Who Is Christa McAuliffe? The Teacher Died In Challenger Disaster – Hollywood Life

Christa McAuliffeView galleryThis Sept. 26, 1985 photo made available by NASA shows astronaut Sharon Christa McAuliffe. The high school teacher from Concord, N.H., never got to teach from space. She perished during the 1986 launch of shuttle Challenger, along with her six crewmates. (NASA via AP)FILE - In this 1985 file photo, high school teacher Christa McAuliffe rides with her children Caroline, left, and Scott during a parade down Main Street in Concord, N.H. New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu is proclaiming a day in honor of McAuliffe who died in the NASA Challenger disaster decades ago. Sununu said Sunday, Jan. 28 will be known as "Christa McAuliffe Day" in honor of the woman selected to become the first educator in space. (AP Photo/Jim Cole, File)Christa McAuliffe, the space teacher from Concord, New Hampshire, helmeted and ready for the oxygen mask as she prepared for an orientation flight aboard one of the T-28 NASA training planes, Monday, Sept. 30, 1985 in Houston, Texas. Pilot of the jet was the commander for the January flight, Dick Scobee. (AP Photo/Ed Kolenovsky)
Image Credit: AP

Challenger: The Final Flight examines the 1986 Challenger space shuttle disaster, which broke apart just 73 seconds after launching on Jan. 28, 1986. All 7 astronauts onboard the Challenger, including Christa McAuliffe, died when the Challenger broke apart due to faulty O-rings on the solid rocket booster. As a member of the crew, the 37-year-old was a payload specialist, but she was actually going to be the first private citizen to be taken into space.

1. Christa McAuliffe was going to be the first teacher in space. Christa, who was a social studies teacher in New Hampshire, was chosen from more than 11,000 applicants to participate in the NASA Teacher in Space Project. During the 1986 Challenger mission, Christa was going to conduct experiments onboard the shuttle and teach two lessons from space.

Christa McAuliffe
Christa McAuliffe with the rest of the Challenger crew. (Public Domain/NASA)

2. She is survived by her husband and kids. Christa married Steven J. McAuliffe in 1970. They had two kids, Scott and Caroline, who were just 9 and 6 years when she died.

3. She had to undergo astronaut training before the launch. Christa left for training at Johnson Space Center in Texas in Sept. 1985. During her training, she experienced weightlessness and joined the crew for “simulations of critical phases of the flight,” according to the New York Times. As a private civilian, Christa’s medical examinations weren’t as strict as the other astronauts but she could not have a chronic condition.

Christa McAuliffe
Christa McAuliffe in her astronaut space suit. (AP)

 

4. Her husband and the other families of the crew continue to remember Christa and the other lost astronauts. Steven and the other members of the crew’s families created the Challenger Center for Space Science Education. The Challenger Center uses “space-themed simulated learning and role-playing strategies to help students bring their classroom studies to life and cultivate skills needed for future success, such as problem-solving, critical thinking, communication and teamwork,” the official website says.

Christa McAuliffe with her backup Barbara Morgan. (Public Domain/NASA)

5. Her backup became an astronaut. Barbara Morgan trained alongside Christa leading up to the launch. Barbara was in Florida for the launch when the Challenger disintegrated less than 2 minutes into its flight. Twelve years after Christa’s death, Barbara was selected as an astronaut candidate by NASA. She began her training as a full-time astronaut, specifically a mission specialist. Barbara eventually went into space on the STS-118 in 2007.

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