Neil Armstrong died today.
My father worked for NASA on the X-15
project at Edwards Air Force Base in the 1960s and the Armstrongs
were friends of the family. We attended the same church and my father
and Neil were both ushers, as were several other test pilots, so I
became an usher so I could hang out with them in the lobby during the
sermon and listen to their shop talk. If it wasn't the recent test
flight they were talking about, it was the upcoming test.
On test flight days, my mother and
brother and I would get up very early, four in the morning, and drive
out into the desert to a spot where we could see the flight. We'd
watch the designated part of the sky, and pretty soon we could see
the B-52 in the distance, followed by a couple of F-104 chase planes.
When the B-52 released the X-15, we
would see that extra contrail start and speed away from the bomber as
if it were standing still.
There were two basic types of test
flights: speed and altitude. On speed flights, the X-15 would rocket
past us so fast that it seemed to cover the entire sky in a matter of
seconds and disappear on the horizon, but my favorite flights were
the altitude tests, because as the X-15 climbed higher and higher it
appeared to go slower and slower until it seemed almost to just stop.
When it reached its peak it would appear to gain speed and again,
disappear on the horizon.
After the flight, my mother would drop
us off at school in time for our first classes. That evening, the
local paper, the Lancaster Ledger-Gazette would have a big headline
about the flight. I'd read all about it with the same enthusiasm as I
did when I checked the baseball standings. What I didn't realize at
the time was that the entire world was not paying as close attention
as I was, as close attention as the citizens of the Antelope Valley.
Not until Tom Wolfe's book, The Right Stuff, was my perception
brought into line.
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