First steps, then giant leap —
From the archives: Grissom’s infamous (and impactful) ocean landing turns 60 this week.
Eric Berger
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Update, July 17, 2021: When it comes to NASA history, July 21 may not have the same significance as July 20, the date when Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong landed on the moon in 1969. But back on July 21, 1961, another pivotal moment in the evolution of human spaceflight took place when Gus Grissom splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean within a small Mercury capsule—almost drowning in the process. The lessons NASA learned that day and in the following weeks undoubtedly changed the course of human spaceflight. This overlooked event has its 60th anniversary next Wednesday, and as such we’re resurfacing Space Editor Eric Berger’s examination of Grissom’s landing from the Ars archives. This story first published on November 8, 2016, and it appears unchanged below.
Gus Grissom had just entered the history books. A mere 10 weeks after Alan Shepard made America’s first human flight into space, Grissom followed with the second one, a 15-minute suborbital hop that took him to an altitude of 189km above the blue planet. After the small Mercury capsule’s parachutes deployed, Grissom splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean, seemingly bringing a flawless mission to a close.
Only it wasn’t flawless, nor was it closed. At that moment, Gus Grissom almost drowned.
It was July 21, 1961, toward the end of the second Mercury mission, and the hatch to Grissom’s spacecraft blew early. The ocean flooded in. The astronaut responded by jumping free of the Liberty Bell 7 capsule. He struggled for five minutes to remain above the churning waves even as his spacesuit, already 22 pounds when dry, filled with water.
This incident has gone down in history amid controversy. Some renditions of it, including the famous The Right Stuff novel and movie from Tom Wolfe, portray Grissom as “screwing the pooch.” Such accounts argue that the astronaut panicked and fired his hatch before it was time, essentially inviting the water in.
But a new book by author George Leopold about Grissom’s life—Calculated Risk: The Supersonic Life and Times of Gus Grissom—and a recent interview with the head of NASA’s recovery options for the Mercury program, Bob Thompson, dispels that fiction. From these measured accounts, Grissom emerges as a quick-thinking hero. He reacted decisively in an uncertain situation when otherwise this mission would have ended in death. Such an accident early in NASA’s space program could have given President Kennedy pause over the country’s nascent Moon-landing ambitions at a time when the US lagged badly behind the Soviet Union.
More than half a century later, Grissom’s name has faded from memory. Shepard has the honor of the first US spaceflight, John Glenn made the first orbital flight, and Neil Armstrong stepped on the Moon. Yet after an all-too-brief career that ended tragically in the 1967 Apollo 1 fire, Grissom deserves recognition not as an unlucky footnote but as a genuine hero. And for today’s astronauts, Grissom’s near-death experience in the Atlantic Ocean has renewed importance, offering a sobering reminder of the sea’s peril as NASA plans to return its Orion capsule from deep space again by way of the ocean.
“Water is a great place to land in, but it’s a hell of a place post-landing,” Thompson told Ars. “Let me tell you, you can hurt yourself in the ocean.”
“This I did not do”
Virgil Ivan “Gus” Grissom was the second youngest of the Mercury Seven astronauts NASA announced to the world on April 9, 1959. They were all hotshot test pilots, determined to become the first human to fly in space. Among the group, Grissom distinguished himself by working hard (and partying hard). By early 1961 he, Shepard, and Glenn had emerged as the frontrunners for the coveted first flight. Ultimately all of the Americans lost out to Yuri Gagarin, but Shepard claimed the US honor. Grissom served as the back-up pilot.
The second US mission to space went to Grissom, however. He would largely repeat the first Mercury flight with two key modifications—the Liberty Bell 7 capsule would have a trapezoid-shaped window, and a new explosive hatch would allow Grissom to exit the spacecraft on his own. To blow the hatch, Grissom had to remove a cap from the detonator, pull out a safety pin, and push down on a plunger.
The flight itself was splendid. As Grissom became the first American to directly view the Earth from space, he marveled at his home planet. “The view through the window became quite spectacular as the horizon came into view,” he said in his flight report. “The sight was truly breathtaking. The Earth was very bright, the sky was black, and the curvature of the Earth was quite prominent.”
After landing in the water with a “mild jolt,” Grissom was ready to press ahead with the final stage of his mission. “I felt that I was in good condition at this point and started to prepare myself for egress,” he said. Before firing the hatch, Grissom was supposed to wait for a rescue helicopter to fly over, hook into the lifting loop on top of the capsule, and raise it out of the water. Once clear, he was to remove the cap from the detonator, pull the safety pin, and activate the firing mechanism. Then he could step onto the sill of the hatch, climb into a horse collar lowered from the helicopter, and be pulled to safety without ever getting wet.
Grissom didn’t wait for the helicopter to arrive and hook the capsule, however. As the spacecraft bobbed in four-foot seas, he removed the cap from the detonator and pulled the safety pin. He did not push the plunger, which required five pounds of force to depress, but a few moments later, the hatch blew anyway. In the book We Seven (based on firsthand accounts of the Mercury program from the astronauts), Grissom wrote, “The plunger that detonates the bolts is so far out of the way that I would have to reach for it on purpose to hit it. This I did not do.”