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Mercury-Redstone 4: Difference between revisions






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The flight was identical to Shepard's, but an accident upon spashdown caused the loss of the spacecraft when it filled with seawater. Grissom escaped unhurt. Substantial controversy ensued as Grisson reported that the hatch had blown prematurely without his authorization. Engineering teams concluded this was unlikely. Mrs. Grissom was not invited to the White House as per a forming tradion with previous Astronaut Wives upon successful mission completion. Subsequent independent technical review of the incident has raised doubts as to the veracity of the incident report conclusions that Grissom blew the hatch and was responsible for the loss of the spacecraft.

The flight was identical to Shepard's, but an accident upon spashdown caused the loss of the spacecraft when it filled with seawater. Grissom escaped unhurt. Substantial controversy ensued as Grisson reported that the hatch had blown prematurely without his authorization. Engineering teams concluded this was unlikely. Mrs. Grissom was not invited to the White House as per a forming tradion with previous Astronaut Wives upon successful mission completion. Subsequent independent technical review of the incident has raised doubts as to the veracity of the incident report conclusions that Grissom blew the hatch and was responsible for the loss of the spacecraft.



Liberty Bell 7 remained more than 15,000 feet deep on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean until July 20, 1999, when it was raised by a team led by Curt Newport. It is now part of the collection of the Kansas Cosmosphere in Hutchinson, Kansas.

Liberty Bell 7 remained more than 15,000 feet deep on the bottom of the [[Atlantic Ocean]] until [[July 20]], [[1999]], when it was raised by a team led by [[Curt Newport]]. It is now part of the collection of the Kansas Cosmosphere in [[Hutchinson, Kansas]].



The capsule's hatch was not found.

The capsule's hatch was not found.


Revision as of 06:08, 20 April 2003

July 21, 1961 -- "Liberty Bell 7": Suborbital flight. Astronaut: Virgil (Gus) Grissom. The flight was identical to Shepard's, but an accident upon spashdown caused the loss of the spacecraft when it filled with seawater. Grissom escaped unhurt. Substantial controversy ensued as Grisson reported that the hatch had blown prematurely without his authorization. Engineering teams concluded this was unlikely. Mrs. Grissom was not invited to the White House as per a forming tradion with previous Astronaut Wives upon successful mission completion. Subsequent independent technical review of the incident has raised doubts as to the veracity of the incident report conclusions that Grissom blew the hatch and was responsible for the loss of the spacecraft.

Liberty Bell 7 remained more than 15,000 feet deep on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean until July 20, 1999, when it was raised by a team led by Curt Newport. It is now part of the collection of the Kansas Cosmosphere in Hutchinson, Kansas.

The capsule's hatch was not found.

Ironically, inability to swiftly open a hatch contributed to the death of Gus and two other astronauts in the Apollo_1 launch-pad fire.


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mercury-Redstone_4&oldid=846294"





This page was last edited on 20 April 2003, at 06:08 (UTC).

This version of the page has been revised. Besides normal editing, the reason for revision may have been that this version contains factual inaccuracies, vandalism, or material not compatible with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.



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