Los Angeles Times

Space race hero inspired a nation

JOHN GLENN, 1921 - 2016

- By Geraldine Baum and Valerie J. Nelson

When his bell-shaped capsule splashed into the ocean after orbiting Earth again and again, John Glenn emerged an instant hero — the fighter-jock pilot of few words who in just five hours of circling the planet helped cement America’s faith that it could lead the race into outer space.

He walked across the deck of the aircraft carrier where Friendship 7 had been lowered as casually as a guy who’d just returned from running a crosstown errand, exuding a confidence and swagger later mythologiz­ed in Tom Wolfe’s “The Right Stuff.”

Decades later, at the age of 77, Glenn would return to space on a nine-day mission aboard the shuttle Discovery after selling himself as a human guinea pig who would demonstrat­e the effects of space travel on the elderly.

Glenn, who also served for 24 years as a U.S. senator from Ohio, died Thursday at the age of 95, a day after being hospitaliz­ed in Columbus, Ohio.

“When John Glenn blasted off from Cape Canaveral atop an Atlas rocket in 1962, he lifted the hopes of a nation. And when his Friendship 7 spacecraft splashed down a few hours later, the first American to orbit the Earth reminded us that with courage and a spirit of discovery there’s no limit to the heights we can reach together,” President Obama said in a state-

ment.

Glenn was the last surviving astronaut of the original Mercury Seven group, preceded in death by Alan B. Shepard Jr., Gus Grissom, Wally Schirra, Gordon Cooper, Deke Slayton and Scott Carpenter.

In his first historic flight, Glenn circled Earth for nearly five hours in a tiny spaceship on Feb. 20, 1962, the first American to orbit the planet. When he returned to space in 1998, his voyage did nearly as much to revive interest in America’s space program as his first pioneering voyage had to ignite the country’s fascinatio­n with space exploratio­n.

Glenn first earned broad public attention in 1962 in the bell-shaped space capsule Friendship 7 — a flight that NASA’s mission control worried might burn up upon reentering Earth’s atmosphere.

A war hero and test pilot who earned fame even before he was named to the Mercury team, Glenn seemed to have the right stuff and more.

Not only did Glenn “have courage and ambition, but he also had supreme confidence in himself and his own abilities,” qualities that distinguis­hed him from most mortals, said Frank Van Riper, who wrote the 1983 biography “Glenn: The Astronaut Who Would Be President.”

“That type of confidence can let him sit atop a rocket and have his blood pressure not change at all.”

After his first space flight, Glenn, then 40, was elevated to celebrity status as much by his personal charm and heroics as he was by the pioneering era that he helped define. Before Glenn made his three loops around Earth in a four-hour, 56-minute flight, only Soviet astronauts, test dummies and dogs had made historic “firsts” in space. Almost a year before Glenn’s flight, cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin had become the first man in space.

Glenn was neither the first nor the second American in space. Those distinctio­ns belonged to Shepard — whose entire voyage lasted 15 minutes — and Grissom, who followed Shepard months later. Yet Glenn’s flight raised the most passion and publicity in America. Glenn stayed aloft for hours, focusing Americans’ rapt attention on his every orbit and ultimately restoring America’s confidence in its technologi­cal prowess.

President Kennedy was apparently so relieved that Glenn helped put America back in the space race, and so concerned about the astronaut’s well-being, that he vetoed a return to space by Glenn. Rather, Kennedy marked Glenn as an American with a political future. After a few early political defeats, the astronaut was elected to the U.S. Senate from Ohio in 1974.

Although Glenn remained a supporter of NASA, he tried to steer clear of being seen as the Senate “astronaut,” preferring to make his mark in other areas. He was perhaps best-known as the author of bills to restrict the proliferat­ion of nuclear weapons around the world. He also helped pass legislatio­n to clean up radioactiv­e waste at the nation’s nuclear weapons sites.

Yet his drive to return to space never fully abated, and he relentless­ly lobbied the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion for another space flight. Glenn insisted that he was not driven to return to space for the thrill of the ride or as a passenger with a congressio­nal free pass, but as a scientist-explorer.

“What you’re up there for,” he said, “is to accomplish something for the country that may break us into some new areas of research that may benefit an awful lot of people.”

After his late-in-life flight, dozens of tests done on his body showed that he handled the rigors of space as well as astronauts roughly half his age, NASA scientists said when results were released in 2000.

In 2012, Glenn and Carpenter received a hero’s welcome when they returned to the Cape Canaveral launchpad to mark the 50th anniversar­y of Glenn’s orbital flight.

The national attention after the 1962 flight was “almost unbelievab­le,” Glenn said at the event, and he added that he and his colleagues learned to live with the acclaim “or tried to, anyway.”

John Herschel Glenn Jr. was born July 18, 1921, in Cambridge, Ohio. His mother, Clara, a teacher, and father, John, soon moved to the tiny town of New Concord, where his father opened a plumbing business. At 3, he met Anna “Annie” Castor, the 4-year-old daughter of the town dentist. The pair started dating in high school and married in 1944.

In high school, Glenn was an honors student who excelled in sports and student politics — and played the lead in the senior class play.

A religious young man, Glenn enrolled in Muskingum College, a small Presbyteri­an school in New Concord, where he sang in the church choir and played football. While there, Glenn learned to fly in a civilian program run by the Navy.

When it came time to enlist, he joined the Marines, leaving college behind after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor.

During World War II, he rose to the rank of captain and decided to make a career in the military. By the end of the war, he had flown 59 missions with F4U fighters and had been awarded two Distinguis­hed Flying Crosses and 10 Air Medals.

The Korean War meant 90 more missions for the Marine aviator, and many more medals, including a third and fourth Distinguis­hed Flying Cross.

“Glenn grew up with the archetypal Protestant work ethic and the idea that good things happen to people who work hard,” Van Riper said. “Add to this [his] sense of confidence and the idea in the military that you succeed if you work hard, and it explains why he pursued tougher and tougher assignment­s.”

As a test pilot, Glenn pushed his bosses to let him attempt a transconti­nental flight in an F8U-1 Crusader fighter aircraft. On July 16, 1957, he set a speed record of 3 hours, 23 minutes and 8.4 seconds

flying from Los Angeles to New York, picking up a fifth Distinguis­hed Flying Cross and a taste for fame.

Two years later, Glenn volunteere­d for an elite corps of pilots who would become the country’s first astronauts, riding rockets into space. NASA pared an original list of about 500 test pilots down to 110 and then to the Mercury Seven.

Training was rigorous and tedious. In addition to studying astrophysi­cs and biology, the new astronauts were exposed to high heat, strong gravitatio­nal forces and the sense of weightless­ness. Glenn became a pacesetter in training and moral leadership. He would run extra miles in a morning workout and lecture the others against carousing.

When Glenn took his pioneering turn in space, astronaut Carpenter spoke for all Americans when he radioed from launch control just before liftoff, “Godspeed, John Glenn.” Carpenter later said he had tried to keep the mood light by telling Glenn: “Remember, John, this was built by the low bidder.”

NASA cut the flight short — Glenn was supposed to orbit Earth seven times — when mechanical failure created concern that Friendship 7’s heat shield might fall off during reentry and cause the capsule to burn up.

Although he remained calm, Glenn later told Life magazine that he had been prepared to die. The heat shield held. After Glenn’s safe return, he became a national hero. Bathed in the spotlight, Glenn was typically low-key.

“It’s been a long day,” he said after being fished out of the Atlantic Ocean by helicopter, “but it has been very interestin­g.”

Back on Earth, Glenn was greeted by Kennedy. Four million New Yorkers showered him and his family with ticker tape, and the New York Times called him “America’s first flesh-and-blood Buck Rogers.”

Ref lecting on that moment decades later while sitting in his thirdfloor office at the John Glenn School of Public Affairs at Ohio State University, Glenn was at a loss to explain the adulation: “It’s true we got more attention. It wasn’t something we planned. Truth is, I just don’t know why it happened.”

Glenn retired from the military in 1965 and entered private business, serving first as vice president of corporate planning and then as president of the Royal Crown Cola Co. He also made a fortune with business investment­s that included building Holiday Inns in Florida.

Within a few years, he decided to try politics. After losing to Howard Metzenbaum in the 1970 Democratic primary race in Ohio for a U.S. Senate seat, Glenn ran against him again in 1974.

During the campaign, Metzenbaum contrasted his business background with Glenn’s military and astronaut credential­s, saying his opponent had “never worked for a living.”

Glenn’s reply came to be known as the “Gold Star Mothers” speech. He challenged Metzenbaum to tell wounded veterans “they didn’t hold a job” and tell any Gold Star mother — a woman whose child who died while serving in the military — that “her son did not hold a job.”

Glenn won the nomination and the general election.

Jimmy Carter considered making Glenn his running mate in the 1976 presidenti­al race, but after Glenn gave an uninspired address to the Democratic National Convention, Carter chose Walter Mondale. Nearly a decade later, Glenn ran for president and racked up $3 million in debt but didn’t make it out of the primaries.

“He was never really a coalition builder,” Van Riper said.

And if he was considered a bit of a square by the other Mercury astronauts, that image intensifie­d in the Senate, where he served until 1999. But in Glenn’s post-Watergate class of 1974, he was always a respected colleague, considered a sincerely decent man.

His Norman Rockwell character and reputation for unparallel­ed principle were severely tested in 1989 during the so-called Keating Five scandal. He was one of five senators investigat­ed by the Senate Ethics Committee for using clout to keep federal regulators out of the way of savings-and-loan mogul Charles Keating Jr. The committee said Glenn used “poor judgment” in accepting a $200,000 donation from Keating but cleared the senator of wrongdoing.

Through all the years after his famous space flight, Glenn continued flying. Almost every weekend he would escape Washington for Ohio in his Beechcraft Baron, with his wife as his co-pilot. When he sold his plane in early 2012, Glenn noted that he still held a valid pilot’s license.

In 1995, he had started campaignin­g to return to space. As a member of the Senate Select Committee on Aging, he had learned that the aging process on Earth, in many ways, is similar to the effects of weightless­ness, and he decided he wanted to know why.

Glenn approached NASA chief Dan Goldin and pressed to serve as a crew member on a Discovery flight as a test subject for geriatric experiment­s. Goldin gave the goahead after aging experts insisted that Glenn’s mission might produce good science and NASA’s own doctors found Glenn in good health.

Glenn had kept fit throughout the decades, running in his youth and power-walking in his later years around his Bethesda, Md., neighborho­od. He lifted weights, ate well, took vitamins and kept trim.

The day after returning to Earth on the space shuttle, Glenn admitted he had felt “a little woozy” upon landing but relayed a message aimed at other senior citizens. “Old folks have ambitions and dreams too, like everyone else. ... Why don’t they go for them? Don’t sit on a couch someplace,” he said.

But age did catch up. Glenn sold off his airplanes and stopped flying in 2013. Last year, he gave up driving too.

His return to space was, in a way, Glenn’s attempt at writing his own epitaph.

“Going back up there was a nice capstone to a career that was always centered on that 1962 flight,” Van Riper said. “He’s going to be remembered as the last American hero.”

Glenn, who was awarded the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom in 2012, is survived by his wife, Annie; two children, David and Carolyn Ann; and two grandchild­ren.

 ?? Associated Press ?? THE RIGHT STUFF — AND MORE John Glenn and his wife, Annie, wave during a rainy parade in Washington, D.C., honoring the celebrated astronaut after his return from space in February 1962. Also in the car are Vice President Lyndon Johnson and Glenn’s...
Associated Press THE RIGHT STUFF — AND MORE John Glenn and his wife, Annie, wave during a rainy parade in Washington, D.C., honoring the celebrated astronaut after his return from space in February 1962. Also in the car are Vice President Lyndon Johnson and Glenn’s...
 ?? Associated Press ?? WAR HERO AND TEST PILOT Glenn performs a test in the control room of the NASA tracking ship Coastal Sentry at Cape Canaveral, Fla., in May 1963. “He had supreme confidence in himself,” his biographer said.
Associated Press WAR HERO AND TEST PILOT Glenn performs a test in the control room of the NASA tracking ship Coastal Sentry at Cape Canaveral, Fla., in May 1963. “He had supreme confidence in himself,” his biographer said.
 ?? Vincent P. Connolly Associated Press ?? A FLIGHT OF PASSION AND PUBLICITY Glenn, President Kennedy and Vice President Johnson inspect the Friendship 7 capsule on Feb. 23, 1962. Glenn made three loops around Earth in his four-hour, 56-minute flight.
Vincent P. Connolly Associated Press A FLIGHT OF PASSION AND PUBLICITY Glenn, President Kennedy and Vice President Johnson inspect the Friendship 7 capsule on Feb. 23, 1962. Glenn made three loops around Earth in his four-hour, 56-minute flight.
 ?? Associated Press ?? THE FIRST AMERICAN TO ORBIT EARTH Astronaut John Glenn climbs into the capsule of Friendship 7 at Cape Canaveral, Fla., in 1962.
Associated Press THE FIRST AMERICAN TO ORBIT EARTH Astronaut John Glenn climbs into the capsule of Friendship 7 at Cape Canaveral, Fla., in 1962.
 ?? Harvey Georges Associated Press ?? FROM SPACE TO THE SENATE Sen. John Glenn (D-Ohio) speaks to a group of Youngstown steelworke­rs at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., in 1974. Although he remained a supporter of NASA, he tried to steer clear of being seen as the Senate “astronaut,”...
Harvey Georges Associated Press FROM SPACE TO THE SENATE Sen. John Glenn (D-Ohio) speaks to a group of Youngstown steelworke­rs at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., in 1974. Although he remained a supporter of NASA, he tried to steer clear of being seen as the Senate “astronaut,”...
 ?? Elise Amendola Associated Press ?? ‘NEVER REALLY A COALITION BUILDER’ Glenn, campaignin­g early for the 1984 Democratic presidenti­al nomination, greets supporters in Massachuse­tts in 1983. He racked up $3 million in debt and didn’t make it out of the primaries.
Elise Amendola Associated Press ‘NEVER REALLY A COALITION BUILDER’ Glenn, campaignin­g early for the 1984 Democratic presidenti­al nomination, greets supporters in Massachuse­tts in 1983. He racked up $3 million in debt and didn’t make it out of the primaries.
 ?? Associated Press ?? A RESPECTED COLLEAGUE Glenn addresses the 1976 Democratic National Convention in New York. Jimmy Carter considered making Glenn his running mate but instead chose Walter Mondale of Minnesota.
Associated Press A RESPECTED COLLEAGUE Glenn addresses the 1976 Democratic National Convention in New York. Jimmy Carter considered making Glenn his running mate but instead chose Walter Mondale of Minnesota.
 ?? Bob Pearson AFP/Getty Images ?? A RETURN TO THE COSMOS Decades after his famed flight, Glenn, 77, was part of a mission on the shuttle Discovery after selling himself as a human guinea pig who would show the effects of space travel on the elderly.
Bob Pearson AFP/Getty Images A RETURN TO THE COSMOS Decades after his famed flight, Glenn, 77, was part of a mission on the shuttle Discovery after selling himself as a human guinea pig who would show the effects of space travel on the elderly.

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