by placing an
American into orbit. In keeping with NASA’s policy of openness, the
major networks broadcast the Friendship 7 launch live on
television to millions of people around the world. Thousands of
people gathered in spots around Cape Canaveral to witness the launch
in person, while in New York City an estimated crowd of 5,000 people
paused during their daily commute to view the launch on a large
monitor set up in Grand Central Station.
The success of the Friendship 7 space
flight sent the nation into a patriotic fervor and made the
mission’s astronaut an instant hero. John Glenn’s name was on the
front page of newspapers across the country and around the globe.
After the flight Glenn received hundreds of thousands of pieces of
mail from people living in every state in the union and from close
to one hundred foreign countries, including the Soviet Union. In
thousands of elementary classrooms in America schoolchildren wrote
letters about and drew pictures of the event. Many classes bound
their efforts together into an album sent to Glenn with a cover
letter from the teacher stating what an inspiration he was to the
children. Glenn received hundreds of invitations for public
appearances at events ranging from local Boy Scout meetings to
meetings of prestigious scientific organizations. Scores of
individuals sent him the poem or song they wrote to commemorate the
space flight, while across the country, school buildings, streets,
and newborns were named after Glenn.
During the two weeks immediately following
Glenn’s space flight, the nation celebrated on a scale not seen
since Charles Lindbergh’s solo trans-Atlantic flight in 1927. On
February 23, 1962, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson flew to Grand
Turk Island to escort Glenn on a flight to Patrick Air Force Base in
Florida, where Glenn was reunited with his family. The Glenn
family, accompanied by Vice President Johnson and some of the
Mercury astronauts, then proceeded by automobile to Cape Canaveral
where they were scheduled to meet with President John F. Kennedy.
The eighteen-mile trip between the air force base and the NASA
facility turned into a parade as thousands of people from around
Cocoa Beach stood along the highway to greet the returned
astronaut. Later that day, during ceremonies held at Cape
Canaveral, President Kennedy presented Glenn with NASA’s
Distinguished Service Medal.
By invitation of President Kennedy, on February
26th the Mercury astronauts and their families met with the
president and vice president at a White House reception. After the
event, John and Annie Glenn, riding in an open car with Vice
President Johnson, led a parade through Washington, D.C. to the
Capitol Building. Despite dismal rainy weather thousands of people
lined the route. Upon arrival at the Capitol Building, Glenn had
the rare honor of giving a speech to a special joint session of
Congress.
New York City vividly illustrated the public
enthusiasm over the success of the Friendship 7 space flight
when the Mercury astronauts arrived there on March 1, 1962. An
estimated four million people turned out in frigid temperatures to
cheer as John and Annie Glenn, again in an open automobile with Vice
President Johnson, rode in a procession down Broadway, temporarily
named Astronaut Way for the event. New Yorkers showered thirty-five
hundred tons of paper along the route in the biggest ticker tape
parade in the city’s history. The motorcade stopped shortly after
noon at City Hall, where Glenn gave a brief speech to a cheering
crowd. It then proceeded to the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel where Glenn
received the city’s Medal of Honor at a luncheon held in honor of
the Mercury astronauts. The following day the astronauts visited
the United Nations, where Glenn gave a brief address. He stressed,
as he had in all his speeches following the space flight, the team
effort required to place a man in orbit and the importance of the
space program to the nation.
On the next day, March 3, 1962, John and Annie
Glenn returned to their hometown of New Concord, Ohio for their
fourth parade in eight days. On another cold and blustery day
75,000 people converged on the small town of 2,100 residents in east
central Ohio to get a glimpse of the local hero. After the parade
Glenn gave a speech to a packed gymnasium during ceremonies held at
Muskingum College. As part of the ceremonies the college, John and
Annie Glenn’s alma mater, named the gymnasium for its famous
alumnus.
After the initial outpouring of public
jubilation about his space flight, Glenn returned to his work in the
NASA space program. Over the course of the next two years he worked
on the design of the crew station in the Apollo spacecraft and
manned various ground control stations during later Project Mercury
missions. He also became a goodwill ambassador for the space
agency. He toured Japan in 1963, various countries in Europe in
1965 and 1966, and often met with leaders in Congress. The awards
and tributes continued unabated. Glenn lobbied hard with NASA
officials to return to space as part of the two-man or three-man
crews of the Gemini and Apollo programs, but was denied all
requests. Unknown to Glenn at the time, President Kennedy had
judged him to be too valuable a national asset to risk in another
space flight. It would be thirty-six years after the flight of Friendship 7 until NASA finally granted John Glenn his request
to return to space.
Public recognition of the feat he achieved on
February 20, 1962 has followed John Glenn all of his life. In a
statement he wrote in 1982 for the 20th anniversary of the flight
Glenn noted how “it is a rare day, even now, that someone does not
ask me something about that orbital experience.” One result of his
space flight was the friendship Glenn formed with both President
John F. Kennedy and his brother, Robert. The two Kennedy brothers
recognized the political potential of Glenn’s popularity. With
their support Glenn resigned from his position with NASA, submitted
his retirement from the U.S. Marine Corps, and ran for the U.S.
Senate in the 1964 Ohio Democratic primary. Glenn’s first political
campaign ended abruptly, however, when a head injury sustained in an
accidental fall forced him to drop out of the race.
Although John Glenn eventually made a full
recovery, the initial injury to his head left him bedridden with
severe vertigo and required more than nine months of recuperation.
Glenn spent much of his convalescence reading through his mail.
Hundreds of thousands of children and adults wrote him a letter
following the Friendship 7 space flight. He received
thousands more letters in response to his decision to enter politics
and in reaction to his accident and injury. While recovering from
his injury, Glenn sorted through this massive amount of
correspondence and compiled more than four hundred of his
favorites. In late 1964, the World Book Encyclopedia Science
Service, Inc. published these letters in a book titled, P.S. I
Listened to Your Heartbeat: Letters to John Glenn.
After his aborted attempt to enter politics,
John Glenn entered the business world when the Royal Crown Cola
Company hired him as vice president for corporate development in
October 1964. Beginning in 1966, Glenn served the company as the
president of Royal Crown International. His duties took him to
countries around the world where he negotiated agreements for the
distribution of the company’s products. During the 1960s and early
1970s Glenn also served on the editorial board of the World Book
Year Book and was a member of the Board of Directors of the
Questor Corporation, an international consumer products conglomerate
comprised of companies manufacturing automotive parts and sporting
goods. In 1967, Wolper Productions, Inc. selected Glenn to retrace
the route through Africa taken during 1871 by Sir Henry Stanley in
his search of Dr. David Livingstone. The production company
broadcasted footage of Glenn’s trip as part of their “Great
Explorations” television program.
In the late 1960s Glenn joined into a
partnership with Henri Landwirth and other businessmen to build a
Holiday Inn franchise motel in Florida. Glenn and Landwirth
originally met and became friends in 1960 when Landwirth was the
manager of the hotel in Cocoa Beach, Florida where the Mercury
astronauts stayed while training at Cape Canaveral. The partnership
built a hotel on land near the new Disney World theme park south of
Orlando. The success of this motel eventually led to the
development by the partnership of three more successful Holiday Inns
in the Orlando area.
John Glenn continued to explore the political
arena throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s. He campaigned
heavily in 1968 with Robert Kennedy during Kennedy’s tragically
aborted presidential campaign. In 1970, Glenn once again entered
the Ohio Democratic primary, but lost to Cleveland businessman,
Howard H. Metzenbaum. Later that year Ohio Governor John Gilligan
appointed Glenn as chairman of the Citizens Task Force on
Environmental Protection. The task force surveyed the environmental
problems in Ohio and made various recommendations to rectify those
problems in a final report published in June 1971. The work
accomplished by the task force was a major factor in the formation
of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.
In the 1974 Democratic primary, John Glenn
tried for a third time to obtain a seat in the U.S. Senate. His
opponent in the primary election once again was Howard Metzenbaum.
Glenn beat Metzenbaum at the polls this time by a margin of one
hundred thousand votes and went on to win his first term in the U.S.
Senate in the November general election. Glenn subsequently won
re-election to the U.S. Senate three times - his twenty-four years
of public service a record for a Senator from Ohio. A landslide
victory in his 1980 re-election campaign convinced him to seek the
Democratic Party’s nomination for president in the 1984 elections.
Seen by many in 1983 as a front-runner in the campaign, Glenn was
forced to drop out of the race in March 1984 after poor showings in
the early primaries. He left the race saddled with a large campaign
debt that took him more than a decade to settle. The debt issue did
not deter his popularity with the voters of Ohio, however, as Glenn
won re-election to the Senate in 1986 and 1992 by large margins.
As a U.S. Senator, Glenn quietly worked for
legislation designed to improve the lives of Americans. He is
perhaps best known as the author of numerous bills to restrict the
proliferation of nuclear weapons around the world. Glenn’s
background in science and technology made him a leader in the
passage of regulations designed to clean up the decades of
radioactive waste piled up at the nation’s nuclear weapons sites. A
proponent of government efficiency, Senator Glenn also proposed and
helped pass legislation to create inspector generals in federal
departments and agencies to end waste, fraud and abuse in government
spending.
From his years spent as a military test pilot
and NASA astronaut Glenn also brought to the Senate a firm belief in
the value to the nation of basic scientific and technological
research and development. This belief extended not only to his
support for the nation’s space program, but also to every aspect of
human inquiry into the unknown. In a statement made in 1987 for the
25th anniversary of the Friendship 7 space flight, Senator
Glenn called Americans “a curious questing people” and said, “the
exploration of the unknown is nothing less than an expression of
America’s spirit.” In this spirit of exploration of the unknown,
Senator Glenn made his celebrated return to space in 1998.
From his work as a member of the Senate Special
Committee on Aging, in the mid-1990s Senator Glenn began to see
parallels between the human aging process and some of the negative
symptoms experienced by astronauts exposed for a lengthy period of
time to the weightlessness of a space environment. After discussing
his ideas with numerous doctors and scientists he found many of them
interested in one day doing research about the similarities between
aging and space travel. Glenn began meeting with NASA officials on
this topic in 1995, and participated in an Aging and Space Flight
Conference held in February 1997. It was generally agreed that in
order to learn more about possible connections between the aging
process on Earth and the weightlessness of space, NASA needed to
send an older individual into space. Glenn saw himself as the ideal
candidate. After a thorough review on the merits of the scientific
knowledge to be gained by sending an older person into space, NASA
officials agreed to place Glenn on an upcoming space shuttle mission
if he could pass the mandatory physical requirements demanded of all
current astronauts. Glenn passed the required physical without
difficulty, so in January 1998 NASA announced the selection of Glenn
as a payload specialist aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery Mission STS-95 scheduled for late October.
John Glenn spent the next eight months
commuting between his duties in Washington, D.C. and his training in
Houston, Texas for the NASA mission. He also found time to deal
with the enormous media attention generated by his selection as a
shuttle astronaut. The public responded overwhelmingly with support
for his decision to once again travel into space. As in 1962, Glenn
found himself the recipient of thousands of cards and letters from
both children and adults writing to express their thoughts on his
latest endeavor. As a seventy-seven year old astronaut and the
oldest person ever to travel in space, Glenn became an inspiration
to a generation of senior citizens and an example of how age and
activity need not be exclusive.
The Space Shuttle Discovery launched
into orbit on October 29, 1998 for a nine-day mission. During the
mission the seven crewmembers used a SPACEHAB module to conduct over
eighty experiments, released and then retrieved a Spartan satellite
built to study the Sun and solar winds, and tested hardware slated
for use in a later shuttle mission to service the Hubble Space
Telescope. In addition to his duties as a payload specialist, John
Glenn underwent a series of medical tests prior to, during, and
after the space flight. NASA designed the tests to monitor for
various medical conditions such as osteoporosis, muscle loss, and
immune system suppression commonly suffered by astronauts due to the
absence of gravity. Other experiments tested Glenn’s balance and
perception, his protein metabolism, and his heart and blood flow.
Glenn also wore a harness during many of his nights in space to
monitor sleep disorders, another common problem in space travel.
After a successful mission totaling one hundred and thirty-four
orbits Discovery touched down at Cape Canaveral on November
7, 1998.
The completion of his second trip into space
coincided with the close of John Glenn’s career in the U.S. Senate.
On February 20, 1997, the 35th anniversary of the Friendship 7 space flight, he announced his intention to retire from the Senate
when his fourth term expired at the end of 1998. As he stated in
his retirement speech, however, Glenn viewed leaving the U.S. Senate
not as an end, but as a beginning in a new phase of his life. In
1999, Glenn co-chaired with Senator Robert Dole the National
Commission on Mathematics and Science Teaching. He chaired the
National Commission on Service Learning from 2000-2002, and
continues to have an active interest in ways to combine learning and
community service for high school and college students.
After careers as a Marine aviator, NASA
astronaut, and U.S. Senator, Glenn came to deplore the negative
image many young people hold towards a public service career.
Determined to do what he could to reverse this negativity, in
October 1998 he joined with The Ohio State University to create the
John Glenn Institute for Public Service and Public Policy. Glenn
presently holds a position as an adjutant professor in both the
Department of Political Science and the School of Public Policy and
Management at Ohio State and is Chairman of the Board of Directors
for the John Glenn Institute. Through these positions Glenn
continues to share the knowledge gained from more than fifty years
of service to the public. |