- Guenter Wendt
Günter F. Wendt (b. August 28, 1924 in
Berlin ) is a German-American engineer noted for his work in the U.S. manned spaceflight program. An employee ofMcDonnell Aircraft and laterNorth American Aviation , he was in charge of the NASA Kennedy Space Center launch tower pad operations from the entire Mercury through Apollo programs (1959-1975). His official title was "Pad Leader". Wendt, like many others of the NASA Kennedy Space Center, remains a colorful and little-known, and yet essential figure in the history of manned space exploration.The native of
Germany studiedAeronautics in Berlin and served asLuftwaffe on-board mechanic during the war. Like his father, he immigrated to the U.S. in 1949 and became a U.S. citizen in 1955. As anengineer , he worked forMcDonnell Aircraft during the Mercury and Gemini manned space programs supervising spacecraft launch preparations atCape Canaveral . He was the last person seen by the astronauts before liftoff. NASA astronautDonn Eisele 's popular pun "Ah, I vonder vhere Guenter Vendt" was used authentically in the movie, "Apollo 13", spoken by actorTom Hanks playing the role of Apollo 13 mission commander Jim Lovell.After the
Apollo 1 accident on the pad, Guenter Wendt was hired by the ApolloManned Spacecraft Center contractorNorth American Rockwell . He had stopped "turning the lug wrench" to secure the hatches for astronaut crews with the end of the Gemini Program. However, NASA veteran astronautWally Schirra requested reassignment of the ever-competent and safety-obsessive Wendt specifically as the in-charge Pad Leader for Schirra's crew'sApollo 7 spaceflight. Crewmembers of the other Apollo missions shared an equal high regard for Wendt, so Wendt stayed on in the Pad Leader role through the end of the Apollo missions.In NASA documentary films, Wendt appears as the smiling, bespeckled, thin technician in the white cap and overalls, usually standing to the right at the hatch door, clipboard in hand, or bending over seated crewmembers pulling their safety belts snug for launch.
Wendt was regarded as somewhat of a welcomed good luck figure to mission crews; as above, always the last reassuring earth-bound human face they saw, kidding with the crewmembers and wishing them a 'successful trip', as he directed completion of the complex pad 'close-out' procedures just prior to spacecraft launch. Wendt, the 'final word' for the launch tower white room 'close-out' team (responsible for loading and securing the mission crews, ensuring that spacecraft instrumentation, switches and controls were correct for launch, and securing the hatch), was fondly nicknamed "Der Führer of der Launch Pad" (from his German-English accent) by the astronauts for his efficient, disciplined, yet good-humored pad crew leadership.
He worked at the cape into the early
Space Shuttle flights.Guenter F. Wendt later served as a technical consultant for several TV and movie features and wrote in his biography "
The Unbroken Chain " about his time atNASA . He remains a personal friend of many Americanastronaut s, and is a recipient of NASA's "Letter of Appreciation" award.Biography
* Guenter Wendt & Russell Still, "The Unbroken Chain", 2001,
Apogee Books (ISBN 1-896522-84-X)On film and television
Guenter F. Wendt has been portrayed in a number of movies and television shows or series about the
Space Race , including:* "Apollo 13" (played by
Endre Hules ). His character was playfully mocked by Jim Lovell (played byTom Hanks ): "Aaah, Gunter Wendt! I vonder vhere Gunter vent?"
* "From the Earth to the Moon" (played byMax Wright )External links
* [http://www.collectspace.com/padleader/home.html Padleader - The official website of Guenter Wendt]
* [http://www-pao.ksc.nasa.gov/kscpao/bios/wendt.htm Biography] atKennedy Space Center
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