Houston Chronicle

Apollo children grew up with moon always looming

Kids ‘born into space program’ then unaware of how special dads were

- By Alex Stuckey STAFF WRITER

Jeff Lovell tiptoed past his mom watching TV in the living room and, quiet as a mouse, turned the handle to the front door of their Houston home.

Outside, the hundreds of reporters crowded on the lawn saw movement and started snapping photos. Lovell waved and posed before going back inside, sneakily opening the garage a few minutes later to pose for more pictures.

It was April 1970 and Lovell was just 4. He didn’t understand the danger his father, Jim Lovell, faced aboard Apollo 13 after an oxygen tank explosion forced the crew to abort their trip to the moon.

“I was born into the space program,” Jeff Lovell said Thursday during a panel at Space Center Houston, the visitor’s center for NASA’s Johnson Space Center. “So, my dad being an astronaut was just like anything else other parents did. It was their normal job.”

Jeff Lovell was joined at the visitor’s center Thursday by his sister, Barbara Lovell Harrison; Amy Bean, the daughter of fourth man on the moon Alan Bean; and Tracy Cernan Woolie, the daughter of last man on the moon Gene Cernan. The Thursday event was held in celebratio­n of the 50th anniversar­y of the Apollo 11 lunar mission, which landed on the moon July 20, 1969.

Apollo 11 launched on July 16, 1969, and splashed down on Earth on July 24, 1969. The Houston area, home of the nation’s astronaut corps, has been holding events all week in celebratio­n of what arguably is the 20th century’s greatest achievemen­t.

Thirty miles north at the

Houston Museum of Natural Science, 10 Apollo-era mission controller­s helped their grandchild­ren “land” on the moon — virtually, of course.

The kids were set up in a separate room, complete with consoles and monitors that blared alarms alerting them to problems such as “major malfunctio­n with life support systems.”

The room was enormous compared to the the Apollo 11 spacecraft — and it certainly held more people — but the mission controller­s calmly walked their loved ones through the steps necessary to fix the problem just the same.

It was dramatic and chaotic. And when the crisis was averted, the grandparen­ts cheered and clapped from their makeshift mission control room located just next door.

“We did it! All right!” one cheered.

‘Confidence in NASA’

Thursday’s event was just a simulation — easy, fun work for men who were in the real Mission Control room at Johnson Space Center when missions went haywire. These men saved astronauts’ lives on a daily basis — something their children never forget.

“We had a lot of confidence in NASA and knew they would take care of our dads,” Amy Bean said Thursday. “I look back now and say … they helped save my dad’s life on the launch of Apollo 12.”

Apollo 12 — with Alan Bean, Pete Conrad and Richard Gordon on board — was struck by lightning about 35 seconds into liftoff on Nov. 24, 1969. But a quick-thinking Mission Control manager guided Bean to switch to a backup power supply. The mission went on to become the second to land astronauts on the moon, and Bean and Conrad performed two moonwalks.

Some of those in the room Thursday were also present during the problem-plagued Apollo 13 mission in 1970. The dramatic return to Earth of the three-person crew — Jim Lovell, Jack Swigert and Fred Haise — was detailed in the movie, “Apollo 13.”

Missing their fathers

Barbara Lovell Harrison was 16 during that mission and remembers the night the oxygen tank exploded. Her mother came to her room and told her there was a problem on the flight and that her daddy wouldn’t make it to the moon.

“I was worried about my dad not being able to step on the moon. I knew that was his lifelong goal,” she said. “My mom told me not to worry, but it was harrowing at that age, to understand how serious it was.”

She and the three others on the panel Thursday admitted that it was hard to be the child of an Apollo astronaut — they often didn’t see their fathers until the weekend, and never knew if they were in Houston, in Florida or in space.

But for the most part, it was normal, they said. Dad was dad, and being an astronaut wasn’t special.

“I remember finding a baseball trophy in the basement,” Jeff Lovell said, “and thinking I was going to take it to school and tell everyone my dad was a profession­al baseball player. I remember thinking that would be really cool.”

 ?? Photos by Jon Shapley / Staff photograph­er ?? Tim White, center, talks with grandchild­ren, clockwise from right, Cooper, 10, Kale, 13, and Mason, 10, as well intern Conrad Schmitt, 17, at the Houston Museum of Natural Science on Thursday. White worked on the Apollo 8 mission.
Photos by Jon Shapley / Staff photograph­er Tim White, center, talks with grandchild­ren, clockwise from right, Cooper, 10, Kale, 13, and Mason, 10, as well intern Conrad Schmitt, 17, at the Houston Museum of Natural Science on Thursday. White worked on the Apollo 8 mission.
 ??  ?? Ava Sophia, 9, reacts to the challenge of navigating to the moon during a simulated mission at the museum.
Ava Sophia, 9, reacts to the challenge of navigating to the moon during a simulated mission at the museum.
 ?? Mark Mulligan / Staff photograph­er ?? Tracy Cernan Woolie, whose father, Gene Cernan, was the last person to walk on the moon, speaks to Emerson Smith, 7, following a panel discussion Thursday at Space Center Houston. Emerson and his family made the trip from Fort Worth for the event.
Mark Mulligan / Staff photograph­er Tracy Cernan Woolie, whose father, Gene Cernan, was the last person to walk on the moon, speaks to Emerson Smith, 7, following a panel discussion Thursday at Space Center Houston. Emerson and his family made the trip from Fort Worth for the event.
 ?? Jon Shapley / Staff photograph­er ?? Larry Schmitt, who worked on Apollo 16 and 17, speaks with his grandkids, from left, Meredith Mei Foye, 16, Alexander Montoya, 11, and Annabel Foye, 15, at the natural science museum event.
Jon Shapley / Staff photograph­er Larry Schmitt, who worked on Apollo 16 and 17, speaks with his grandkids, from left, Meredith Mei Foye, 16, Alexander Montoya, 11, and Annabel Foye, 15, at the natural science museum event.

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