Texarkana Gazette

John Glenn still inspires 55 years after his 1st orbit

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS, Ohio—John Glenn is continuing to inspire 55 years after becoming the first American to orbit Earth.

Since Glenn’s death on Dec. 8 at the age of 95, untold numbers of devotees have stopped by an exhibit of his artifacts on the campus of Ohio State University, backers have begun fundraisin­g for an observator­y and astronomy park in Glenn’s name and work has begun on a 7-foot statue in his likeness.

While he also spent time as a military test pilot and U.S. senator, it was the history-making Mercury mission that propelled Glenn and his spacecraft Friendship 7 into the history books. Monday marked the anniversar­y of the flight.

For 4 hours, 55 minutes and 23 seconds on Feb. 20, 1962, the capsule circled the Earth three times, making Glenn the first American to orbit Earth.

Jeffrey Thomas, an archivist at Ohio State who curated the Glenn display on display until March, said the event was so intensely anticipate­d and followed by the public that it made Glenn an instant hero.

He said the world knew debris from a burning heat shield was flying by Glenn’s window as he entered the atmosphere and into radio silence.

“So, here he goes into the atmosphere and everything’s black for 10 minutes,” Thomas said. “Did he make it? Did he burn up?”

Glenn was fine, and he went on to a long life remembered in the display. Among items displayed are his baby book, his first pilot’s license, flight logs, personal notes, anti-aircraft shell fragments recovered from a jet fighter-bomber he flew during the Korean War, patches, jackets, medals and headgear.

The walls of artist Zenos Frudakis’ studio in eastern Pennsylvan­ia are also plastered with photos of Glenn, as the sculptor produces clay models for an eventual full-size sculpture.

Frudakis has connected with Adam Sackowitz, a New York graduate student pursuing a sculpture, portrait and other tangible remembranc­es of Glenn. An initial applicatio­n seeking a spot on the Historic Register for Glenn’s birthplace was rejected. The National Park Service has indicated Glenn’s boyhood home in New Concord is more suitable for the designatio­n.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Astronaut John Glenn climbs inside the capsule of the Mercury spacecraft Friendship 7 before becoming the first American to orbit the Earth, at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Feb. 20, 1962, in Cape Canaveral, Fla.
Associated Press Astronaut John Glenn climbs inside the capsule of the Mercury spacecraft Friendship 7 before becoming the first American to orbit the Earth, at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Feb. 20, 1962, in Cape Canaveral, Fla.

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