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Space

Moonwalker 'Pete' Conrad dies in crash

Conrad
Conrad became the third astronaut to walk on the moon on November 12, 1969, during the Apollo 12 mission
VIDEO
CNN's Miles O'Brien reports on the life of former astronaut 'Pete' Conrad.
Windows Media 28K 80K
 

Astronaut remembered for 'pushing the boundaries'

July 9, 1999
Web posted at: 10:13 a.m. EDT (1413 GMT)


In this story:

Fatal accident

'Whoopie!'

From Navy to space

A pioneer to the end

RELATED STORIES, SITES icon



From staff and wire reports

OJAI, California (CNN) -- Former Apollo astronaut Charles "Pete" Conrad Jr., who became the third person ever to walk on the moon, was killed in a motorcycle accident near the town of Ojai, California, authorities said early Friday. He was 69.

"Pete was a great guy," remembers NASA administrator Daniel Goldin. The head of the U.S. space agency described Conrad as "a prankster ... who, during serious times, would want to tell jokes to cut the stress and the tension, and a man who was deeply committed to his country."

He was "always pushing the boundaries, always coming into my office with a new idea and, at 69, he had the spirit of a 13- year-old," Goldin told CNN.

Just last spring, Conrad said he was looking forward to the day he would turn 77.

"I fully expect that NASA will send me back to the moon as they treated Sen. (John) Glenn, and if they don't do otherwise, why, then I'll have to do it myself," he declared.

Glenn became the oldest person in space at age 77, aboard the shuttle Discovery last year.

Conrad
NASA selected Conrad, an aeronautical engineer, to be an astronaut in 1962  

Fatal accident

Conrad, of Huntington Beach, near Los Angeles, was riding his 1996 Harley Davidson Thursday when the vehicle left the road on a curve and went into a drainage culvert. Conrad was ejected onto the pavement, the California Highway Patrol said in a statement.

He was on a trip to Monterey with his wife, Nancy, and friends when he crashed on the turn, Ventura County Deputy Coroner James Baroni said.

Conrad died at the hospital where he was taken for treatment. The preliminary cause of death was listed as internal injuries, the highway patrol said.

An autopsy was to be performed on Friday. Neither drugs or alcohol were involved in the accident, authorities said.

Officials also said Conrad was wearing a helmet and was traveling under the posted 55-mph speed limit when he took the turn.

In an interview with The Los Angeles Times several years ago, Conrad said he enjoyed "fast bikes, fast cars and anything that moves."

Apollo 12
The second lunar landing was made during the Apollo 12 mission  

'Whoopie!'

Conrad was a veteran of four space flights, but is best remembered for his role in the second lunar landing on November 19, 1969, during the Apollo 12 mission he commanded.

Conrad and astronaut Alan Bean spent seven hours and 45 minutes on the moon's surface.

U.S. astronaut Neil Armstrong was the first person to set foot on the moon on July 20, 1969. He was followed by crew mate Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin on the Apollo 11 mission.

"That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind," Armstrong said as he stepped onto the lunar surface.

When the 5-foot-6 Conrad stepped onto the surface, he exclaimed with his trademark sense of humor: "Whoopie! That may have been a small one for Neil, but that's a long one for me."

Crew
Conrad was the pilot for the Gemini 5 mission in 1965, and set an endurance record during the flight  

From Navy to space

Conrad was born in Philadelphia on June 2, 1930, and earned a degree in aeronautical engineering from Princeton University in New Jersey in 1953.

Trained as a Navy aviator, he became an astronaut in 1962, serving as pilot of the Gemini 5 mission in 1965, the command pilot of the Gemini 11 mission in 1966, commander of Apollo 12 three years later and Skylab 2 in 1973.

In his final space mission, Conrad commanded the first crew assigned to the Skylab space station, which had sustained damage during its launch.

During the 28-day mission, Conrad and his crew repaired the station during three harrowing spacewalks, saving the program from potential failure.

"Pete and his crew saved the Skylab. He was one hell of a guy," said former astronaut Tom Stafford, who joined NASA the same year as Conrad.

A pioneer to the end

Conrad retired from the U.S. Navy and NASA in 1974.

After leaving the space agency, Conrad devoted his time to developing reusable spacecraft, initially with aerospace giant McDonnell Douglas.

In 1995, he formed his own company, Universal Space Lines, and several sister companies with the goal of commercializing space.

"He was going back to space as an entrepreneur, trying to create ways for rockets to launch inexpensively and manage satellites," said his widow.

Among his numerous awards are the Congressional Space Medal of Honor, two NASA Distinguished Service Medals, two NASA Exceptional Service Medals, two Navy Distinguished Service Medals and two Distinguished Flying Crosses.

He was enshrined in the Aviation Hall of Fame in 1980.

Conrad is the third of the 12 original moon walkers to die. James Irwin of Apollo 15 died in 1991 and Alan Shepard of Apollo 14 died a year ago.

In reflecting on the upcoming 30th anniversary of Apollo 11, Conrad recently said, "Time flies when you're having fun, and I've been having fun for the last 30 years."

Conrad, who divorced his first wife, is survived by his second wife, Nancy, three sons and seven grandchildren. A son preceded him in death. Funeral arrangements were pending.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.


RELATED STORY:
Apollo 12 astronaut Pete Conrad killed in motorcycle accident
July 9, 1999
Shuttle mission aims to make history
July 7, 1999

RELATED SITES:
Astronaut Bio: Charles Conrad, Jr., Captain, USN (Ret.)
TLC -- Blast Off: True Stories From the Final Frontier - Charles Conrad
Kennedy Space Center Home Page
  • NASA Project Gemini-V
  • NASA Project Gemini-XI
  • NASA Apollo Mission Apollo-12
  • Skylab 2
NASA History Page
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