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Ellison Onizuka

 
Biography: Ellison Onizuka
 

American astronaut Ellison Onizuka (1946 - 1986) was one of the seven crew members who died in the 1986 explosion of the "Challenger"space shuttle. The first American of Asian heritage to reach space, Onizuka had harbored a desire to become an astronaut since his childhood. "He encouraged the freedom to dream," his wife Lorna told "People","and the commitment to making those dreams come true."

Grandson of Japanese Immigrants

Onizuka was born on June 24, 1946, in Kealakekua, on the Kona coast of Hawaii's main island. His grandparents had come to Hawaii from Japan in the early 1900s to work as indentured laborers on the island's sugar plantations. Onizuka was the third of four children born to his mother Mitsue, who ran a small store in Keopu, and his father Masimutu. Keopu was a coffee - growing area, and Onizuka earned extra money for the household as a child by picking coffee beans.

Onizuka was fascinated by space flight from an early age. The year he turned 15, the pioneer Mercury mission of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) put an American astronaut in space for the first time. Many among this early generation of astronauts became celebrated heroes in the era, but they were exclusively white males. "Ellison always had it in his mind to become an astronaut but was too embarrassed to tell anyone," his mother said in a Time magazine tribute from Paul Gray. "When he was growing up, there were no Asian astronauts, no black astronauts, just white ones. His dream seemed too big."

Earned Dual Degrees

Onizuka liked to visit the Bishop Museum in Honolulu, and look through its immense telescope at the heavens. A well - rounded student, he was a good athlete, a Boy Scout who attained the Eagle Scout rank in his last year of high school, and a practicing Buddhist as a teen as well, which linked him to his Japanese heritage, though he did not speak the language. In 1964, he entered the University of Colorado at Boulder and its Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program. He studied aerospace engineering, and graduated from a special program in 1969 with both undergraduate and master's degrees in his field. He then went on to a career in the United States Air Force, becoming an aerospace flight test engineer at McClellan Air Force Base and its Air Logistics Center in the Sacramento, California area. One of his projects was devising ways to salvage American military aircraft that had been downed in the Vietnam War.

In 1974, Onizuka won a spot in the Air Force Test Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base in California. After excelling in that, he was accepted for the far more rigorous astronaut training program with NASA in 1978, and Onizuka moved to Houston, Texas, with his family to begin training at its Johnson Space Center. He was one of 35 future space - shuttle astronauts to start training there, though the first shuttle flight was still three years away.

Onizuka completed his astronaut training in 1979, and by 1982 was serving on the launch support crews for the space shuttle flights of the Columbia, then the Challenger and Discovery crafts which followed. These shuttles rocketed into space with increasing regularity from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida during the first half of the decade, and Onizuka waited to be selected for a flight himself. A few notable firsts in American space history occurred while he waited: the first female astronaut, Sally Ride, went aloft in June of 1983, and two months later Guion Bluford became the first African American astronaut in space. As Onizuka neared forty, he worried little about being bypassed, for he knew his space - flight career could continue well into middle age. "There's no age cutoff for astronauts," his mother said he liked to assert, according to Gray's Time article.

First Asian American in Space

Onizuka became the first Asian American in space in January of 1985 when he joined the crew of the Discovery for the shuttle program's first Department of Defense mission. The trip also made him the first astronaut from Hawaii as well as the first Buddhist in space. The Discovery circled the Earth 48 times, and Onizuka was awed by both the view and the technology. "You're really aware that you're on top of a monster, you're totally at the mercy of the vehicle," New York Times journalist Pauline Yoshihashi quoted him as telling a friend. Still, he was thrilled by finally achieving his childhood goal. "I still pinch myself to convince myself that the dream came true," the same New York Times article reported him as enthusing.

Onizuka's home was in Houston, where he lived with his wife, Lorna Leiko Yoshida, a fellow Hawaiian of Japanese ancestry whom he married in 1969. They had two daughters, Janelle and Darien, and visited family in Hawaii regularly. He was modest about his career and achievements, brother Claude told Yoshihashi. "When he'd come home, he'd drink beer and ...be just another guy," he told the New York Times.

First Civilian Among the Crew

Onizuka was selected to fly on a second shuttle mission slated for early 1986. This Challenger flight was to be the vessel's 10th, and headed by flight commander Dick Scobee. Other crew members included pilot Michael Smith, electrical engineers Gregory Jarvis and Judith Resnik, physicist Ronald McNair, and the first civilian American in space, Christa McAuliffe. A Concord, New Hampshire high school teacher chosen from among from some 11,000 applicants to be America's first "Teacher in Space," McAuliffe's presence excited great public interest in this particular Challenger flight, and a group of Concord students traveled to Florida to watch the launch from special viewing stands, a contingent that included the educator's nine - year - old son and six - year - old daughter.

McAuliffe's role aboard the Challenger was to teach two classroom lessons from space with the help of video feeds. Onizuka's job was to film Haley's comet, which had not been seen since 1910, with a handheld camera. The launch of the Challenger, originally set for January 20, was delayed several days from the Kennedy Space Center pad due to weather and technical issues. It finally fired its rockets on Tuesday, January 28, and went aloft as NASA's 25th shuttle mission. Initially, it appeared to be a successful launch, traveling at 1,900 miles per hour and with no sign of trouble, but then a brief flash of orange near where the fuel tank connected to the orbiter became visible, and at 73 seconds after takeoff flames near that seal turned into a fireball that obliterated the view of the craft from the Earth. Communication was instantly lost, and all aboard perished. Onlookers at the Kennedy Space Center watched in horror of what became the worst accident in the history of the U.S. space program to date.

Urged Others to Reach for Stars

Onizuka was mourned with his six colleagues in a memorial service held several days later at the Kennedy Space Center. His Buddhist beliefs, the head of the Buddhist Churches of America, told Yoshihashi for Onizuka's New York Times obituary, lent his choice of career an added resonance. "As a test pilot and an astronaut, he had to deal with life and death," Bishop Seigen Yamoaka told the newspaper. "As long as death is seen as the enemy, you fight it, and become more attached to life. In time, he came to the realization that death is not an enemy to defeat, but a compassionate friend."

A hero back in Hawaii, the state's first astronaut was honored with the Ellison S. Onizuka Space Center, a museum at Keahole Airport in Kona, which opened in 1991. During his career, Onizuka regularly visited classrooms and schools to speak of his own youth and goals that once seemed beyond reach. He was the guest speaker at the 1980 commencement of his alma mater, Konawaena High School, and told the graduates that it was the duty of their generation to pursue science past the bounds of the known. He urged them not to restrict themselves "by what your eye can see but by what your mind can imagine," according to Honolulu Advertiser writer Hugh Clark. "Many things that you take for granted were considered unrealistic dreams by previous generations. If you accept these past accomplishments as commonplace then think of the new horizons that you can explore."

Books

Notable Asian Americans, Gale, 1995.

U*X*L Biographies, U*X*L, 2003.

Periodicals

Honolulu Advertiser, January 28, 2001.

New York Times, February 11, 1986.

New York Times Magazine, February 23, 1986.

People, December 22, 1986.

Time, February 10, 1986.

Online

"Museum Spotlight: Ellison S. Onizuka," Asian American Online Museum, http://www.asiansinamerica.com/museum/0703 - museum.html (December 14, 2004).

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Wikipedia: Ellison Onizuka
 
Ellison Shoji Onizuka
NASA Astronaut
Status Killed during mission
Born June 24, 1946(1946-06-24)
Kealakekua, Hawaii
Died January 28, 1986 (aged 39)
Cape Canaveral, Florida
Other occupation Research Engineer
Rank Lieutenant Colonel, USAF
Time in space 3d 01h 33m
Selection 1978 NASA Group
Missions STS-51-C, STS-51-L
Mission insignia

Ellison Shoji Onizuka (June 24, 1946 - January 28, 1986) was a Japanese American astronaut from Kealakekua, Kona, Hawaii who died during the destruction of the Space Shuttle Challenger, where he was serving as Mission Specialist for mission STS-51-L.
He was the first Asian American to reach space.

Contents

Early life

Ellison Onizuka was the oldest son and second youngest child of the late Masamitsu and Mitsue Onizuka. He had two older sisters, Shirley and Norma, and a younger brother, Claude. Claude became the family spokesman when Ellison attained fame as an astronaut and continued after the Challenger accident. Growing up, Ellison was an active participant in 4-H and the Boy Scouts, where he reached the level of Eagle Scout.[1]

He graduated from Konawaena High School in Kealakekua in 1964. He received a Bachelor's degree in aerospace engineering in June 1969, and a Master's in that field in December of the same year, from the University of Colorado at Boulder. He participated in Air Force ROTC during his time there and is an alumnus of Triangle Fraternity.

Onizuka married Lorna Leiko Yoshida on June 7, 1969,[2] while completing his studies at the University of Colorado. They had two daughters, Janelle Onizuka-Gillilan (b. 1969) and Darien Lei Shizue Onizuka-Morgan (b. 1975).

Air Force career

On January 15, 1970, Onizuka entered active duty with the United States Air Force,[3] where he served as a flight test engineer and as a test pilot. At the Sacramento Air Logistics Center at McClellan Air Force Base, he worked in test flight programs and systems security engineering for the F-84, F-100, F-105, F-111, EC-121T, T-33, T-39, T-28, and A-1.

From August 1974 to July 1975, Onizuka attended the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School. In July 1975, he was assigned to the Test Flight Center at Edwards Air Force Base in California. He became a squadron test flight engineer at the Test Pilot School, and later worked as a manager for engineering support in the training resources division. His duties there were based on the instruction of courses and the management of the airship fleet (A-7, A-37, T-38, F-4, T-33, and NKC-135) being used for the Test Pilot School and Test Flight Center. Onizuka managed to register more than 1,700 flight hours.

NASA career

Onizuka was selected for the astronaut program in January 1978, and completed one year of evaluation and training in August 1979. Later, he worked in the experimentation team, Orbiter test team, and launch support crew at the Kennedy Space Center for the STS-1 and STS-2. At NASA, he worked on the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory (SAIL) test and revision software team. He also collaborated on other technical projects, for instance, as astronaut crew team coordinator.

His first space mission took place on January 24, 1985, with the Kennedy Space Center launch of mission STS 51-C on Space Shuttle Discovery, the first space shuttle mission for the Department of Defense. Onizuka was accompanied by the commander Ken Mattingly, pilot Loren Shriver, fellow mission specialist James Buchli, and payload specialist Gary E. Payton. During the mission, Onizuka was responsible for the activities of the primary payloads, which included the unfolding of the Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) surface. After 48 orbits around the Earth, Discovery landed at the Kennedy Space Center on January 27, 1985. Onizuka had completed a total of 74 hours in space.

Onizuka was assigned to the mission STS 51-L on the Space Shuttle Challenger that took off from Kennedy Space Center at 11:38:00 EST (16:38:00 UTC) on January 28, 1986. The other Challenger crew members were commander Dick Scobee, pilot Michael J. Smith, mission specialists Ronald McNair, Judith Resnik, and payload specialists Gregory Jarvis and Christa McAuliffe. Challenger was destroyed by aerodynamic stress when rupture of the fuel tank at 73 seconds after launch turned the spacecraft out of proper position. All seven crew members were killed. NASA had estimated that the probability of a catastrophic accident during launch, the most perilous portion of space flight, was 1 in 438.

Gravesite of Ellison Onizuka

Ellison was buried at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaii.[3]

At the time of his death, Onizuka held the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. Posthumously, Onizuka was promoted to the rank of Colonel.

Memberships and distinctions

Onizuka belonged to the following organizations: Society of Flight Test Engineers, the Air Force Association, the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Tau, Arnold Air Society, and Triangle Fraternity.

Among his distinctions are the Air Force Commendation Medal, Air Force Meritorious Service Medal, Air Force Outstanding Unit Award, Air Force Organizational Excellence Award, and National Defense Service Medal. He was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart medal and the Congressional Space Medal of Honor.

Legacy

Astronaut Ellison S Onizuka St. in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo neighborhood

Onizuka Air Force Station in Sunnyvale, California, Onizuka Village family housing on Hickam Air Force Base and the Astronaut Ellison S. Onizuka Space Center, http://www.onizukaspacecenter.org at Kona International Airport in Hawaii are dedicated to him.

Two astronomical features were also named after him: an asteroid discovered by Edward L. G. Bowell on February 8, 1984, 3355 Onizuka and a 29-km-diameter crater on the Moon, Onizuka. Little Tokyo in Los Angeles, California also has a street named after him, as does the street surrounding Whitcomb Elementary in Clear Lake City, Houston, Texas, where his daughters attended school at the time of the Challenger disaster.

The Onizuka Center for International Astronomy, named in his honor, is the mid-level support and visitor complex for the Mauna Kea Observatories in Hawai'i. The complex includes a Visitor Information Station as well as dining, lodging, office and maintenance facilities for observatory staff and astronomers. A plaque of Onizuka's face is mounted on a boulder by the entrance to the Visitor Information Station.

Triangle Fraternity has the Ellison Onizuka Young Alumnus Award in tribute to him.

The Engineering Center at the University of Colorado at Boulder has a conference room named after him.

Page 28 (Page X of additional page inserts) of every new U.S. passport contains this quote:

"Every generation has the obligation to free men's minds for a look at new worlds... to look out from a higher plateau than the last generation." - Ellison S. Onizuka

The Hawai'i Space Grant Consortium holds an annual Astronaut Ellison Onizuka Science Day[4] at the University of Hawai'i-Hilo for students in grades 4-12, parents and teachers.

In Movies/TV

References

External links


 
 

 

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