Astronaut Thomas Stafford, chief of Apollo 10, dies aged 93

By editor
March 19, 2024

Astronaut Thomas Stafford, chief of Apollo 10 vision, died at the age of 93 on Monday.

Stafford commanded a dress rehearsal trip for the 1969 sun landing, Apollo 11, and the first U. S. Soviet place linkup.

He died in a hospital near his Space Coast house, said Max Ary, chairman of the in Weatherford, Oklahoma.

The three-star retired Air Force public participated in four space operations. Before Apollo 10, he flew on two Libra airlines, including the first encounter of two U. S. pills in orbit.

Stafford was one of 24 pilots who touched down on the sky, but he did not land on it. The Apollo 11 mission’s ancient mission two months later was a result of the Apollo 10 goal in May 1969.

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson stated in a blog on X that “Today General Tom Stafford traveled to the eternal sky that he so bravely explored as a Gemini and Apollo astronomer as well as a mediator in Apollo Soyuz.”

Astronaut Thomas Stafford, commander of Apollo 10 mission, has died at the age of 93 on Monday
The retired Air Force three-star general commanded a dress rehearsal flight for the 1969 moon landing and the first U.S.-Soviet space linkup. (pictured: Stafford in August 1965 near the NASA Motor Vessel Retriever in the Gulf of Mexico during training)

‘ Godspeed, General Tom Stafford. Thank you for your efforts to NASA, and the earth, Nelson continued with a heartfelt gift picture in honor of Stafford.

Those of us who have the privilege of knowing him are grieving greatly but pleased that we knew a giant.

Stafford became a significant number for NASA after he left place and retired with his expertise. His expertise included advice on everything from safety concerns to returning to space after the Columbia space shuttle accident in 2003.

He was recognized with a NASA community service award for his leadership in a class that looked into how to repair the then-failed Hubble Space Telescope.

Stafford, also known as the “Father of Stealth,” was in charge of the well-known Area 51 desert base, which hosted numerous UFO theories and held the test of Air Force stealth technologies.

During his Apollo 10 vacation, Stafford and Gene Cernan, another American astronomer, took the moon’s rover nicknamed Snoopy within nine yards of the moon´s area.

Astronaut John Young remained in the main spacecraft, which was nicknamed Charlie Brown.

‘ The most amazing look, I think, that definitely changed your view of things is when you first see Earth,’ Stafford said in 1997 as he talked about the perspective from lunar circle.

Apollo 10´s return to Earth laid the world´s record for fastest rate by a manned aircraft at 24, 791mph.

After the sky landings, the Soviet Union and NASA made a decision to launch a combined docking mission, and Stafford, a one-star general at the time, was chosen to lead the British side.

After he retired from space, Stafford became a key figure for NASA when it sought independent advice on everything from human Mars missions, to safety issues, to returning to flight after the 2003 space shuttle Columbia disaster
Stafford in orbit during NASA's Gemini 9A mission, on June 5, 1966

He made longtime friendships with spacecraft and participated in intense language training, which the KGB followed while serving in the Soviet Union.

The two space tourists also visited Disney World and rode up on Space Mountain before entering room and joining ships.

The 1975 vision included two times where the five men worked together on research. After, the two groups toured the world together, meeting President Gerald Ford and Russian leader Leonid Brezhnev.

At a meeting marking the 30th anniversary in 2005, he recalled how it demonstrated to the rest of the world that two absolutely opposing political systems was coexist.

The two personnel eventually became so near that Leonov made arrangements years later for Stafford to be able to choose two Russian boys when he was in his 70s.

‘We are too old to follow, but they were too aged to be adopted,’ Stafford told The Oklahoman in 2004.

‘They just added so much meaning to our life, and just because you´re retiring doesn’t mean you don´t have anything left to give.’

Afterwards, Stafford played a key role in discussions about the relationship building and running of the International Space Station in the 1990s.

Stafford, a child from Weatherford, said he would look away and observe enormous DC-3 aircraft flying overhead on first intercontinental routes.

‘I wanted to fly since I was 5 or 6 years older seeing those jets,’ he told NASA researchers.

Stafford attended the U.S. Naval Academy, where he received his top honors, flew in the back of some aircraft, and had fun doing it.

He had a dream to sail battle in the Korean War and had volunteered for the Air Force. But by the time he got his arms, the conflict ended. He attended the Air Force’s experimental test pilot training facility, graduated it second in his class, and continued to teach it.

Stafford (right) is survived by his wife. Linda, two sons, two daughters and two stepchildren. (pictured: Russian cosmonaut Alexei Leonov (left) and Stafford speaking to the media in Moscow in July 2010)
Stafford (left) is seen with Vice President Spiro T. Agnew (center) and Al Siepert, deputy director of the Kennedy Space Center to watch the Apollo 11 take off in July 1969

In 1962, NASA selected Stafford for its next collection of pilots, which included Neil Armstrong, Frank Borman and Pete Conrad.

Stafford and Wally Schirra were given the Gemini 6 sign. Their initial goal was to get together with a spacecraft that was clear.

However, the spaceship’s 1965 release was halted by the spacecraft’s explosion shortly after liftoff. In December, NASA improvised, and the Gemini 6 met but didn’t dock with the two astronauts on the 7th spacecraft.

Stafford´s second journey in 1966 was with Cernan on Gemini 9. Cernan´s spacecraft, connected to a plane- group like device, didn´t get well.

Cernan complained that his back became more swollen and the sun made him more warm. Then his helmet fogged off and he couldn´t view.

‘Call it quits, Gene. Get out of there,’ Stafford, the captain, told Cernan.

Stafford flew 127 different types of aviation, helicopters, and four distinct aircraft totaling 507 hours.

After the Apollo-Soyuz vision, Stafford returned to the Air Force, where he worked in studies and commanded the Air Force Flight Test Center, before resigning in 1979 as a three-star standard.

He is survived by his family. Linda, two children, two sons and two siblings, according to the gallery.

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