On its way to my paper recycling bin (virtual sub-bin “junk mail”), I noticed on one of the retirement community junk mails with which my household is bombarded (my wife, a retired social worker, worked with and in nursing homes for years, so is on innumerable such mailing lists) a little graphic of the
Challenger disaster, captioned “Lessons from the Challenger disaster”. Not the sort of thing one normally sees on a retirement commuity newsmailing, I read the page 6 (of 10) article, and learned the following:
Allan J. McDonald, director of Morton Thiokol’s Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Motor Project at the time Challenger’s 1/28/1986 explosion, and head of the subsequent redesign project, is planning to publish this spring his memoirs of these events under the title
“Truth, Lies, and O-Rings: The Untold Story Behind the Challenger Accident”.
Though not a very well-known person, McDonald has had some press since 1986, such as
this 1/28/1987 NYT article. Along with other Thiokol and NASA engineers and managers, McDonald is reported to have felt deep regret about the accident. Along with engineer
Roger Boisjoly, McDonald is reported to have unequivocally objected to the 1/28/1986 launch of STS-61-C, citing concerns that what did happen, would.
This book is unlikely to be front rack or webpage material, so spacecraft engineering and history enthusiasts might want to be on the lookout for it. As someone who makes a habit of reading practically anything former astronauts and manned spaceflight engineers manage to publish, I will be.
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