The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

’Black in Space’ looks at final frontier of civil rights

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In 1959, Ronald Erwin McNair walked into a South Carolina library. The 9-yearold aspiring astronaut wanted to check out a calculus book, but a librarian threatened to call the police if he didn’t leave. McNair was black.

Years later, McNair was selected to become only the second African American to travel to space, overcoming segregatio­n, poverty, and stereotype­s in an intellectu­al act of resistance that inspired a generation. Tragically, McNair died in the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger tragedy.

McNair’s story and those of other black astronauts are shared in a new documentar­y that looks at the final frontier of civil rights: getting black astronauts into space amid Jim Crow, danger, discrimina­tion and the Cold War. Within four generation­s, they went from slavery to space.

“Black in Space: Breaking the Color Barrier,” scheduled to air Monday on the Smithsonia­n Channel, examines the race to get black astronauts into the heavens while fighting for human rights on Earth. It shows how the astronauts surmounted racial barriers and hostile commanders to get close to the stars.

“They really are the first of the first,” filmmaker Laurens Grant said. “And they are the elite of the elite.”

Not only did these aspiring space travelers have to navigate the racial politics of their time, they also had to study cuttingedg­e science and engineerin­g to compete with others, Grant said.

And it didn’t always end happily. The road to get black astronauts into space in the U.S. began under President John. F. Kennedy. His brother, Attorney General Robert Kennedy, pressured an Air Force program to make sure its astronaut project had a person of color.

Air Force Capt. Ed Dwight was selected for a trainee program and became an overnight hero in the black press. However, the NASA program did not select him for the astronaut program.

U.S. Air Force officer Robert Henry Lawrence Jr. was chosen. The U.S. Air Force selected the Chicago-born Lawrence as the first African American astronaut, and he may have made it to the moon. Unfortunat­ely, Lawrence died after his F-104 Starfighte­r crashed in 1967 at Edwards Air Force Base, California,

No African Americans would make it to the moon.

 ?? Associated Press ?? The documentar­y “Black in Space: Breaking the Color Barrier,” scheduled to air on the Smithsonia­n Channel on Monday, examines the race to get black astronauts into space.
Associated Press The documentar­y “Black in Space: Breaking the Color Barrier,” scheduled to air on the Smithsonia­n Channel on Monday, examines the race to get black astronauts into space.

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