South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

2022 Astronaut Hall of Fame honorees revealed

Two crewmates of final shuttle mission in 2011 among three chosen

- By Joe Mario Pedersen Jpedersen@orlandosen­tinel. com

Three NASA astronauts including two of the last people to ever fly on a space shuttle are headed to the United States Astronaut Hall of Fame.

The choices announced by the Astronaut Scholarshi­p Foundation are astronauts David Leestma, Sandy Magnus and Chris Ferguson, set to be inducted June 11 to the hall of fame as its 2022 class of honorees. The three will join a small group of 101 other individual­s who have received the distinguis­hed honor. Leestma, Magnus and Ferguson were selected by the foundation for their demonstrat­ion of “outstandin­g accomplish­ments in furthering NASA’s mission of exploratio­n and discovery,” according to a press release from the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, which houses the hall of fame.

The ceremony will take place in the massive exhibit that displays space shuttle Atlantis, which flew on STS-135, NASA’s final space shuttle mission back in 2011. The Atlantis backdrop is a fitting homecoming for Magnus and Ferguson, who were both part of the 2011 Atlantis crew for its final mission. The shuttle was later decommissi­oned and became an exhibit in

2013 at the Visitor Complex in Cape Canaveral.

NASA is inviting space enthusiast­s and community leaders to the annual ceremony. The

30-year tradition was skipped in 2020 due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. The 2020 veteran astronauts — Pamela Melroy, Scott Kelly and Michael Lopez-Alegria — were officially inducted at a reschedule­d ceremony last November.

“As we embark on a new era of space travel and interplane­tary exploratio­n, we are pleased to resume this annual program — as scheduled — and welcome

these accomplish­ed individual­s into the United States Astronaut Hall of Fame,” said Curt Brown, chairman of the Astronaut Scholarshi­p Foundation, which oversees the hall of fame selection process.

To qualify for the hall of fame, an astronaut must have made their first flight at least 17 years prior to the induction year and they must be a NASA-trained commander, pilot or mission specialist who has orbited Earth at least once. U.S. citizenshi­p is also necessary.

“All three have demonstrat­ed the characteri­stics that define a Hall of Famer: heroism, commitment and bravery,” Brown said.

Leestma became an astronaut

in 1980 and flew three space shuttle missions. Later, he became the director of flight crew operations where he oversaw 41 space shuttle flights and seven shuttle-Mir flights. Leestma wore many executive hats with NASA and twice received the Presidenti­al Rank of Meritoriou­s Executive.

Joining the NASA Astronaut Corps in 1996, Magnus flew in space on four shuttle missions, riding in Atlantis twice, first in 2002, as well as shuttles Endeavour and Discovery. She is one of the four astronauts who flew on NASA’s final shuttle flight in 2011. She also flew to the Internatio­nal Space Station in 2008, spending nearly five months aboard as the ISS flight engineer and science officer. Magnus’ career also includes

internatio­nal work the European Space Agency and the Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency on facility-type payloads for the ISS.

Ferguson is a retired U.S. Navy captain and former NASA astronaut logging more than 40 days in space and 5,700 hours in high-performanc­e aircraft. Ferguson worked as space shuttle pilot and commander of the 2011 Atlantis mission. He previously served as deputy chief of the astronaut office and currently works as a flight crew representa­tive for Boeing ’s Commercial Crew Program.

“All three have demonstrat­ed the characteri­stics that define a Hall of Famer: heroism, commitment and bravery.” — Curt Brown, chairman of the Astronaut Scholarshi­p Foundation

 ?? ORLANDO SENTINEL FILE ?? Space shuttle Atlantis astronauts, from left, commander Chris Ferguson, Sandy Magnus, Rex Walheim and pilot Doug Hurley talk to the media on May 17, 2011, as their orbiter, background, is rolled to the Vehicle Assembly Building. Magnus and Ferguson recently were chosen, along with David Leestma, who oversaw dozens of shuttle flights, to join the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame. Their induction is set for June 11.
ORLANDO SENTINEL FILE Space shuttle Atlantis astronauts, from left, commander Chris Ferguson, Sandy Magnus, Rex Walheim and pilot Doug Hurley talk to the media on May 17, 2011, as their orbiter, background, is rolled to the Vehicle Assembly Building. Magnus and Ferguson recently were chosen, along with David Leestma, who oversaw dozens of shuttle flights, to join the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame. Their induction is set for June 11.

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