Everything about John Glenn totally explained
Following the war, as a member of
VMF-218, Glenn flew patrol missions in
North China, until his unit was moved to
Guam. In 1948 he became a flight instructor at
Naval Air Station Corpus Christi,
Texas. Following that he attended amphibious warfare school and was given a staff assignment.
Glenn was finally assigned to
VMF-311 flying the
F9F Panther and eventually took part in 63 combat missions with the Marines during the
Korean War. It was during this time that Glenn earned the nickname
"Magnet Ass", for his ability to attract
flak. On two occasions he brought his jet back to base with over 250 holes in it. During his time in Korea, Glenn also served for a time alongside
Ted Williams, a future
hall of fame baseball player for the
Boston Red Sox. On his second tour he flew with the
United States Air Force on an interservice exchange. Flying 27 missions in the
F-86 Sabre, he shot down three
MiG-15s near the
Yalu River in the last nine days of the war.
He returned to NAS Pax River, with an appointment to the
Test Pilot School (class 12). As a test pilot, he served as armament officer, flying planes to high altitude and testing their cannon/machine guns. On
July 16,
1957, Glenn completed the first supersonic
transcontinental flight in a
Vought F8U Crusader. The
California to
New York flight took 3 hours, 23 minutes and 8 seconds. As Glenn passed over his hometown, a child in the neighborhood reportedly ran to the Glenn house shouting "Johnny dropped a bomb! Johnny dropped a bomb! Johnny dropped a bomb!" as the sonic boom shook the town.
NASA
In April 1959, Glenn was assigned to the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) as one of the original group of
Mercury astronauts for the
Mercury Project. During this time, he remained an officer in the
Marine Corps. He piloted the first American manned orbital mission aboard
Friendship 7 on
February 20,
1962, on the "Mercury Atlas 6" mission, lasting 4 hours, 55 minutes, and 23 seconds. During the mission there was concern that his heat shield had failed and that his craft would burn up on re-entry but he made his splash down safely. Glenn was celebrated as a national
hero, and received a
ticker-tape parade reminiscent of
Lindbergh. His fame and political gifts were noted by the Kennedys, and he became a personal
friend of the
Kennedy family.
Although NASA didn't publish the frequencies for the communications with space, according to a TV documentary two Italian radio enthusiasts, the
Judica Cordiglia brothers, used a photograph of an American space ship to calculate the length of the antenna. They found the frequency and were the first individuals to record the voice of Glenn from space.
Glenn resigned from NASA six weeks after the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy to run for office in his home state of Ohio. In 1965, Glenn retired as a
Colonel from the USMC and entered the business world as an executive for
Royal Crown Cola. He reentered politics later on. Some accounts of Glenn's years at NASA suggest that Glenn was prevented from flying in
Gemini or
Apollo missions, either by President Kennedy, himself, or by NASA management, on the grounds that the subsequent loss of a national hero of such stature would seriously harm or even end the manned space program. Yet Glenn resigned from the astronaut corps on
January 30,
1964, well before even the first Gemini crew was assigned.
Three decades later, after serving 24 years in the
Senate, Glenn lifted off for a second space flight on
October 29,
1998, on
Space Shuttle Discovery's
STS-95, in order to study the effects of space flight on the elderly. At age 77, Glenn became the oldest person ever to go into space. Glenn's participation in the nine-day mission was criticized by some in the space community as a junket for a politician. Others noted that Glenn's flight offered valuable research on weightlessness and other aspects of space flight on the same person at two points in life thirty-five years apart — by far the longest interval between space flights by the same person. Upon the safe return of the STS-95 crew, Glenn (and his crewmates) received another
ticker-tape parade, making him the ninth (and, as of 2007, final) person to have ever received multiple ticker-tape parades in his lifetime (as opposed to that of a
sports team).
Glenn vehemently opposed the sending of
Dennis Tito, the world's first
space tourist, to the International Space Station on the grounds that Tito's trip served no scientific purpose.
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The
NASA John H. Glenn Research Center at Lewis Field in
Cleveland, Ohio is named after him. Colonel Glenn Highway, which runs by
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and
Wright State University near
Dayton, Ohio, and John Glenn High School in his hometown of New Concord, Ohio were named for him as well.
Life in politics
In 1964, John Glenn announced that he was resigning from the space program to run against incumbent Senator
Stephen M. Young in the Democratic primary, but he was forced to withdraw when he hit his head on a bathtub. He sustained a concussion and injured his inner ear. Recovery left him unable to campaign at that time.
Glenn remained close to the Kennedy family and was with Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy when he was assassinated.
In 1970, Glenn contested for the
Democratic nomination for U. S. Senate; Glenn was defeated in the
primary by fellow Democrat
Howard Metzenbaum, who went on to lose the
general election race to
Robert Taft Jr. In the bitterly-fought 1974 Democratic primary rematch, Glenn defeated Metzenbaum, who had earlier been appointed by Ohio governor
John J. Gilligan to fill out the Senate term of
William B. Saxbe, who had resigned to become U. S.
attorney general. Metzenbaum was running to retain the seat to which he'd been appointed. In the 1974 general election, Glenn defeated Republican Mayor of
Cleveland Ralph Perk, beginning a Senate career that would continue until 1999. In 1980, Glenn won re-election to the seat, defeating Republican challenger
Jim Betts. In 1986, Glenn defeated challenger U.S. Representative
Tom Kindness.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Glenn and Metzenbaum (who was elected to the Senate in 1976) had strained relations, even though they were both from the same party and the same state. There was a thaw in 1983 when Metzenbaum endorsed Glenn for president, and in 1988, in response to a charge by Metzenbaum's opponent
George Voinovich that Metzenbaum was soft on
child pornography, Glenn appeared in a television ad in support of Metzenbaum.
In 1990, Glenn was inducted into the
Astronaut Hall of Fame.
Glenn was one of the five U. S. Senators caught up with
Lincoln Savings and the
Keating Five Scandal after accepting a $200,000 contribution from
Charles Keating. Glenn and Republican Senator
John McCain were the only Senators exonerated. The Senate Commission found that Glenn had exercised "poor judgment." The association of his name with the scandal gave Republicans hope that he'd be vulnerable in the 1992 campaign. Instead, Glenn handily defeated
Lieutenant Governor R. Michael DeWine to keep his seat. This 1992 re-election victory was the last time a Democrat won a statewide race in Ohio until 2006; DeWine later won Metzenbaum's seat upon his retirement.
In 1998, Glenn declined to run for re-election. The Democratic party chose
Mary Boyle to replace him, but she was defeated by then-Ohio Gov. George Voinovich.
Glenn made a bid to run as
Vice President with
Jimmy Carter in 1976, but Carter selected
Minnesota Senator
Walter Mondale at the 1976
Democratic National Convention. Glenn also mounted a bid to be the 1984 Democratic
Presidential candidate. Early on, Glenn polled well, coming in a strong second to Mondale. It was also surmised that he'd be aided by the almost-simultaneous release of
The Right Stuff, a film about the original seven Mercury astronauts in which it was generally agreed that Glenn's character was portrayed in an appealing manner. However, Glenn thought it would be bad form to capitalize on this kind of publicity, and didn't make much of these achievements in the period leading up to the
Iowa caucuses. Media attention turned to Mondale,
Gary Hart, and
Jesse Jackson, and by the time his campaign started playing up
The Right Stuff for the
New Hampshire primary, it was already too late. His failed 1984 presidential bid left Glenn with over $3 million in campaign debt that took over 20 years to pay off.
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During his time in the Senate, he was chief author of the
1978 Nonproliferation Act, served as chairman of the
Committee on Governmental Affairs from 1987 until 1995, sat on the
Foreign Relations and
Armed Services committees and the
Special Committee on Aging. Once Republicans regained control of the Senate, Glenn also served as the ranking minority member on a special Senate investigative committee chaired by
Tennessee senator
Fred Dalton Thompson that looked into alleged illegal
donations by China to U.S. political campaigns for the 1996 election. There was considerable acrimony between the two very high-profile senators during the life of this committee, which reached a level of public disagreement between the five leaders of a Congressional committee seldom seen in recent years.
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Public affairs institute
Glenn helped found the John Glenn Institute for Public Service and Public Policy at the
Ohio State University to encourage public service in 1998. On
July 1,
2006 the institute merged with OSU's School of Public Policy and Management to become the
John Glenn School of Public Affairs. Today he holds an adjunct professorship at both the Glenn School and Ohio State's Department of Political Science.
Family
Raised in Cambridge as well as New Concord, Ohio, Glenn married his childhood sweetheart,
Anna Margaret Castor, whom he met in New Concord and with whom he played in the band; they're the parents of two children, David and Carolyn. Both Glenn and his then-future wife, Annie, attended
Muskingum College in New Concord.
Glenn's former New Concord home has been made into an education center, teaching American history beginning in 1944.
Glenn is part of the Glenn-Macintosh clan of
Scotland. In 1963, Glenn received a letter from a young girl from
Sheffield, England named Anne Glenn. The letter, congratulating him on his orbit around the Earth, enclosed a family tree showing that Anne's father, George Arthur Thomas Glenn, and John Glenn were cousins.
John Glenn's great-nephew, renowned camera operator Glenn Thomas of New York, NY, was named after him, having been born three days after Glenn's historic first flight into space.
On
August 4,
2006, Glenn and his wife were injured in an automobile accident on
I-270 near Columbus, Ohio and were subsequently hospitalized. They were released on
August 6, after being treated for their injuries. Glenn suffered a fractured
sternum and a "very sore chest", as remarked by Glenn. The driver of the other car wasn't injured, but Glenn was cited for failure to yield the right-of-way. Mrs. Glenn was treated for minor injuries.
Medals and decorations
Military
Further Information
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