Houston Chronicle

Astronaut took part in first shuttle spacewalk

Peterson had long Air Force, NASA career, but ‘greatest joy’ was time spent with family

- By Alex Stuckey

Col. Don Peterson spent 24 years in the Air Force, became a NASA astronaut during the Apollo era and participat­ed in the first spacewalk of the 30year space shuttle program.

But after his death Sunday at the age of 84, his family will remember him more for his honesty and gentleness than for his stellar career.

“Don would tell you his greatest joy was caring for and spending time with his wife and family,” his obituary reads. “Saying ‘I love you’ came easy and often from him. … He told his grandchild­ren, ‘holding them in his rocking chair was better than floating in space.’ His unconditio­nal love for all of them will be treasured always.”

Peterson was the second astronaut to die over the weekend, both in Texas. The first was Alan Bean, the fourth man to walk on the moon, who died Saturday at the age of 86.

Originally from Mississipp­i, Peterson became an astronaut in 1969, just a few months after the first lunar landing in July of that year. Though Peterson never reached the moon, he rocketed out of Earth’s atmosphere on Space Shuttle Challenger in 1983, just two years into the 30-year shuttle program.

On Tuesday morning, NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e said on Twitter he was “saddened” by Peterson’s death.

“Don will always be part of

the @NASA family & his legacy as a pioneer in space lives on,” Bridenstin­e wrote.

Peterson is known for participat­ing in the shuttle program’s first spacewalk, alongside astronaut Story Musgrave, during his 1983 Challenger flight. But flying was always part of Peterson’s life, even as a child.

“He would later tell his own children that as a young boy he had reoccurrin­g dreams of flying, without the aid of wings or a plane, just soaring above the Earth,” the obituary reads. “This dream set him on a quest for knowledge to discover the universe and its secrets.”

At 17, Peterson boarded a train bound for New York to attend the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, from which he graduated in 1955. He became a pilot and later, in 1962, received a master’s degree in nuclear engineerin­g from the Air Force Institute of Technology at Ohiobased Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

He became an astronaut in 1969, but only went to space once. He retired from NASA in 1984, logging 120 hours in space.

Peterson is survived by his brother, Gil Peterson, and his three children. Peterson’s wife, Bonnie, died last year at the age of 82. They were married for almost 60 years, the family said.

A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday at Crowder Funeral Home, located at 111 E. Medical Center Blvd., in Webster.

“His family is comforted knowing his childhood dream of flying has been fulfilled in this life and hereafter,” his obituary reads.

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