General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Challenger explosion happened 33 years ago today.
A day that I remember vividly. I was in the Army stationed in Georgia.CottonBear
(21,598 posts)I was in college in Georgia. I was in the library.
Tommy_Carcetti
(43,232 posts)My family was on vacation in Florida at the time. We pulled over on the side of the road to see it go off.
We didnt know anything had gone wrong until we got back in the car and turned on the radio.
duforsure
(11,885 posts)And was absolutely stunned as were others I was around. Knew someone up the street from me that worked at Nasa and knew all these people.
dewsgirl
(14,961 posts)Courts outside. I remember all the hype from the teachers/principal, the first teacher in space. When the explosion happened, they told us it was the O ring seperating. But most of us even at that age, had seen dozens of shuttle launches we knew something was wrong..they ushered is inside, just in time for our principal to announce through tears, that the Challenger was lost. It still gives me goosebumps to think back on that tragic day.
hlthe2b
(102,562 posts)At least I was waay too young to grasp much of what happened when Kennedy was assassinated, but though I was at work and not watching on tv, I had been following that mission closely. It was devastating.
I will say that at least Reagan, (someone for whom I had great disdain) had the emotional depth to understand the loss, especially of the school teacher, Christa McAuliffe. I can not fathom the added devastation that would come from having Trump speak on a similar horror.
May they all be in some wonderful realm where they might guide the next generation of problem solvers.
lpbk2713
(42,775 posts)A co-worker and I were walking across a coffee shop parking lot. We stopped as we saw it launch and then it made a fleur de lis. We knew that wasn't good. We saw some of the bigger peices spiraling toward the ground. We felt bad for the families. We didn't say much over our coffee.
chwaliszewski
(1,514 posts)Horrible day.
mgardener
(1,825 posts)Had to help write a statement very quickly to explain to the kids.
Javaman
(62,540 posts)Roy Rolling
(6,943 posts)I was trading for clients and the report came across the news wire. Like everyone else, that moment is etched in my mind forever, along with the JFK assassination and 9/11.
And, of course, that Monday Night Football bulletin of December 8, 1980.
forgotmylogin
(7,540 posts)Polybius
(15,533 posts)I watched it on TV in my living room as a kid.
JI7
(89,289 posts)but its weird since I can't remember the before part of it.
I was about 7
sarge43
(28,946 posts)It was announced on radio, then the station started to play Barber's Adagio. I had to pull over.
jimlup
(7,968 posts)I got my first real job. I was an intern. My boss came in with a very somber expression on his face and handed me the letter with my job offer. He had been listening to the launch and he just said that the Challenger had exploded.
lillypaddle
(9,581 posts)Same thing during the OKC bombing.
Horrendous events.
Joe941
(2,848 posts)CaptainTruth
(6,619 posts)Colder than what was specified as safe, but engineers were overruled. In one case it was too cold for O-rings in boosters to seal properly. In the other case chunks of ice fell off & damaged a wing.
Both could have been prevented by waiting for a warmer day.
skydive forever
(449 posts)At the time I was working for a company called USBI at Kennedy Space Center building the TVC system for the solid rocket boosters. Didnt go back to the space center for 3 years where I actually built the SRBs for the duration of the shuttle program.
Blue_Tires
(55,445 posts)r.i.p.
musette_sf
(10,209 posts)I was living in southwest Houston and working as a server at a sports bar/restaurant owned by Dan Patrick. (Yes, THAT Dan Patrick, who is now incomprehensibly the insane Lt Gov of Texas.)
I was relatively new to the place so I got the crappy shifts, and weekday lunchtime was the crappiest of the crappy shifts. Low volume and terrible tipping.
Being a sports bar, the place had a giant TV screen over the dining area. The explosion played out over and over, endlessly, over the big screen.
Sadly, I made the best tips that day that I ever made on that shift. People left work for the day, started drinking immediately, and stayed all afternoon into the evening. Houston, of course, is emotionally tied as a city to NASA, so it felt personal to us.
Such a waste, only because a president* wanted a positive story right THEN just before SOTU, regardless of what the experts said about the risks of the launch under those weather conditions.
(Many years later I participated in an offsite business skills training session, in which the group was broken into teams to do an exercise on decision making and risk taking. The scenario was an auto race with dragsters, and your team had to decide whether a certain super high performance car should race or not. If it didn't race, the owner stood to lose a pile of dough. Just before the analysis for the decision began, the facilitator added to the scenario that there had been "freezing conditions the night before", and this particular configuration had not been raced before under those conditions. Being the only person on my team old enough to remember the specifics reported in real time, I told them, "This is Challenger! We will not race!" So the facilitator went around the room and asked each team for their go/no-go decision. We were the only team that gave a no-go. And then he said, "This is the only team that chose correctly. This is the Challenger space shuttle scenario." )
riversedge
(70,464 posts)PeeJ52
(1,588 posts)I said, "hey look, the shuttle is going off", as we looked to the right. The sky was so blue and you could see it clear as a bell. Then we saw the Y shaped plume of the vapor trail and knew something went wrong and headed for the diner. So sad. We had taken so many liftoffs for granted....
MyOwnPeace
(16,955 posts)We had brought the TV into the room to have all of the first graders watch the launch and see a teacher go into space. Because of "delays" in the launch, we had to take the kids to the cafeteria for lunch and NOT see the launch.
At least I was spared explaining that sadness and shock to the little ones.
FakeNoose
(32,917 posts)Those little kids would have been traumatized. It was still a terrible, terrible day though.
Phentex
(16,334 posts)I was watching it as it happened and even though my brain was telling me something wasn't right, my eyes were watching trying to figure out what I just saw. It was such an odd feeling. I think one of the commentators said something about a malfunction but said it in such a calm voice I was still thinking what the hell just happened?
Auggie
(31,240 posts)4TheArts
(75 posts)A sudden sinking feeling. Next thought was the teacher on board. A horrible day.
B Stieg
(2,410 posts)Saw it on the TV set in the assistant principal's office as I was free first period.
I still remember that it took under an hour for the first shuttle jokes to start circulating.
Mass shock in the student center.
I'll never forget that day or the O rings that failed on the booster rocket...
bluedigger
(17,091 posts)I hated seeing the flag go to half mast at reveille formation.
riversedge
(70,464 posts)spacecraft take off. I recall the puzzlement of the reporters--then the horrible truth.
kimbutgar
(21,285 posts)I was interested in that particular because of the first teacher in space.
treestar
(82,383 posts)I couldn't imagine it, but saw it on the news that evening.
RobinA
(9,909 posts)visiting my cousin. I remember the cold snap, because everybody down there was freaking out about how cold it was. We just laughed, we were from PA. We had actually raced the cold air down I-95 from Philadelphia because it was rainy and we didn't want snow to overtake us. Cars were passing us covered with snow. My cousin worked for Delta second shift so we were going to bed late and waking up late that week. His friend called to tell him to turn on the TV. We must have seen it a zillion times that day.
LongtimeAZDem
(4,494 posts)When we were young, we saw the triumph of men walking on the Moon; when Millennials were similar ages, they saw the horrible tragedy of the Challenger disaster.
onenote
(42,847 posts)The assassinations of JFK, RFK, MLK Jr. The Apollo 1 fire.
Violence during the Civil Rights movement, including the Mississippi murders, the church bombings, etc.
Nightly footage of the war in Vietnam.
Maybe we didn't see all of those things "live" as they happened (except for the shooting of Jack Ruby), but we saw a number of them on film over and over.
LongtimeAZDem
(4,494 posts)Your point about Vietnam is well taken though; seeing it on the news every night led to a widespread desire to end war. One of the most heinous things G.H.W. Bush did was to sanitize television coverage of the Gulf War, making it palatable again.
leftyladyfrommo
(18,874 posts)And all those assassinations. All those awful funerals with the black horses and the hearses. And John standing there saluting.
And the awful years of the Vietnam war and so many friends not coming home.
But we survived.
I did not live thru that to have some dumb assholes ruin our country because they have no morals and no ethics.
Awsi Dooger
(14,565 posts)Nice apartment but we only had one television. My roommate Bobby Bryde was on the couch watching rented movies with his girlfriend. It was a comedy so I sat down and watched the end of it, while still groggy. Then we watched another comedy movie.
I had no reason to believe anything had happened. Then at the end of the second movie Bobby perks up. "Oh, did you hear? Did you hear about the space shuttle? It blew up."
Bobby frantically clicked the channel to CNN as I sat there in astonishment. I couldn't believe he didn't think it was significant enough to mention when I walked out there hours earlier. Likewise it never dawned on his girlfriend to say anything.
Bobby was a good guy. Huge hockey fan. Normally I didn't get to watch television in the apartment because he always had a hockey tape from a night earlier. Bobby was just starting as a hockey handicapper in 1986. He ended up gaining lots of Las Vegas notoriety along those lines. He was nicknamed, "Herr Hockeymeister" and had an annual hockey betting guide that was very popular. He transitioned to the internet well. Unfortunately Bobby got cancer and died young maybe 13 or 14 years ago. When he died I posted several anecdotes on the gambling site tributes to him, including about that day when the Challenger blew up.
Hong Kong Cavalier
(4,573 posts)...and I thought my friends were joking when they told me during lunch.
leftyladyfrommo
(18,874 posts)it over and over and over. It was Wful.