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Challenger 25th anniversary: Memories of the day
By Melissa Bell
This 1986 photo shows the crew of the space shuttle Challenger, from left, Ellison Onizuka, Mike Smith, Christa McAuliffe, Dick Scobee, Greg Jarvis, Ron McNair and Judy Resnick. (AP Photo/NASA)
On a bright blue morning in Florida in 1986, the Challenger shuttle launched into space. Twenty-eight years had passed since NASA had first formed. Shuttle flights had become routine. What set this one apart was the diversity of the crew and the addition of the first teacher in space, Christa McAuliffe. The shuttle took off buoyed by hope and pride, watched by a nation enamored with the great U.S. space program and by schoolchildren filling classrooms early in the morning.
Seventy-three seconds later, the shuttle disappeared into an orange and white cloud, and the nation stood in shock and disbelief.
President Ronald Reagan, in a moving broadcast to the nation that afternoon, paraphrased a sonnet written by John Gillespie Magee, a young American airman killed in World War II saying the crew "slipped the surly bonds of earth to touch the face of God."
Read The Post's story, "The horror dawned slowly," from January 28, 1986 here.
On January 28th, 1986, seven brave Americans lost their lives in pursuit of exploration and discovery aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger. Schoolchildren across the nation watched the tragedy live on television. In a time of crisis, we look to our leaders to set the tone and give us guidance. President Reagan did just that.
In one of his most famous addresses, President Reagan gave what Clinton speechwriter Michael Waldman calls a "pitch perfect eulogy." The President spoke directly to the nation, the families of the deceased, schoolchildren, and the dedicated team at NASA. In the face of fear and trepidation, he promised that we would not be discouraged and that we would continue to explore space.
Mike80;2297536; said:Yep - we watched it on TV and it freaked me out a bit......
Deety;1865215; said:I was home from school sick that day, watching from the couch. I remember pulling the blanket around me and sitting there in horror watching the coverage all afternoon, wishing someone would get home because the house felt so empty and quiet. Very surreal.
scooter1369;137711; said:I watched it live during lunch From Silver Sands Junior High in Port Orange, FL. I was standing outside watching it go up and then we saw the fork in the trail. We ran in and told Mr. Tipton (shop teacher) that the shuttle did something wierd. He turned on the TV and we watched the coverage for the next two hours.
I remember it like it was yesterday.