There is a movie about Ed Dwight being produced very soon; and other astronauts. List of African-American Astronauts. ClIck here.
African-American astronauts are Americans of African descent who have either traveled into space or been part of an astronaut program.
African-American astronautsEdit
Traveled into spaceEdit
# | Images | Names & Birth dates | Notes | Missions & launch dates | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Guion Bluford November 22, 1942 | First African-American astronaut in space | [1] | ||
2 | Ronald McNair October 21, 1950 †January 28, 1986 | Died in the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster | [1] | ||
3 | Frederick D. Gregory January 7, 1941 | First African American to pilot and command a Space Shuttle mission; acting Administrator of NASA, 2005 | [1] | ||
4 | Charles Bolden August 19, 1946 | Administrator of NASA, July 17, 2009 – January 20, 2017 | [1] | ||
5 | Mae Jemison October 17, 1956 | First African-American woman in space |
| [1] | |
6 | Bernard A. Harris Jr. June 26, 1956 | First African American to walk in space | [1] | ||
7 | Winston E. Scott August 6, 1950 | Veteran of three spacewalks | [1] | ||
8 | Robert Curbeam March 5, 1962 | Veteran of seven spacewalks | [1] | ||
9 | Michael P. Anderson December 25, 1959 †February 1, 2003 | Died in the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster | [1] | ||
10 | Stephanie Wilson September 27, 1966 | [1] | |||
11 | Joan Higginbotham August 3, 1964 |
| [1] | ||
12 | Alvin Drew November 5, 1962 | Veteran of two spacewalks, February 28 and March 2, 2011 | [1] | ||
13 | Leland D. Melvin February 15, 1964 | Associate Administrator for Education at NASA | [1] | ||
14 | Robert Satcher September 22, 1965 | EVA November 19 and November 23, 2009 |
| [1] | |
15 | Victor J. Glover April 30, 1976 | Joined ISS Expedition 64 as first African-American on an ISS Expedition |
| [2][3] | |
16 | Sian Proctor March 28, 1970 | First African American female Spacecraft Pilot, as part of Inspiration4. First African American commercial Astronaut. |
| ||
17 | Michael Strahan November 21, 1971 | First African American space tourist |
|
Never traveled into spaceEdit
Image | Name Birth date | Note | Sources |
---|---|---|---|
Robert Henry Lawrence Jr. October 2, 1935 †December 8, 1967 | First African-American astronaut; selected for astronaut training in 1967 for the MOL program; died in an aircraft accident | [4] | |
Livingston L. Holder Jr. September 29, 1956 | USAF astronaut in the Manned Spaceflight Engineer Program | [5] | |
Michael E. Belt September 9, 1957 | Astronaut, payload specialist from TERRA SCOUT – US Army Project; retired January 12, 1991. Although he did not fly any shuttle missions during his time as an astronaut, he was the back-up payload specialist to Thomas J. Hennen for the STS-44 mission which deployed a military satellite, undergoing 9 months of astronaut training for the role[6] He was selected as an astronaut through the US Army's Terra Scout program which was created specifically to support STS-44.[7] | [8] | |
Yvonne Cagle April 24, 1959 | In NASA management | [8] | |
Jeanette J. Epps November 2, 1970 | On August 25, 2020, NASA announced that Epps would join Boeing Starliner-1, the first operational mission of Boeing's CST-100 Starliner to the International Space Station.[9] | [8] | |
Jessica Watkins May 14, 1988 | Astronaut, NASA Astronaut Group 22, member of the crew of SpaceX Crew-4, first African-American woman on an ISS Expedition | [10] |
Often cited as the first African-American astronaut candidateEdit
Image | Name Birth date | Note | Sources |
---|---|---|---|
Ed Dwight September 9, 1933 | Ed Dwight made it to the second round of an Air Force program from which NASA selected astronauts, but was not selected by NASA to be an astronaut. Resigned from the Air Force in 1966 due to racial politics. In July, 1961, Frederick Dutton, special assistant to the president, wrote to Adam Yarmolinsky, special assistant to the secretary of defense to say that it was important "that for symbolic purposes in crossing the frontiers of space, this country would have qualified members from minority backgrounds." Shortly after, General Curtis LeMay, chief of the air force told Chuck Yeager, who was running Aerospace Research Pilot School (ARPS) at Edwards Air Force Base that, "[Attorney General] Bobby Kennedy wants a colored in space. Get one into your course." This communication placed Ed Dwight on a career track that could have sent him into outer space. Dwight proceeded to Phase II of ARPS, but was not selected by NASA to be an astronaut. | [11] |
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