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Transcript of John Glenn's Official
Communication with the Command Center (1962)
John Glenn conducted the first manned space orbit of the earth on
February 20, 1962. This is the transcription of his in-flight
communication with Mission Control in Florida.
Soviet
scientists stunned the world on October 4, 1957, when they launched
a satellite, called Sputnik I, into orbit around the earth.
It weighted 184 pounds. A month later they exceeded their previous
mark by launching a larger satellite that weighed 1,120 pounds and
carried a dog. This amazing scientific accomplishment sent a shock
wave through America. The military significance of Sputnik
was lost on no one, for if the Soviets could fire heavy objects into
outer space, they could certainly reach America with
intercontinental missiles loaded with nuclear warheads. A space and
arms race fever swept the nation, and by January 31, 1958, America
regained some confidence and prestige by launching Explorer I,
a grapefruit sized-sized (2.5 pounds) satellite, into orbit. To stay
competitive in this race, President Eisenhower proposed and Congress
passed the National Defense and Education Act, which authorized $887
million in loans and grants to aid college students in teaching
sciences and languages. Between 1958 and 1961, a series of unmanned
launches by the Americans and the Soviets resulted in the launch of
the first man into space by the Soviets on April 12, 1961. Just over
20 days later, on May 5, Alan B. Shepard, Jr., became the first
American in space.
John Glenn
blasted into orbit around the earth on February 20, 1962. Encased in
a bulky pressurized suit, strapped into a seat, and crammed into a
tiny capsule, Glenn put his life at risk as he traveled at 17,500
miles per hour 160 miles above Earth. With great skill, courage, and
grace, Glenn manually piloted Friendship 7 when the autopilot
function failed. Mission Control was also concerned about whether
the capsule's life-saving heat shield would hold when Glenn
reentered the atmosphere. After Glenn began his second orbit,
Mission Control received a signal that the heat shield, designed to
prevent the capsule from burning up during reentry, was loose.
Although it could have been a faulty signal, Mission Control took no
chances. Normally, the retropacket package would be jettisoned after
the rockets were fired to slow the capsule for reentry. In this
case, however, Glenn was ordered to retain the retropack to hold the
heat shield in place. While struggling to maintain control of the
spacecraft, Glenn watched as huge chunks flew past the window and
wondered whether it was the retropack or heat shield breaking up.
The heat shield held. If it hadn't, Glenn and his capsule would have
been incinerated. Glenn returned to Earth after five hours,
suffering no injury more severe than scraped knuckles, sustained as
he prepared to exit the capsule after a safe splashdown.
In the flood
of enthusiasm after Glenn’s flight, President John F. Kennedy
proposed a new challenge on September 12, 1962, in an address at
Rice University:
There is
no strife, no prejudice, no national conflict in outer space as
yet. Its hazards are hostile to us all. Its conquest deserves
the best of all mankind, and its opportunity for peaceful
cooperation many never come again. But why, some say, the moon?
Why choose this as our goal? And they may well ask why climb the
highest mountain? Why, 35 years ago, fly the Atlantic? Why does
Rice play Texas?
We
choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this
decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but
because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize
and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that
challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are
unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the
others, too.
The
documents presented here are pages of the official flight transcript
of Glenn's 1962 spaceflight document the reentry.
For
more information and other documents from the Friendship 7 mission,
visit the
Featured Documents
section of the National Archives' Online Exhibit Hall.
To
listen to John Glenn’s radio transmissions with Mission Control,
visit NASA's
Project Mercury Archive.
Transcript of
Transcript of John Glenn's Official Communication with the
Command Center (1962)
|
04 36 56 |
0.4 |
CC |
Roger. |
|
04 37 00 |
9.6 |
P |
There is
quite a bit of cloud cover down in this area. I
can, ah, right on track, I can only see certain
areas. I can see quite a bit on up to the north,
however. |
|
04 37 18 |
2.4 |
P |
This is
Friendship 7, going to manual control. |
|
04 37 21 |
1.3 |
CC |
Ah, Roger,
Friendship 7. |
|
04 37 23 |
2.7 |
P |
This is
banging in and out here; I'll just control it
manually. |
|
04 37 25 |
0.4 |
CC |
Roger. |
|
04 37 48 |
3.1 |
CC |
Friendship
7, Guaymas Cap Com, reading you loud and clear. |
|
04 37 51 |
2.1 |
P |
Roger,
Guaymas, read you loud and clear also. |
|
|
|
|
TEXAS |
|
04 38 06 |
4.0 |
CT |
Friendship
7, Friendship 7, this is Texas Com Tech. Do you
read? Over. |
|
04 38 10 |
1.3 |
P |
Roger,
Texas, go ahead. |
|
04 38 13 |
3.9 |
CT |
Ah, Roger.
Reading you 5 square. Standby for Texas Cap Com. |
|
04 38 16 |
0.4 |
P |
Roger. |
|
04 38 25 |
23.8 |
CC |
This is
Texas Cap Com, Friendship 7. We are recommending
that you leave the retropackage on through the
entire reentry. This means that you will have to
override the 05g switch which is expected to
occur at 04 43 _3. Tis also means that you will
have to manually retract the scope. Do you read? |
|
04 38 49 |
4.0 |
P |
This is
Friendship 7. What is the reason for this? Do
you have any reason? Over. |
|
04 38 53 |
3.6 |
CC |
Not at this
time; this is the judgement of Cape Flight. |
|
04 38 58 |
2.6 |
P |
Ah, Roger.
Say again your instructions please. Over. |
|
04 39 01 |
22.1 |
CC |
We are
recommending that the retropackage not, I say
again, not be jettisoned. This means that you
will have to override the 05g switch which is
expected to occur at 04 43 53. This is
approximately 4-1/2 minutes from now. This also
means that you will have to retract the scope
manually. Do you understand? |
|
04 39 25 |
9.7 |
P |
Ah, Roger,
understand. I will have to make a manual 05g
entry when it occurs, and bring the scope in,
ah, manually. Is that affirm? |
|
04 39 35 |
2.5 |
CC |
That is
affirmative, Friendship 7. |
|
04 39 39 |
0.6 |
P |
Ah, Roger. |
|
04 39 42 |
3.6 |
P |
This is
Friendship 7, going to reentry attitude, then,
in that case. |
|
04 40 00 |
3.8 |
CC |
Friendship
7, Cape flight will give you the reasons for
this action when you are in view. |
|
04 40 06 |
2.6 |
P |
Ah, Roger.
Ah, Roger. Friendship 7. |
|
04 40 09 |
2.5 |
CC |
Everything
down here on the ground looks okay. |
|
04 40 12 |
1.5 |
P |
Ah, Roger.
This is Friendship 7. |
|
04 40 14 |
1.4 |
CC |
Confirm
your attitudes. |
|
04 40 16 |
0.4 |
P |
Roger. |
|
|
|
|
CANAVERAL |
|
04 40 23 |
1.7 |
CC |
Ah,
Friendship 7, this is Cape. Over. |
|
04 40 25 |
1.5 |
P |
Go ahead,
Cape. Friend 7. |
|
04 40 27 |
4.9 |
CC |
Ah,
recommend you go to reentry attitude and retract
the scope manually at this time. |
|
04 40 32 |
1.9 |
P |
Ah, Roger,
retracting scope manually. |
|
04 40 36 |
14.6 |
CC |
While
you're doing that, we are not sure whether or
not your landing bag has deployed. We feel it is
possible to reenter with the retropackage on.
Ah, we see no difficulty at this time in that
type of reentry. Over. |
|
04 40 51 |
1.6 |
P |
Ah, Roger,
understand. |
|
04 41 10 |
1.4 |
CC |
Seven, this
is Cape. Over. |
|
04 41 12 |
1.5 |
P |
Go ahead,
Cape. Friendship 7. |
|
04 41 15 |
5.4 |
CC |
Estimating
05g at 04 44. |
|
04 41 21 |
0.6 |
P |
Ah, Roger. |
|
04 41 23 |
3.0 |
CC |
You
override 05g at that time. |
|
04 41 31 |
2.7 |
P |
Ah, Roger.
Friendship 7. |
|
04 41 33 |
13.2 |
P |
This is
Friendship 7. I'm on straight manual control at
present time. This was, ah, still kicking in and
out of orientation mode, mainly in yaw, ah,
following retrofire, so I am on straight manual
now. I'll back it up --- |
|
04 41 45 |
0.8 |
CC |
--- on
reentry. |
|
04 41 47 |
0.9 |
P |
Say again. |
|
04 41 50 |
0.6 |
CC |
Standby. |
|
04 41 53 |
6.2 |
P |
This is
Friendship 7. Ah, going to fly-by-wire. I'm down
to about 15 percent on manual. |
|
04 42 00 |
8.9 |
CC |
Ah, Roger.
You're going to use fly-by-wire for reentry and
we recommend that you do the best you can to
keep a zero angle during reentry. Over. |
|
04 42 09 |
1.2 |
P |
Ah, Roger.
Friendship 7. |
|
04 42 13 |
3.4 |
P |
This is
Friendship 7. I'm on fly-by-wire, back-it up
with manual. Over. |
|
04 42 18 |
1.1 |
CC |
Roger,
understand. |
|
04 42 29 |
9.2 |
CC |
Ah, Seven,
this is Cape. The weather in the recovery area
is excellent, 3-foot waves, only one-tenth cloud
coverage, 10 miles visibility. |
|
04 42 39 |
1.2 |
P |
Ah, Roger.
Friendship 7. |
|
04 42 47 |
1.4 |
CC |
Ah, Seven,
this is Cape. Over. |
|
04 42 49 |
2.5 |
P |
Go ahead,
Cape, you're ground, you are going out. |
|
04 42 52 |
1.8 |
CC |
We
recommend that you --- |
|
04 43 16 |
2.9 |
P |
This is
Friendship 7. I think the pack just let go. |
|
04 43 39 |
2.4 |
P |
This is
Friendship 7. A real fireball outside. |
|
04 44 20 |
1.9 |
P |
Hello,
Cape. Friendship 7. Over. |
|
04 45 18 |
1.9 |
P |
Hello,
Cape. Friendship 7. Over. |
|
04 45 43 |
2.3 |
P |
Hello,
Cape. Friendship 7. Do you receive? Over. |
|
04 46 20 |
2.0 |
P |
Hello,
Cape. Friendship 7. Do you receive? Over. |
|
04 47 18 |
1.2 |
CC |
--- How do
you read? Over. |
|
04 47 20 |
1.5 |
P |
Loud and
clear; how me? |
|
04 47 22 |
1.6 |
CC |
Roger,
reading you loud and clear. How are you doing? |
|
04 47 25 |
1.0 |
P |
Oh, pretty
good. |
|
04 47 30 |
3.8 |
CC |
Roger. Your
impact point is within one mile of the up-range
destroyer. |
|
04 47 34 |
0.5 |
P |
Ah, Roger. |
|
04 47 35 |
0.2 |
CC |
--- Over. |
|
04 47 36 |
0.3 |
P |
Roger. |
|
04 47 44 |
3.4 |
CC |
This is
Cape, estimating 4 50. Over. |
|
04 47 48 |
1.5 |
P |
Roger, 04
50. |
|
04 47 53 |
1.6 |
P |
Okay, we're
through the peak g now. |
|
04 47 55 |
4.0 |
CC |
Ah, Seven,
this is Cape. What's your general condition? Are
you feeling pretty well? |
|
04 47 59 |
2.8 |
P |
My
condition is good, but that was a real fireball,
boy. |
|
04 48 05 |
3.2 |
P |
I had great
chunks of that retropack breaking off all the
way through. |
|
04 48 08 |
2.1 |
CC |
Very good;
it did break off, is that correct? |
|
04 48 11 |
3.4 |
P |
Roger.
Altimeter off the peg indicating 80 thousand. |
|
04 48 15 |
1.7 |
CC |
Roger,
reading you loud and clear. |
|
04 48 17 |
0.3 |
P |
Roger. |
| |
|