- William R. Pogue
Infobox Astronaut
name =William Reid Pogue
type =Astronaut
nationality =American
date_birth =birth date and age|1930|01|23
place_birth =Okemah ,Oklahoma
occupation =Test Pilot
rank =Colonel ,USAF
selection =1966 NASA Group
time =84d 01h 15m
mission =Skylab 4
insignia =
|William Reid Pogue (born
January 23 ,1930 ) is a retired Americanastronaut .Personal data
Pogue was born in
Okemah, Oklahoma , and is the son of Mr and Mrs Alex W. Pogue (both deceased) who lived inSand Springs, Oklahoma ; he is ofChoctaw descent. [http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/history/oral_histories/PogueWR/WRP_Bio.pdf] He is married with three children. He enjoys running and playingpaddleball and handball, and his hobbies includecabinet making . He has three grandchildren who reside in Georgia.Education
Attended primary and secondary schools in Oklahoma; received a bachelor of science degree in
Education fromOklahoma Baptist University in 1951 and aMaster of Science degree in Mathematics fromOklahoma State University in 1960; awarded an honorary doctorate of science degree fromOklahoma Baptist University in 1974.Experience
Pogue, retired Air Force Colonel, came to the
Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center from an assignment atEdwards Air Force Base ,California , where he had been an instructor at theAir Force Aerospace Research Pilot School since October 1965.He enlisted in the Air Force in 1951 and received his commission in 1952. While serving with the Fifth Air Force during the Korean conflict, from 1953 to 1954, he completed a combat tour in
fighter bombers . From 1955 to 1957, he was a member of theUSAF Thunderbirds . He was a solo and a slot pilot with themHe has gained proficiency in more than 50 types and models of American and British
aircraft and is as acivilian flight instructor . Pogue served in the mathematics department as an at theUnited States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs,Colorado , from 1960 to 1963. In September 1965, he completed a two-year tour astest pilot with theBritish Ministry of Aviation under theUSAF/RAF Exchange Program , after graduating from theEmpire Test Pilots' School in Farnborough,England .He has logged 7,200 hours flight time--including 4,200 hours in
jet aircraft and 2,017 hours inspace flight .NASA experience
Colonel Pogue was one of the 19
astronauts selected byNASA in April 1966. He served as a member of the astronaut support crews for theApollo 7 , 11, and 14 missions. He was also scheduled as Command-Module Pilot forApollo 19 . He would have been the Command Module pilot, so he would not have walked on the moon. Instead Pogue andGerald Carr of Apollo 19 went to Skylab, America's first space station.Pogue was pilot of
Skylab 4 (third and final manned visit to theSkylab orbital workshop), launchedNovember 16 ,1973 , and concludedFebruary 8 ,1974 . This was the longest manned flight (84 days, 1 hour and 15 minutes) in the history ofmanned space exploration to date. Pogue was accompanied on the record setting 34.5-million-mile flight byGerald P. Carr (commander) and Dr. Edward G. Gibson (science-pilot). They successfully completed 56 experiments, 26 science demonstrations, 15 subsystem detailed objectives, and 13 student investigations during their 1,214 revolutions of the earth.They also acquired extensive
earth resources observations data using Skylab's earth resources experiment package camera and sensor array and logged 338 hours of operations of theApollo Telescope Mount which made extensive observations of the sun'ssolar processes . Logged 13 hours and 31 minutes in two EVA's outside the orbital workshop.Pogue retired from the United States Air Force on
September 1 ,1975 , and he is now retired from NASA.Pogue is self-employed as a consultant to
aerospace and producer of general viewer videos on space flight. In 1991 he also authored the book "How Do You Go to the Bathroom in Space?"Writing career
In 1992, Pogue co-authored "The Trikon Deception", a science fiction novel, with
Ben Bova .He also wrote a book in 1991 called "How Do you Go to the Bathroom in Space" where he answers of 270 common questions he received.In 2003, Pogue published "Space Trivia" with
Apogee Books . It covers the trivial questions and answers from theProject Mercury era to theSpace Shuttle /International Space Station era.In 2007, as of the time of the revision of this document, Pogue is working on a website (http://williampogue.com), and an autobiography, which is currently under the working title of "But for the Grace of God".
Organizations
Member of the
Air Force Association Explorers Club ,American Astronautical Society , andAssociation of Space Explorers pecial honors
*
NASA Distinguished Service Medal (1974) andJSC Superior Achievement Award (1970);
*Air Medal ,Air Force Commendation Medal , theNational Defense Service Medal , and anAir Force Outstanding Unit Award (while a member of the USAF Thunderbirds);
*Air Force Distinguished Service Medal and Command Pilot Astronaut Wings (1974);
*City of Chicago Gold Medal (1974);
*Robert J. Collier Trophy for 1973 (1974);
*City of New York Gold Medal (1974);
*Dr. Robert H. Goddard Memorial Trophy for 1975 (1975);
*Federation Aeronautique Internationale's De La Vaulx Medal andV. M. Komarov Diploma for 1974 (1975);
*General Thomas D. White USAF Space Trophy for 1974 (1975);
*Fellow of theAcademy of Arts and Sciences ofOklahoma State University (1975);
*AIAA Haley Astronautics Award for 1974 (1975);
*American Astronautical Society 's 1975Flight Achievement Award (1976);
*5 Civilized Tribes Hall of Fame (1975);
*Oklahoma Aviation and Space Hall of Fame (1980);
*Clarence E. Page Memorial Trophy -Oklahoma Aviation and Space Museum (1989)In popular culture
In the 1995 film "Apollo 13", Pogue was played by
Brett Cullen . (He is never actually referred to by name in the film, but it is strongly hinted that Cullen's character is in fact Pogue when he mentions his upcoming flight on "Apollo 19".)External sources
* [http://www.williampogue.com William R. Pogue's Official WebSite]
* [http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/pogue-wr.html NASA bio web site]
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