RocketSTEM Issue #10 - February 2015 | Page 13

Expedition One commander William (Bill) Shepherd poses for a photo in the Zvezda Service module of the International Space Station Alpha. Credit: NASA Did someone call for a contractor? william shepherd Another Navy Astronaut, William Shepherd, was born July 26, 1948 in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. However if you ask him, he calls Babylon, New York his hometown. He too attended the U.S. Naval Academy where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in aerospace engineering. However, unlike many of his fellow Navy astronauts, he did not go down the path of a pilot, instead he served with the Navy’s Underwater Demolition Team Eleven, SEAL Teams One and Two, and Special Boat Unit Twenty. This was a much different path to becoming an astronaut then most other Navy astronauts before him. Captain Shepherd was selected as an astronaut in 1984 and went on to fly three Space Shuttle missions. STS-27, his first mission was a mission for the Department of Defense. Space Shuttle Atlantis launched on December 2nd, 1988 on a 4 day mission. In its payload bay was a satellite named ONYX, the mission was to simply release it into orbit, however upon release, one of the antenna dishes failed to deploy. The crew retrieved and repaired the satellite before releasing it once again. Repairing the satellite would have required an unscheduled spacewalk which Shepherd and fellow crew member Jerry Ross would have had to perform. But that’s all just speculation, in truth, only the Astronauts and some people at NASA and the DoD really know what happened since the mission, was, and still is, classified. His next mission would be STS-41, while not a classified mission, it was never the less, very important. On board was the European Space Agency’s Ulysses spacecraft which they were to send on a mission to the sun to explore its polar regions. The mission was a success, Ulysses made it to the Sun and spent 18 years orbiting our star carrying out its studies. His last Space Shuttle mission would be on STS-52 which launched on October 22nd, 1992. The primary mission was the deployment of the Laser Geodynamic Satellite also known as LAGEOS-II. Other mission experiments were also performed and Columbia returned to a landing at the Kennedy Space Center on November 1st, 1992 after a highly successful mission. That, however, was not the end of Captain Shepherd’s career as an Astronaut. He did fly one more time aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft, blasting off on October 31st, 2000, and docking to the newly born International Space Station two days later. He and his crew of two Russian Cosmonauts spent almost 6 months as the very 1st crew to man the orbiting outpost. They were responsible for getting everything working inside and preparing the station for future crews and future expansion of the outpost. This was quite the daunting task to say the least, which could be why NASA put an Ex-Navy SEAL in command. Captain Shepherd returned to Earth aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery on March 21st, 2001. That would be his last time flying in a spacecraft, as he retired from NASA in 2002, but you can go outside and see his work flying overhead still today. 11 www.RocketSTEM .org 11