Ronald McNair: Astronaut
Corinne Naden
Hardcover
(Chelsea House Publishers, Aug. 16, 2003)
One of America's first black astronauts, Ronald McNair was a trailblazer who helped extend the world's frontiers. Born in 1950 to a struggling family in racially segregated Lake City, South Carolina, McNair never accepted second best. In high school he became an honor student, Star Scout, ferocious football player, skillful musician, karate champion, and valedictorian of his senior class. After graduating magna cum laude from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, he attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he performed some of the earliest experiments with high-pressure lasers and earned a doctorate in physics. He then took a job as a staff physicist at California's Hughes Research Laboratories. In 1978, McNair joined the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's astronaut candidate program. He made his first spaceflight in 1984; two years later, on January 28, 1986, mission specialist McNair boarded the shuttle Challenger for his second journey into space. But the spacecraft exploded 73 seconds after lift-off, killing 35-year-old McNair and his 6 colleagues and plunging a shocked world into mourning.