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This is the 24th anniversary of the Challenger disaster
examiner.com ^ | January 28 | Jennifer Ellis May

Posted on 01/28/2010 12:50:25 PM PST by free1977free

Where were you on January 28th, 1986? Were you in a classroom watching the first teacher go into space? Do you remember how you felt when you saw the Challenger explode soon after it left the earth?

CNN reports that about 17% of Americans were watching when the disaster occurred. One hour later, 85% had heard the news. It is estimated that 48% of 9-13 year-olds were watching.

Teacher Christa Macauliffe was supposed to be the first teacher in space, but she never made it. She died in the explosion along with the six astronauts accompanying her.

Most of today's moms are old enough to remember this event. Today is a good day to share this historical story with your children. It's also a good way to share an emotional story from your own childhood.


Our heroes: Michael Smith, Dick Scobee, Judith Resnik, Ronald McNair, Ellison Onizuka, Gregory Jarvis, and Christa McAuliffe.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: 1986; america; american; anniversary; challenger; conservatism; florida; godsgravesglyphs; gop; history; mourning; nasa; obama; poetry; prayer; president; reagan; religion; republicans; ronaldreagan; ronaldwilsonreagan; science; shuttle; shuttlechallenger; space; spaceshuttle; teaparty; tragedy; tribute; tv; usa; values
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To: Gator113

If you look carefully at President Reagan’s speech above, you’ll see lots of references to ‘we’ and ‘the American people’, things you’d never see in an Obama speech.

Lord, I really miss Reagan.


41 posted on 01/28/2010 1:30:52 PM PST by reagan_fanatic (You lie, Barry!)
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To: Buckeye McFrog

I was working in a downtown office. No TV or radio. A coworker told me what happened. I didn’t cry until I saw the pictures that night. Such a shock.


42 posted on 01/28/2010 1:31:03 PM PST by Sunshine Sister
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To: free1977free; oswegodeee; seenenuf; Chigirl 26; flaglady47; seekthetruth; Brytani; Bob Ireland; ...
About a dozen neighbors were in the back yard of my Florida gulf coast home hoping to see the lift-off directly across from us on the Atlantic Ocean side. We occasionally could view some lift-offs at that distance if weather conditions were right.

Those of us in the group could see my sun porch television set through sliding glass doors.

We couldn't see the lift-off this time for some reason....and a neighbor suddenly remarked on the somewhat unusual scenes appearing on the TV. Something didn't seem to be right, he said.

Then the TV showed the painfully-strained visages of the McAuliffe parents and other spectators....their anxious eyes all turned skyward as if they were searching for something they didn't want to see.

To make a long story short, we went inside and gathered around the TV. We shortly learned the bad news. We went outside again and looked skyward. Dark contrails and wisps of smoky puffiness were slowly falling toward earth......starkly marring the clear sunny blue sky of a perfect Florida day.

We must have watched these aftermaths of disaster heading earthward for at least a half hour. The debris and smoke clusters definitely must have been very far up because they took so long to come down.

Our group of neighbors then gloomily disbanded and we all went into our homes to watch TV.....each to deal in our own ways with the tragedy which had horribly played out almost over our heads.

Leni

43 posted on 01/28/2010 1:31:22 PM PST by MinuteGal (Bill O'Reilly: 9/8/09: "Communism is not a threat to us anymore"-10/20/09: "Obama is not a Marxist")
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To: free1977free

I was just interviewed for a job with one of the companies that supported NASA on the Challenger mission, started work there on Feb 3rd, 1986 and I am still working for them today. I actually just met Scott Parazynski, a former astronaut and current Chairman for the Challenger Center for Space Science Education today, we had lunch. Nice guy, great sense of humor.


44 posted on 01/28/2010 1:33:19 PM PST by ravingnutter
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To: free1977free

One of Reagan’s best speeches! That man could bring tears to your eyes...and did, many times. Commanding, soft spoken, authoritative. There’s been no one like him since. W would’ve done a nice speech I’m sure.


45 posted on 01/28/2010 1:35:39 PM PST by albie
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To: reagan_fanatic

I miss him more than I have the words to describe.


46 posted on 01/28/2010 1:36:24 PM PST by Gator113 (Obama is America's First FAILED "light skinned African American [Pres-dent] with no Negro dialect..")
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To: free1977free

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6NOKyLgmYn0

Challenger tribute with John Denver music, very moving
Ironic considering how Denver himself later died

I was at CENTCOM HQ in Tampa, heard the news in the watch center, went out into the parking lot and saw the horrible twisted contrails in the east


47 posted on 01/28/2010 1:37:28 PM PST by silverleaf
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To: free1977free

I was a new hire in a corporate orientation class. Someone in the hall stuck his head through the door and announced the disaster. I had a Sony Watchman TV in my briefcase. 30 people crowded around for an hour watching that tiny screen.


48 posted on 01/28/2010 1:44:03 PM PST by TexasRepublic (Socialism is the gospel of envy and the religion of thieves)
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To: VeniVidiVici

Our company was in the field that day. I remember our squad preparing some fighting positions when our platoon sergeant came by to check on our progress. After a few minutes, he turned to leave to when he said, “Yeah, somebody over in the TOC just said that the shuttle blew up. That’s all I know about it.” Learned in the evening that it blew up just after launch. Didn’t learn any more or see any footage till we got out of the field a few days later.


49 posted on 01/28/2010 1:44:56 PM PST by BradyLS (DO NOT FEED THE BEARS!)
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To: Badeye

I was working that day after having both legs crushed in an accident at my brother-in-law’s house helping him wire the house. The alarm installer needed to get behind some 12’ by 4’ sheetrock lain against a wall and ‘we’ pulled it back enough for the guy to get to the box to run the wire. Only my BIL pulled too hard and the 20 sheets of sheetrock pushed me over to the floor and crushed my legs.......just about the worst day I ever had...I still have cringes and shooting pains in one ankle because of it....Think about what 20 sheets of 12’X 4’ X 1/2” sheetrock weigh....I can tell you what it feels like....


50 posted on 01/28/2010 1:45:50 PM PST by Gaffer ("Profling: The only profile I need is a chalk outline around their dead ass!")
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To: free1977free

I was a 19 year-old receptionist watching the launch with my boss on the t.v. in his office. When the shuttle exploded we were both in shock. I’ll never forget that day.


51 posted on 01/28/2010 1:46:33 PM PST by LatinaGOP (But then again, I homeschool)
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To: Buckeye McFrog

Where were you on Jan. 28, 1986 ...

Picking up stats at the county courthouse, then hurried back to the newspaper. I believe we hovered around the AP feed and read each bulletin as it came in.

When I went home (still lived with my folks since I was paid $4.25 per hour) my mom said grimly, “Have you seen this? It’s pretty bad ...”

There was a song out about then called “Kyrie Eleison” (sp) (Which I think means “Lord, have mercy ...”) and some of the words included “Kyrie Eleison on the road that I must travel ...”

Tough all the way around. I only hope we learned from it.


52 posted on 01/28/2010 1:51:18 PM PST by Cloverfarm (This too shall pass ...)
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To: free1977free

We were stationed with the 1946 Communicatons Squadron, West Berlin, Germany. It was dinner time and we had the TV on, AFN was showing the Today Show when they started covering the Challenger disaster.


53 posted on 01/28/2010 1:51:30 PM PST by ops33 (Senior Master Sergeant, USAF (Retired))
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To: jesseam
There was a video of the crew compartment coming out of the gas cloud virtually intact and rumors had it the crew survived till impact.

IIRC, the pilot's and commander's emergency oxygen was found to have been switched on (controls on the rear of their seats). Someone seated behind them survived long enough to reach forward and do that.

I'm pretty sure some of them were alive - if not conscious - when they hit the surface of the Atlantic.

54 posted on 01/28/2010 1:51:41 PM PST by Charles Martel ("Endeavor to persevere...")
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To: free1977free

I had worked the night shift, and didn’t wake up until several hours past the tragedy. I flipped on the TV while getting ready for work, and a guy on TV was droning on for a long time about loss of the Shuttle, loss of telemetry, etc... I kept thinking that it had ditched somewhere and they couldn’t find it, because of them using the word loss again and again. And it wasn’t until watching for what seemed like an eternity that they replayed the video and I fully understood the magnitude of what had happened. It was a punch in the gut!

I lived in SoCal and knew many people who were involved with various aspects of Shuttle construction at Rockwell. I’ve still got the original “patch” from the last Challenger mission. Heck, I’ve got all the Rockwell newsletters from the very first (white tank) shuttle launch. Those were proud times to be an American!


55 posted on 01/28/2010 1:57:36 PM PST by MarineBrat (Better dead than red!)
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To: free1977free

I was at the doctor, getting a fractured finger put in a splint.

I found out about it when I got home and turned on the TV. I remember not quite comprehending at first what was being said.
It seemed unbelievable to me.


56 posted on 01/28/2010 2:24:11 PM PST by Deo volente (January 19, 2010...the Second American Revolution begins, right where it all started!)
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To: Filo
Very interesting.

I was in high school at the time, and someone mentioned in one of my classes that there was an "explosion" involving the space shuttle. I wasn't even aware of the launch that day and assumed it had something to do with an issue with a fuel tank on the ground.

We had a half-day at school for some reason that day, and I saw the details on the news when I stopped in a deli for a sandwich on my way home.

One image that I found haunting was a two-page photo in one of the weekly news magazines a few days later. It showed a blown-up image of the explosion, and there was a red circle on the image showing what was clearly a fully-intact cockpit and crew cabin falling out of the sky.

57 posted on 01/28/2010 2:47:47 PM PST by Alberta's Child (God is great, beer is good . . . and people are crazy.)
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To: free1977free

I watched the Challenger explode live and in person from the parking lot of Titusville High School in FL. We knew immediately that it had exploded when we saw two trails instead of one. Most of us were silent for several minutes. Many of our teachers had applied to go on the flight. My history teacher was a runner-up.

A lifetime later I watched the Columbia explode over the skies of my DFW home. I was taking my daughter to gymnastics class. I was heartbroken. When I told the other parents inside what had happened, nobody even cared. They just looked at me.


58 posted on 01/28/2010 3:13:57 PM PST by BuckeyeTexan (Integrity, Honesty, Character, & Loyalty still matter)
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To: MinuteGal
About a dozen neighbors were in the back yard of my Florida gulf coast home hoping to see the lift-off directly across from us on the Atlantic Ocean side. We occasionally could view some lift-offs at that distance if weather conditions were right.

I was driving into MacDill AFB one morning and was listening to a launch on the radio. I looked east shortly after liftoff and SAW the glow of the boosters climbing skyward. Nobody ever believes me when I tell them. Thanks for confirming I'm not completely looney :-)

59 posted on 01/28/2010 3:14:29 PM PST by VeniVidiVici (Marsha Coakley's been teabagged. Congrats Scott Brown! Mary Jo finally got even.)
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To: free1977free

Sort of ironic now that Barry has stabbed the space program through the heart.


60 posted on 01/28/2010 3:19:51 PM PST by VeniVidiVici (Marsha Coakley's been teabagged. Congrats Scott Brown! Mary Jo finally got even.)
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