Space Shuttle Challenger Cockpit Voice Recorder Transcript, January 28, 1986

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024
  • This is the transcript of the cockpit voice recorder (also known as the black box) from the Space Shuttle Challenger which broke apart 73 seconds after lift off in Cape Canaveral, Florida on January 28, 1986. It shows what the shuttle crew said to mission control and to each other.
    A great deal of effort was made to match the conversation to the exact second it happened both before lift off and after. It is a written transcript and not an audio recording.
    Please take a moment to remember the astronauts lost: Francis Richard Scobee, Michael Smith, Ellison Onizuka, Judith Resnik, Ronald McNair, Christa McAuliffe, and Gregory Jarvis.
    The transcript was taken from the book The Black Box, by Malcolm MacPherson.
    Music:
    I Need to Start Writing Things Down by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommon...)
    Source: chriszabriskie....
    Artist: chriszabriskie....

Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @vickiefowler1429
    @vickiefowler1429 3 года назад +1495

    I was working as an inspector for a company that made some o-rings for NASA. I lived with the fear that I had somehow missed a defect and caused this disaster. For eighteen months! When we finally got the letter from the investigation team that it was not our o-rings, my boss called me to his office and let me read it first! I cried so hard with relief! I still carry a memorial card in my wallet to this day!

    • @terribrooks9041
      @terribrooks9041 3 года назад +91

      Vickie Fowler - That would be awful to live with that fear for 18 months. Your boss was a good man. Just so sad for the families of the crew. May God bless and comfort them still.

    • @vickiefowler1429
      @vickiefowler1429 3 года назад +95

      I’ve often wondered what I would have done had it actually been one of our o-rings that failed. I’m not sure I could have lived with that! It was the longest eighteen months of my life. I couldn’t sleep... could barely eat. It was a living nightmare. The only thing that kept me alive were my co-workers who stood by me and urged me to wait for the results of the investigation. The o-rings we made were of Teflon, which is notorious for shrinking in cold weather. I had convinced myself that our’s were where the fault lay. I still feel such a strong connection to those brave people!

    • @chrisst8922
      @chrisst8922 3 года назад +36

      @@vickiefowler1429 It was out of the manufacturer's hands. The customer elected to use them without regard for the design parameters because of their culture.

    • @CWfist
      @CWfist 3 года назад +9

      Was it an O ring that failed and caused it to explode ?

    • @RHD919
      @RHD919 3 года назад +23

      It's really good to see someone that takes so much pride in their work. If you had that much concern you obviously have some pride even if it's not a glamorous or fun job.

  • @suziohug
    @suziohug 5 лет назад +3876

    If I remember correctly an engineer warned NASA not to launch because of icy o-rings . But why listen to an rocket engineer ? What do they know .

    • @ksol1460tv
      @ksol1460tv 5 лет назад +342

      Correct. Boisjoly & his fellow engineers had been lodging strenuous objections to the launch for MONTHS. They knew what was coming. They were haunted for the rest of their lives.

    • @MrNunna
      @MrNunna 5 лет назад +193

      Yeah, what do they know? It's not rocket science....Oh...

    • @pathall1532
      @pathall1532 5 лет назад +137

      There were two previous launch delays and Ronald Reagan had some dignitary buds with him and he was pissed about no launch so when those engineers said 'don't launch' Ron said to hell with that as this is the third time his buddies came to watch and OUR President said light this bird up using some kind of excuse " I want to know if this bird will take me out of harms way in the event of a war !! bad weather or not you bastards light this thing I am not going to be embarrassed in front of my friends again !!! THIS IS THE TRUTH !!!!

    • @hal1168
      @hal1168 5 лет назад +46

      @@pathall1532 Facinating. I don't doubt it. Do you have some provenance on that quote?

    • @pathall1532
      @pathall1532 5 лет назад +20

      I was told first hand by a person that was there !! Big VIP !!! He Has the credentials !!!

  • @jameskennedy6982
    @jameskennedy6982 3 года назад +403

    There are "life moments" that you remember forever....this is one!

    • @sherribrawn3757
      @sherribrawn3757 3 года назад +15

      Agree one hundred percent!!
      This, princess Diana's death, and 9/11.

    • @kmsharley75
      @kmsharley75 3 года назад +5

      @@sherribrawn3757 Princess Diana and 9/11 in the same breath? I mean, her death was tragic but come on....

    • @PaddyMcShane
      @PaddyMcShane 3 года назад +1

      @@kmsharley75 right?

    • @sherribrawn3757
      @sherribrawn3757 3 года назад +11

      @@kmsharley75it's one of those "I remember where I was and what I was doing at the time it happened... No disrespect just my feelings...

    • @pamelaneibuhr6959
      @pamelaneibuhr6959 3 года назад

      Indeed

  • @centuryrox
    @centuryrox 3 года назад +421

    As sad as this video is, it's nothing compared to the absolutely devastating footage in the "raw" video, which shows Christa McAuliffe's mother, father, and sister watching from the viewing stands, and their immediate reactions to the tragedy. It's so heartbreaking!

    • @chriswinchell1570
      @chriswinchell1570 3 года назад +7

      I agree. I think mission control says something like “there’s been a catastrophic loss of telemetry” and you can see christa’s mother asking what does that mean.

    • @lilchapin818
      @lilchapin818 2 года назад

      @@baruckacrane2685 7j7jj

    • @bartholomewlyons
      @bartholomewlyons Год назад

      I beg to differ

  • @lorrainefava9647
    @lorrainefava9647 3 года назад +291

    Never forget this day. God rest their souls.

    • @mattwilson3244
      @mattwilson3244 3 года назад +1

      When P.R. overrules science .

    • @jimegan6783
      @jimegan6783 3 года назад +3

      And God rest Roger Boisjoly, the Morton Thiokol employee whose pragmatism and wisdom would otherwise have delayed the launch due to the temperature's effect on the o-rings. The seals were not faulty, the same as aircraft are sound vehicles when properly de-iced or not flown at all in inclement weather.

    • @duke3250
      @duke3250 3 года назад +6

      they're not dead. look into it.

    • @Verstats
      @Verstats 3 года назад +1

      @@duke3250 shut the hell up and stop disrespecting these poor people, life is never on our side, we just act as it is, and think that.

    • @duke3250
      @duke3250 3 года назад +3

      @@Verstats just look it up lol they're still alive. the pictures are on the net.

  • @scottdacey1858
    @scottdacey1858 5 лет назад +745

    What a tragedy. You hear a lot about Christa but not a lot about Judith. She was an amazing woman. She was a electrical engineer, software engineer and a biomedical engineer.

    • @feeberizer
      @feeberizer 4 года назад +38

      I had the pleasure of meeting Judy when she came to Boeing for a prior payload briefing a couple years beforehand. She was smart, articulate and had a great sense of humor. I was working on a different program when Challenger was destroyed, but a manager who had been watching the live feed in another building came over to tell us what had happened. What an ugly day....

    • @simonbone
      @simonbone 4 года назад +15

      @Chairman of the Board As you probably know, Barbara Morgan went into space 21 years later despite the cancellation of the Teacher in Space program. She essentially had to start all over, training as a Mission Specialist. An amazing story.

    • @juliel7092
      @juliel7092 4 года назад +5

      Feeber Izer hi and hugs for your comments

    • @joserodrigo5595
      @joserodrigo5595 4 года назад +2

      @Geo Hock gtfo no one cares

    • @GGE47
      @GGE47 4 года назад +2

      @Geo Hock You're mad because you didn't get to go.

  • @dopeynightlifetv6859
    @dopeynightlifetv6859 3 года назад +278

    Uh-oh is two of the scariest words you would not want too hear in a accident like this

    • @janedoex1398
      @janedoex1398 Год назад +2

      This is what hit me the most. He HAD to know. 3 seconds can be long.

    • @christopherjohnson1803
      @christopherjohnson1803 Год назад +1

      He might have seen a master alarm of pressure dropping in the external tank or SRB...not much time to think.

  • @JG-ns2jc
    @JG-ns2jc 3 года назад +160

    I'll never forget this day. I was in 4th grade and we had the television on in the library. My teacher asked me to run from the classroom down to the library to see if there were any updates. As I entered the library, I saw the space shuttle take off and then explode shortly after. I stood there in disbelief for what had to have been a few minutes. I finally shook myself out of my amazement and ran down to the classroom, shouting "it blew up, the space shuttle blew up" everyone rushed down to the library to see what happened. I don't think we did any school work the rest of the day.

    • @louvreunknown
      @louvreunknown 3 года назад +8

      I was in first and remember everything..... my teacher started crying.

    • @myhaikaratesmellstillrocks6823
      @myhaikaratesmellstillrocks6823 3 года назад +7

      i was in 5th grade and i'll never forget my teacher's reaction. She just shut off the TV and walked out of the room. 15 mins later they were all lining up the buses to send us home early. Fucking unbelievable tragedy and like every school child in America watched it live.

    • @verstumfung43
      @verstumfung43 3 года назад +2

      I was in 4th Grade also when this occurred.

    • @oziumentisis
      @oziumentisis 3 года назад

      @@myhaikaratesmellstillrocks6823 and Canada, we watched it live as well...

    • @thefrontporch8594
      @thefrontporch8594 3 года назад +3

      I was on the table awaiting a vasectomy.

  • @chrisvaughn2945
    @chrisvaughn2945 4 года назад +372

    "uh ohh" damn that made me cry. Iremember watching this on tv as a kid

  • @Razorback2088
    @Razorback2088 5 лет назад +1170

    I watched the launch live and I'll never forget the shock of seeing the explosion and knowing I just watched seven brave people die. They gave their lives to make future launches safer.

    • @chrismeyers5963
      @chrismeyers5963 5 лет назад +23

      Same here, I remember the school I went to on base actually postponed classes while the launch happened, my dad was actually at ground zero with his camera taking photos and stuff, then the explosion happened, messed me and a bunch of my friends up because we were huge supporters of NASA and couldn't understand how it happened

    • @kindlydude
      @kindlydude 5 лет назад +6

      i Dreamt a dream that left me in a cold sweat the night before. But it was of a plane flying low just above my head ...and crashing into a building. I thought it was just a coincidence and scoffed at the idea of a psychic premonition ...because it wasn't a dream about the shuttle. I had said a prayer actually, asking God for the safety of the launch before I went to sleep the night before. Had there been talk of a delay? We were still in the midst of the cold war & I sensed that launch was important. They instantly went to Heaven I have no doubt.

    • @kindlydude
      @kindlydude 5 лет назад +7

      With all the false alarms and false hoaxes that are being revealed as of late.... (Russian Hoax... Smollett, etc.) I begin to wonder if some weird psycho-drama of promoting mass-trauma on the American people wasn't being employed? I don't know what the purpose would be. At the time I was just thinking sabotage... But who? The Russians or communist Chinese? Or do the elites & the CIA drama-queens in the media love us & would NEVER think of manipulating us???? Or it was just another tragic accident? Funny how mass shootings almost never happened when my generation was growing up (I'd never heard of one... except for JFK & he was the only one killed). Are the spooks/'black'-Ops/CIA more brazen & psychotic... Or has our decaying morality been the sole cause?

    • @rayschutte6651
      @rayschutte6651 5 лет назад +6

      I watched it live in school. Every one freaked out.

    • @beckybiehl7322
      @beckybiehl7322 5 лет назад +3

      @@kindlydude The Satanic Illuminati is behind everything. Check out the card game.

  • @edsahara
    @edsahara 3 года назад +115

    Everyone remembers where they were and what they were doing when they saw this happen. It rocked our world.

    • @StarFuryG7
      @StarFuryG7 3 года назад +4

      It rocked our world, but we're no longer that country unfortunately.

    • @cjanquart
      @cjanquart 3 года назад +2

      7th grade, Ms. Lowell's science class, Hughes Jr. High.

    • @3catscarefreelife
      @3catscarefreelife 3 года назад +2

      I was at the student having lunch at the student union in my university. I remember it so vividly. It was crowded with many students, some of which were foreign students from the Middle East. Many of us were engineering students. As the explosion happened, some of the foreign students stood up and cheered. I was shocked and outraged. Those cheering were rejoicing at the death of people that were dedicating their lives to the advancement of scientific progress for the benefit of our country and the world. Needless to say, I struggled to forget how they celebrated a tragedy. If they hated our country so much do not come to our country to study. It was the beginning of my realization of biases against our country, whether it was for good or bad reasons.

    • @rocker76m88
      @rocker76m88 3 года назад

      I was in art class at my university and the professor walked in and canceled class. I remember driving home and my mother was crying when I got there. I stood watching the TV in disbelief. Such a tragedy

    • @camsasser
      @camsasser 3 года назад +1

      @@cjanquart Mrs. Jordan's 7th grade pre-algebra class; we'd just come in from lunch and she was there, crying, and told us what had happened.

  • @work4rsl46
    @work4rsl46 3 года назад +21

    I'll never forget it either, I was in the Navy watching it live on on tv while at sea. 25 guys watching it and you could've heard a pin drop. it was just unbelievable, RIP crew.

  • @chingersfreind
    @chingersfreind 6 лет назад +428

    I remember being in 11th grade and having my teacher bring out the TV to watch it live because a teacher was on board and she was so excited to see it live. When it all happened the whole class was so uncomfortable and my teacher burst into tears....I'll never forget that.

    • @tdecarlo7395
      @tdecarlo7395 6 лет назад +17

      alex ubillus I too was in the 11 grade. In gym class. Complete silence. Then tears.

    • @LisaWhitehorn
      @LisaWhitehorn 6 лет назад +9

      alex ubillus Wow I remember watching it in class too. It haunted me for a long time

    • @chingersfreind
      @chingersfreind 6 лет назад +12

      I knew I wasn't the only one. Will never forget it and I too share that memory with my son.

    • @ZiddersRooFurry
      @ZiddersRooFurry 6 лет назад +4

      Don't be so hard on yourself.

    • @rhondamartin379
      @rhondamartin379 6 лет назад +12

      Same story here, except I was in 4th grade. We were in the gymnasium and the teacher wheeled the tv in on a cart. We all sat on the floor watching it Live and the teacher stood near the tv. Everyone just sat there after it happened, not sure what we had just seen. The teacher began sobbing.

  • @frankjackson2359
    @frankjackson2359 5 лет назад +1921

    It has also been proven that those poor souls were indeed still alive until they hit the ocean. God only knows if they were conscious or not. I pray for not. 😭😭

    • @somebody4244
      @somebody4244 5 лет назад +396

      Frank Jackson It’s a horrible thing to imagine but the female astronaut had turned on the oxygen for two others during the free fall which would indicate she was very much alive and conscious.

    • @titanashinsuke1901
      @titanashinsuke1901 5 лет назад +129

      How can God know it if he doesnt exist??

    • @forreal245
      @forreal245 5 лет назад +65

      Frank Jackson...Can you direct me to this "proof" so I can read it?

    • @PabloGonzalez-hv3td
      @PabloGonzalez-hv3td 5 лет назад +190

      @@forreal245 - It's well known that most if not all the crew survived the explosion and went as far as donning oxygen masks as contrary to popular belief the explosion didn't immediately destroy the orbiter the aerodynamic forces from the subsequent destabilized flight did and the reinforced crew compartment - detached from the rest if the orbiter - fell relatively intact

    • @ckotcher1
      @ckotcher1 5 лет назад +189

      Unfortunately we know three of them were because they activated the oxygen in their helmets.

  • @shawn13mertle13
    @shawn13mertle13 3 года назад +29

    I was 21 when I saw this live on tv.We were all hard at work in the bakery.We took a special break so we could watch this historic event.This is the first time I watched it again.Quite an emotional day for America.

    • @wincrasher2007
      @wincrasher2007 3 года назад +2

      I was at university at the time and blew off my classes that morning and thought I'd watch the launch on tv.

    • @robedmund9948
      @robedmund9948 3 года назад +1

      @@wincrasher2007 I remember walking in from class right after it happened. Walking into a silent living room full of college kids, I knew something was wrong. That silence was deafening.

  • @mentalcocktail1467
    @mentalcocktail1467 4 года назад +456

    "If we die we want people to accept it. We are in a risky business, and we hope that if anything happens to us, it will not delay the program. The conquest of space is worth the risk of life."
    -Virgil Ivan "Gus" Grissom, Astronaut who died during Apollo I pre-launch tests.

    • @yukisan78
      @yukisan78 3 года назад +28

      True and noble. Accidents can always happen, however, in the case of the Challenger, it was more like manslaughter. NASA had been warned that the temperature was too low which could lead to a disaster, but they decided their time schedule was more important. That’s why the loss of the Challenger crew never stops hurting. NASA managers gambled with their lives, and the crew was not aware of that.

    • @ken_in_atx9619
      @ken_in_atx9619 3 года назад +4

      Except this was preventable

    • @johnmano1439
      @johnmano1439 3 года назад +6

      The conquest of space is definitely not worth the risk of life.

    • @mentalcocktail1467
      @mentalcocktail1467 3 года назад +2

      What you all say is all true. (Except for John). And i long for the day that bureaucrats and businessmen more retarded than i can be myself would just step off their position in place of people that actually knows what's going on within an early space-age project.
      "The right man in the right place can make all the difference in the world."
      -G-Man from HL2 but slightly edited for context :^)

    • @simoncarranza99
      @simoncarranza99 3 года назад +9

      @@johnmano1439 the conquest of space is greater than the risk of life. With the conquest of space we will be able to create a longer life for humanity without the constraint of earth. U dumb if you cant see it. The future of the human specie and its survival needs the space conquest

  • @renecardona4511
    @renecardona4511 6 лет назад +544

    I worked for Ocean Search in Upper Marlboro MD when that tragic accident and we immediately got a order to manufacture parts for a special crane that the Navy would use to rescue the parts within the ocean. These parts were being made in different localities of the country and would be sent to Florida. The CNC team can not produce the program in time to make one of the parts and my boss Dave asked me: Rene you can do this in the conventional lathe?, my answer was yes sir. Good 3 days later that part of about 3 feet in diameter was already finished and was sent to FL
    immediately. I make through all the work manually and that was my small contribution to help this tragic accident. Machinist Rene Cardona for 42 years. soon to retire and proud to be a machinist.

    • @johnsmith-jm9nw
      @johnsmith-jm9nw 6 лет назад

      Rene Cardona you machined the part that caused the accident???my god have you told anyone before this??

    • @janedoex8345
      @janedoex8345 6 лет назад +41

      john smith read again stupid

    • @janedoex8345
      @janedoex8345 6 лет назад +4

      Clark Gable I won't , thx. I just got a bit upset thinking one might accuse someone being not involved at all, to have caused this horrible incident....other than the ones who obviously are the ones to take responsibility.

    • @janedoex8345
      @janedoex8345 6 лет назад +4

      Clark Gable oh don't worry I won't...I am still in awe ....the music is awesome and leaves me somehow speechless....if one wouldn't know what happens, one could even think how strangely beautiful the white clouds emerging higher and higher are, while the piano's play adds a dark undertone, though being harmonious....It fits the scene so very well...
      It's somehow too much for a humans simple mind to take in at once ....

    • @DR-sv8ke
      @DR-sv8ke 6 лет назад +8

      @@johnsmith-jm9nw can you read?

  • @jamescain6414
    @jamescain6414 5 лет назад +121

    I was friends with a tough, retired Air Force three-star general, an aviator who was a combat veteran of WW2, Korea and Vietnam--saw action in all three. He'd been involved in the space program. Tough, strong guy. When he saw this, he wept. He knew some of those astronauts. It tore him up to witness that.

    • @captain_buggle694
      @captain_buggle694 4 года назад +12

      Being tough isn't not crying, its crying and not giving af.

    • @MaheshKumar-vk9vt
      @MaheshKumar-vk9vt 3 года назад +6

      Thanks James, yes I did. Emotions took over.

  • @NV-oj4pl
    @NV-oj4pl 3 года назад +16

    i wasn’t even born yet but that “uh oh” is so haunting

  • @WhisperinAngel
    @WhisperinAngel 4 года назад +159

    I remember being in the sixth grade, watching this with my classmates. We were excited that a teacher was going to space. When we saw the explosion there was such a loud gasp in the room. Us girls started to cry and the teachers couldn't get to the TV to turn it off fast enough. I remember praying that they all survived somehow, though I knew inside there was less than a one percent chance.
    Now that I'm an adult and I've watched several videos about it and researched it, it makes me mad that NASA didn't heed the warnings and went ahead with this mission anyway. Seven people lost their lives for absolutely no reason other than a bunch of people who thought they knew better than a blessed rocket scientist.
    The fact that they were still alive when they hit the water...ugh. I have no idea why I just watched this, because it just brings back memories and makes me cry all over again.

    • @salamander3765
      @salamander3765 4 года назад +4

      Angieleigh Eads I had almost the exact experience except I was in 8th grade. Always stayed with me, I guess maybe because I was the first major tragedy I watched happen before my eyes 🙈

    • @joiseystud
      @joiseystud 3 года назад

      Same. 5th grade.

    • @RayyM2
      @RayyM2 3 года назад +2

      I was also in middle school at the time. Initially, it wasn't understood what happened, but after it was confirmed word spread throughout the school very quickly.

    • @bossHogOG
      @bossHogOG 3 года назад

      @@RayyM2 I was in first grade in a Houston school so the lead up to the launch was big. I knew something was wrong when I saw my teacher start crying.

    • @BillGates-bg1wz
      @BillGates-bg1wz 2 года назад

      Donut

  • @hannahw1133
    @hannahw1133 7 лет назад +1798

    "Uh-oh" that absolutely shattered my heart

    • @arslanahmad1195
      @arslanahmad1195 6 лет назад +7

      Hannah Prevost Who cares?

    • @darian6423
      @darian6423 6 лет назад +262

      Arslan Ahmad Obviously you do, since you commented

    • @marcellabutay1090
      @marcellabutay1090 6 лет назад +4

      BelmontSlayer 23 Actually no, they replied.

    • @davidmacleod5753
      @davidmacleod5753 6 лет назад +45

      LittleArmyNut wow fuck you arslan and armynut, have a heart... my original comment said hannah, sorry to hannah if you saw that

    • @davidmacleod5753
      @davidmacleod5753 6 лет назад +33

      Army nut just by your name i can tell what kind of person you are hahahaha, not a good one

  • @uoppsdnsu4266
    @uoppsdnsu4266 5 лет назад +431

    The uh-oh gave me chills

    • @hoticeparty
      @hoticeparty 4 года назад +35

      @crackerwv dude just shut up your embarrassing yourself

    • @daleeasterwood2683
      @daleeasterwood2683 4 года назад +2

      Uh huh. Looks nothing like them.

    • @raffarmenio6213
      @raffarmenio6213 4 года назад +16

      The realisation something was majorly amiss. Unfortunately everything happened so quickly there was nothing anyone could do. Very sad.

    • @MrRickstopher
      @MrRickstopher 4 года назад +19

      I can't remember who said it but it was something like "they were alive and he tried to fly that ship without wings the whole way down" referring to the pilot Mike Smith, the one saying "uh oh." Very chilling, indeed.

    • @tkjk503
      @tkjk503 3 года назад +3

      Same

  • @ICUinthedark
    @ICUinthedark 3 года назад +25

    Heartache is a reminder to let you know you are still alive...

    • @donpettyandthespacefakers1798
      @donpettyandthespacefakers1798 3 года назад

      Beautiful ICUinthedark just beautiful but I’m gonna have to lean towards Y Hh on this one

    • @midnightrunner684
      @midnightrunner684 3 года назад

      Clint Eastwood said " Pain is Good .It let's you know that you are still alive " " Heartbreak Ridge "

  • @bowe1728
    @bowe1728 3 года назад +18

    We just buried my grand mother and went home frome the cemetary. I turned on the TV just in time to watch the launch. What a bad day.

    • @alexmurphy5289
      @alexmurphy5289 3 года назад +2

      RIP to all including your grandma. Hopefully they are in a great place

    • @midnightrunner684
      @midnightrunner684 3 года назад

      Same as with My Grandpa .he passed away in December 85 .we spread his ashes into the Gulf of Mexico in January 86

  • @robpolaris7272
    @robpolaris7272 5 лет назад +762

    I saw this live in my classroom in elementary school. Then I watched the OKC bombing aftermath, the waco tx incident in real time and then the second WTC tower hit live.
    I think ive had enough live broadcasts

    • @jeanette0605
      @jeanette0605 4 года назад

      R Rockwell - and the assassination of jfk

    • @nataliepineda1458
      @nataliepineda1458 4 года назад +1

      Same

    • @rhollowaybusiness
      @rhollowaybusiness 4 года назад +2

      Our political science class watched the seize at Waco and they were only supposed to have been serving him a warrant for child endangerment. We fired on them first killing all the women and children; that is when they began firing back.

    • @jeanette0605
      @jeanette0605 4 года назад +3

      R Rockwell I watched the Waco incident live on the television in their icu waiting room with a group of family members of ill patients who were already stressed out. Many were in tears, everyone stunned. I do not think that viewing these kind of events does us any good.

    • @sundhaug92
      @sundhaug92 4 года назад +6

      Do me a favor, if I'm on live TV change the channel

  • @PrehistoricLEGO
    @PrehistoricLEGO 5 лет назад +584

    “Uh-oh”
    Damn, that’s chilling

    • @ihurtmyarm
      @ihurtmyarm 5 лет назад +53

      Yeah for sure. It makes you wonder what he saw or felt to make him say that. I always figured the first they knew was when the explosion happened, but the "uh oh" was just before it happened.

    • @TiminSE
      @TiminSE 5 лет назад +12

      I was thinking the same thing... jesus.

    • @ndgoliberty
      @ndgoliberty 5 лет назад +9

      @@ihurtmyarm probably like the parachute coming out on a top fuel dragster times 20.

    • @ndgoliberty
      @ndgoliberty 5 лет назад +22

      J G I think we can only assume they lost electrical power.

    • @marlonisaac1
      @marlonisaac1 5 лет назад +15

      Yes it is very chilling and sad. Either lost all electric to the shuttle or warning sensors going off making him say that 😥

  • @lindamuvic8110
    @lindamuvic8110 4 года назад +214

    I was so invested in Nasa and the Space Shuttles, to me this was the equivalent of the day JFK got shot.

    • @XJokermanX
      @XJokermanX 4 года назад

      Mad

    • @disneyrn3075
      @disneyrn3075 3 года назад +1

      same

    • @jasonaltham7013
      @jasonaltham7013 3 года назад +2

      My shuttle was Columbia. I remember being in 4th grade watching it on tv in 1981. It hurt to lose that one.

    • @sandydog291
      @sandydog291 3 года назад +1

      It was on a historical scale just like JFK's assassination. That, this, and 911 are the standout historical days of my life, just like (I'm sure) Pearl Harbor, the 29 stock market crash, and the Garfield, McKinley, and Lincoln assassinations were to prior generations. All of were truly sad days.

    • @swamp5050
      @swamp5050 3 года назад

      @@sandydog291 I was 12 when President Kennedy was murdered, so have seen plenty of deaths that have had a historical impact. Unfortunately I'll see many more before my eyes finally close!

  • @maxxdevice4263
    @maxxdevice4263 4 года назад +368

    I don’t think they wanted their last words to be “uh oh”
    Edit: People I understand that they spoke inside while they where falling I was trying to say the word we would hear from them.

    • @some2guy
      @some2guy 4 года назад +51

      Sorry but this is not thay last words, cocpict section is made with reinforced aluminum and just deatched- this is not explosion but more like huge breakup. " NASA estimated the load factor at separation to be between 12 and 20 g; within two seconds it had already dropped to below 4 g and within 10 seconds the cabin was in free fall. The forces involved at this stage were probably insufficient to cause major injury." "Whether the crew members remained conscious long after the breakup is unknown, and largely depends on whether the detached crew cabin maintained pressure integrity. If it did not, the time of useful consciousness at that altitude is just a few seconds; the PEAPs supplied only unpressurized air, and hence would not have helped the crew to retain consciousness. If, on the other hand, the cabin was not depressurized or only slowly depressurizing, they may have been conscious for the entire fall until impact. Recovery of the cabin found that the middeck floor had not suffered buckling or tearing, as would result from a rapid decompression, thus providing some evidence that the depressurization may not have happened suddenly." If this will be just peaceful moments NASA just will give peoples(media) voice recording

    • @iamjp1
      @iamjp1 4 года назад +48

      it most likely wasn’t their last words. at least 3 of them were completely aware and concious, still attempting to save themselves up until the very moment of impact into the water.

    • @maxxdevice4263
      @maxxdevice4263 4 года назад +24

      “The last moments the world would hear from them”

    • @DeepCZero3
      @DeepCZero3 4 года назад +31

      They were alive.. in addition to 3 activated PEAPs, some controls in were set to manual, suggesting that Smith was trying to regain control of a ship that was no longer behind them.

    • @jupitorman
      @jupitorman 4 года назад +4

      @Superfly l thought that

  • @leonardlakey7779
    @leonardlakey7779 5 лет назад +308

    "Uh-oh" were also my dad's last words. Never heard him swear in my life. He was a much finer man then I. My last works will probably include an expletive.

    • @heavynumbertaco
      @heavynumbertaco 5 лет назад +15

      Different generation,Leonard. I’m sure your dad is proud of the man you are

    • @Maplelust
      @Maplelust 4 года назад +2

      how'd he die?

    • @timstanford3220
      @timstanford3220 4 года назад +5

      Sorry about your dad ...... God bless.......

    • @rosealexander9007
      @rosealexander9007 4 года назад +3

      Sorry for your loss 😢

    • @edski8536
      @edski8536 4 года назад +1

      No....call out "Jesus!!"

  • @conniecrawford5231
    @conniecrawford5231 5 лет назад +407

    The words "go with throttle up"still makes my blood run cold. I will never forget your sacrifice and will never forget. RIP Challenger astronauts.

    • @steveimperial7760
      @steveimperial7760 5 лет назад +3

      HAHAHA relax Connie none of them are dead hahaha.

    • @watbebe
      @watbebe 5 лет назад +17

      @@steveimperial7760 They're all dead...

    • @linanicolia1994
      @linanicolia1994 5 лет назад +21

      Throttle up was the last thing Smith said, as the pilot of the shuttle. After that, it was a man knowing his demise is unavoidable but his composure and behavior were the same as all test pilots would be. Scobe was next to him and they both knew, it would be a couple of minutes, before they died. They were heroes who passed with respect and dignity.

    • @chellyr4972
      @chellyr4972 5 лет назад +6

      @@linanicolia1994 Are you saying they knew it was going to explode? oh no...

    • @deirdrepasko9056
      @deirdrepasko9056 5 лет назад +5

      @@steveimperial7760 from what I've read, they were alive when they landed in the ocean. What happened to them after that, is anyone's guess.

  • @herculesrockefeller1683
    @herculesrockefeller1683 3 года назад +17

    I was in middle school watching it in class. A moment later the principal came over the intercom to tell the rest of the school what had happened. How he was able to put sentences together while crying was beyond me. Still remember it vividly.

    • @diannamallar1155
      @diannamallar1155 3 года назад +3

      I was in 6th grade. Our school only had a few TVs and my teacher wasn't able to get one. The first my class realized that there was something wrong was when the other 6th grade class across the hall started screaming. I can remember the teacher dropping his book and running out of the class. When he came back he was crying.

    • @beckymays1677
      @beckymays1677 3 года назад +1

      I was in middle school, too. We were all so excited to watch along with the whole country. As it turned out we had a snow day in Atlanta so I watched from home. I just sat in shock and disbelief. I called my mom immediately and told her what happened. She was home within an hour. It took me years before I would watch another launch. After the SS Columbia incident I’d had enough with SS missions.

    • @diannamallar1155
      @diannamallar1155 3 года назад +2

      @@beckymays1677 think the Challenger was a defining moment for our generation. It's definitely something thst ties us all together.
      We saw 7 people die. People that to many of us were heros. And we were just expected to deal with it. Many of us saw it live, we all saw it on the news for days, front page of the newspaper.
      Today, there would be counselors and meetings. Students would be able to talk about the shock and horror. Their grief. For us it was just part of growing up. I wonder how many more of us are done with SS missions.

  • @doc25000
    @doc25000 3 года назад +8

    I was a senior in high school in Anaheim CA. sitting in class watching it live, When the disaster hit, The entire school was silent, I can remember sitting there trying to pick my jaw up off the floor in the eerie silence while my gut was in knots.... God Bless Em' All....

    • @goldenbubble1803
      @goldenbubble1803 3 года назад

      Really, what school? Loara?

    • @mikefur3957
      @mikefur3957 3 года назад

      I saw this on TV at school, as well. Was in 4th grade. Will never forget it.

  • @michaelmcghie
    @michaelmcghie 5 лет назад +32

    Still brings a boat load of tears to my eyes. RIP you all and thank you for your service

  • @dannyhawks6179
    @dannyhawks6179 5 лет назад +98

    I was 28 years old driving a handicap bus in Fort Myers Florida. I was on business 41 watching it from the top of the bridge when it happened. I had at least 20 handicap adult watching and everyone including me cried. May the astronauts rest in peace

    • @micheleglander2672
      @micheleglander2672 5 лет назад

      Heather. Lynsae

    • @randygreen8916
      @randygreen8916 5 лет назад +8

      @Silvio Manuel You're an Idiot.

    • @Summerbrezze
      @Summerbrezze 5 лет назад +4

      @@randygreen8916 the best part of Silvio dripped down his mother's leg

    • @bennyroberson8719
      @bennyroberson8719 5 лет назад +2

      How sad that day was. The morning when Challenger blew up I was at a law office discussing the soon divorce from my wife of 13 years. Three kids would soon be without their mother.
      Things will be so much better when Jesus returns and those who love Jesus will be forever happy and at peace in the New Jerusalem and on earth made new. There will be no more sad stories, tears and death! Please come soon Lord Jesus and take us to our real, forever home!

    • @juliemiller3502
      @juliemiller3502 4 года назад

      Silvio Manuel thats a douche remark you made to Benny...maybe your just stupid BUT maybe your are anti-Semitic...your post certainly clarifies you as an anti-Semitic POS..

  • @nancydemoss8421
    @nancydemoss8421 3 года назад +14

    My heart still breaks every time I see a video or hear a news story. That day they touched the face of God.
    RIP forever in the arms of the Lord.
    You will NEVER be forgotten. 🙏

    • @seikokay527
      @seikokay527 3 года назад

      @Robbin' Hoods Beats evolution makes a whole lotta more sense to me than saying we were made of clay or mud or dirt and then life was blown into us. If we all came from Adam and Eve we would all have died out due to inbreeding so how does that make sense

    • @andrewfrank8272
      @andrewfrank8272 3 года назад

      Pretty likely they were not all Christian....

  • @Sora_Digital
    @Sora_Digital 3 года назад +7

    I was 7 years old when this happened, I had a very vivid dream a few days after. I was in the cockpit and it was split in half, there was three others with me and they were alive looking out at the sky and we were falling. Weird thing was, we were standing, pinned against the wall of the shuttle. I'll never forget that dream.

  • @melvinboyce9629
    @melvinboyce9629 6 лет назад +169

    This was a sad day that our country choses to remember as it should. Another tragedy struck America on Dec, 12 1985 that America chose to ignore. 240 members of the 101st airborne along with 8 crew members died on their way home from a peace keeping mission when their chartered airplane went down over Canada. 248 men who did not spend Christmas with their families.

    • @lucienskye5274
      @lucienskye5274 6 лет назад +1

      Christmas is gay

    • @peteandrepete528
      @peteandrepete528 6 лет назад +7

      They were either trying to land or were just taking off weren't they?The American military had personnel at CFB Gander in Newfoundland. The Us stops there all the time to refuel either on there way to Europe or on their way back to the states.Canada has people stationed at cheyenne mountain at Norad.I remember that also.A sad day that was.May they all RIP.

    • @dougdavis8986
      @dougdavis8986 6 лет назад +2

      melvin boyce : peacekeeping mission. Lol, America doesn't do those.

    • @daveryan4353
      @daveryan4353 6 лет назад +6

      melvin boyce gandor Newfoundland ,I saw the memorial when my flight had a engine problem and got stuck in gamdor over night waiting for a new engine the airlines was flying tigers air cargo. Sfc D.L. Ryan 7thSf. Airborne ret.

    • @germanicelt
      @germanicelt 6 лет назад +2

      Never heard that one.

  • @alanmorris7669
    @alanmorris7669 6 лет назад +69

    As the world watched. I was 20 years old when this happened. I remember watching this live on TV and thinking, "I can't believe that thing just disintegrated!" How sad.

    • @lekrakkenz2517
      @lekrakkenz2517 6 лет назад +11

      David Williams kinda odd you’re calling him retarded when I’m pretty sure it should be the other way around

    • @ladyjean6129
      @ladyjean6129 5 лет назад +2

      @Cory Templar Alan expressed his feelings of shock is what he is trying to say. Not necessary to be insulting.

    • @SARDiverDave
      @SARDiverDave 5 лет назад

      @Cory Templar It didn't disintegrate. The crew cabin was recovered, intact, on the ocean floor, and one of the crew members, probably Resnick, activated the pilots' PEAPS. They could not activate those themselves, but they had been activated. Also, Resnick was recovered with an emergency checklist opened.
      They were alive for the fall.

  • @maureenhanney9998
    @maureenhanney9998 3 года назад +5

    This happened on my 42nd birthday and i had decided to stay home to watch it rather than go out with friends. I truly hope that those poor brave souls had little knowledge of what was happening to them. RIP.

  • @mchapman132
    @mchapman132 3 года назад +26

    “Uh-oh” was the understatement of all time. RIP

  • @thomasarussellsr
    @thomasarussellsr 6 лет назад +14

    32 1/2 years ago and all of the feelings came rushing back watching this video. Tore me up at 15, and brought tears at 47.75 years old

    • @TammyJean518
      @TammyJean518 6 лет назад +1

      I was/am the same age as you. I was home from school, sick, and I remember watching it alone and the sick, sad feeling that came over me when I saw what happened. That feeling stayed with me for a long while and was just replicated while watching this. RIP Challenger crew

    • @thumperpaul155
      @thumperpaul155 5 лет назад

      About the same age i was watching live and i when i saw the look on the crowds faces i was oh my god that wasnt supposed to happen.

    • @mohammadmasoodwakily6644
      @mohammadmasoodwakily6644 5 лет назад +1

      ya im 27.36 years old right now i totally now how that feels, maybe when im 40.13 years old ill be able to let it go.

  • @kathleenjimenez8394
    @kathleenjimenez8394 4 года назад +251

    I don’t think that as long as I live, I will ever forget the expression Christa McCauliffs mother’s face when this happened. Such a sad sad time in our history.

    • @Jewish.Redneck.Hybrid
      @Jewish.Redneck.Hybrid 4 года назад +52

      crackerwv thanks for demonstrating why lobotomy’s should be mandatory for Flat tards .

    • @bjworm8078
      @bjworm8078 4 года назад +9

      @crackerwv it sure is convenient they all have websites with pictures. Have you ever thought that they could be relatives?

    • @russscrewyougoogleyoucanth8189
      @russscrewyougoogleyoucanth8189 4 года назад +14

      @crackerwv You have a problem recognizing which position is the theory, methinks. While I will admit that they all share eerily similar features to their "namesakes", all of the links you provided are to professionals, each with long-established and verifiable histories that go back before the challenger disaster, and fail any objective definition of "proof". The burden of proof is on the accuser.

    • @judithryle2113
      @judithryle2113 4 года назад

      The teacher should have never done this. Just wanted glory but her kids lost their mother because of her ego

    • @harrygraves6870
      @harrygraves6870 4 года назад +7

      @crackerwv I'm thinking perfectly well for myself right now and I think you should shut the fuck up

  • @ryana3679
    @ryana3679 3 года назад +20

    The scariest thing is that the crew didnt die in the explosion. The cockpit took two minutes to fall to the ground and it was the impact with the water that killed them.

    • @cobyfront6310
      @cobyfront6310 3 года назад

      At least they had a chance to say goodbye

    • @Nessevan
      @Nessevan 3 года назад +2

      I can imagine that they were knocked unconscious by the explosion and that they didn't have to endure those horrific last minutes in the way like you mentioned. Is there any information on that?

    • @ryana3679
      @ryana3679 3 года назад +2

      @@Nessevan apparently they were able to get their breathing systems on before impact which to investigators meant they were alive and conscious after the explosions.

    • @Nessevan
      @Nessevan 3 года назад +3

      ​@@ryana3679 Heartbreaking to imagine what they went through in those last moments. Thanks for responding Ryan. All the best from The Netherlands.

    • @ryana3679
      @ryana3679 3 года назад +1

      @@Nessevan I agree. May they rest in peace. I am from Canada. Take care my friend.

  • @jenniferbooth9348
    @jenniferbooth9348 4 года назад +39

    To this day it still it’s home. McNair snd Ellison were my neighbors. I grew up in Clear Lake and there were many astronauts in my neighborhood

    • @jaywilliams1341
      @jaywilliams1341 3 года назад +1

      Really?

    • @whirl3690
      @whirl3690 3 года назад

      @MattC Croshaw I failed to see the part where your house was mentioned.

    • @ottballday3460
      @ottballday3460 3 года назад

      @n\a Clear Lake isn't in Florida. McNair trained at Johnson Space Center, which is in Clear Lake, (Houston, TX) and the widow of Dr. McNair and their children still live in Clear Lake.

    • @kimjongun2946
      @kimjongun2946 3 года назад

      Fuck off

    • @michaelangel25
      @michaelangel25 3 года назад

      That’s lies. They’re my neighbours on the moon, and my name is Aiken Drumm.

  • @ElreyJames
    @ElreyJames 5 лет назад +156

    I was on the roof of our house in
    St. Petersburg Fl with my oldest brother seeing It live...he’s in Heaven too now🙏

    • @Elthenar
      @Elthenar 4 года назад +1

      I was in Orlando in a science class. They took us all outside to watch it.

    • @chase_doesburg8533
      @chase_doesburg8533 4 года назад +1

      Paul Hogsten huh

    • @Elthenar
      @Elthenar 4 года назад +1

      @Paul Hogsten Steel beams can't melt jet fuel

    • @Elthenar
      @Elthenar 4 года назад +1

      @Paul Hogsten nope.

    • @mollysullivan8872
      @mollysullivan8872 4 года назад +2

      Paul Hogsten they died when they hit the water dumbass

  • @bw3506
    @bw3506 6 лет назад +15

    Still gets to me and brings tears. I can remember exactly where and what I was doing when this happened. Was at work laying in the floor working on a washing machine with a TV right through the door in the TV shop. I scooted out and sat up to watch the launch. Then the explosion. I sat there in disbelief of it all at first then realized they were all gone in an instant. Put my head in my hands and wept for a few min until my boss came by and asked me what happened. I know there have been many many people lost in a lot of different ways, but before that I had never saw something like that happen live as I watched it.

  • @rethamoore4282
    @rethamoore4282 4 года назад +6

    After all these years I still get that sicken feeling in my gut and feel that great loss. I don't think I'll ever get over it. My heart still aches for our Heros.

  • @killianholm2283
    @killianholm2283 4 года назад +2

    The astronauts did not die due to the explosion you can clearly see the crew cabin falling , they survived all 2 minutes of free fall until the hit the water at over 200mph . It is thought that the pilot tryed to fly that cabben with all his energy with out wings . It was every tragic .

    • @tauras665
      @tauras665 4 года назад

      Buddy....you're posting shit people already know...same story has been posted a hundred times before yours.....pay attention !!!

  • @claud1able
    @claud1able 6 лет назад +14

    I was teaching a computer class at the Community College in Colorado Spring Co. My husband was teaching at the Air Force Academy, and he had Commander Scobee’s son in his Physics Class. This was a very sad day for all of us. A day we will long remember]. Please respect it

  • @7eyesopenwide168
    @7eyesopenwide168 5 лет назад +383

    This was prevantable. Pride killed these victims! Heads should have rolled.

    • @rodneykuhn7025
      @rodneykuhn7025 5 лет назад +25

      With each delay youre talking money... Time is money... It was all about the money, thats all it ever is... Money ruled that day.... Not the victims.. RIP Challenger..

    • @tomwolak3362
      @tomwolak3362 5 лет назад +2

      When its the presidents head do you really think anythings gonna happen.Never.

    • @7eyesopenwide168
      @7eyesopenwide168 5 лет назад +13

      @@tomwolak3362 what did the president have to do with it? This was all NASA.

    • @BidenOwesMeGasMoney
      @BidenOwesMeGasMoney 4 года назад +6

      Eyes open wide Trump is responsible. 😂

    • @mollysullivan8872
      @mollysullivan8872 4 года назад +3

      Tandria Alfonso this happened in 1986..

  • @perfectperson214
    @perfectperson214 3 года назад +5

    I was 4, my mother was doing laundry and told me to watch the astronauts, when it exploded she gasped and started crying. She called my father, my sister was in 1st grade and at school. Ill never forget. RIP

    • @suborbitalpada6609
      @suborbitalpada6609 3 года назад +1

      The challenger disaster silenced and gave the worst pain and grief to everyone and the space community. These 7 poor soul gave their life to the stars and to increase safety in human spaceflight.

  • @lbu9542
    @lbu9542 3 года назад +7

    I was in the 3rd grade when this happened. The teachers were crying, and there was such sadness for many days to come after this. God rest these presious souls.

  • @lonmcq7317
    @lonmcq7317 6 лет назад +499

    The really sad part of this was that it was completely avoidable...Not even a close call...One of the guys in MC said it basically wrecked his life, as he pleaded with the higher-up Toadies not to launch...A terrible waste...

    • @SonshineLady7
      @SonshineLady7 6 лет назад +38

      @Wil Andersen - I watched a movie based on this event that depicted just what you said. This mission had been delayed once or twice so the powers that be (whoever they were/are) decided to go with it. I lived about 40 miles from Cape Canaveral at the time and recall what a bitterly cold morning it was. I could see the split plume from my back patio. :(

    • @lonmcq7317
      @lonmcq7317 6 лет назад +20

      Sonshine...A memory that sadly, you'll keep forever...so terrible...

    • @placova
      @placova 6 лет назад +17

      Particularly as it was the Reagan White House that pushed for it. cleantechnica.com/2016/01/31/challenger-disaster-happens-politics-overrides-science/

    • @PerplexiaX
      @PerplexiaX 6 лет назад +8

      Will I've never researched this, so I don't know that much about it really...
      but they were talking about helium loss... didn't Mission Control get the hint? I mean,
      I don't know, but that seems like something... you know... important!?!

    • @donkey3187
      @donkey3187 6 лет назад +14

      all aviation and space accidents are avoidable...but since we are human beings and one little mistake result in disaster in very complex machines and missions....its just a dangerous undertaking.

  • @runyanpiano
    @runyanpiano 4 года назад +159

    My dad told me about this when I was a kid and said a good friend of his was one of the men pressuring NASA to abort the launch for precisely the reason that caused the failure. There is always someone in the higher up who forgets about the value of human life and is more focused on the agenda. Reminds me of Mr. Ismay on the Titanic pressuring for full steam through the ice field.

    • @runyanpiano
      @runyanpiano 3 года назад +1

      @@commontater1785 Just something he told me when I was about 14 years old.

    • @koborkutya7338
      @koborkutya7338 3 года назад +4

      I heard it set up like we have to take risks to accomplish something. I understand this: sometimes people must die to accomplish a mission. The saddest part is that whoever pushed it through has also committed the deadliest sins of all: has also failed the mission. People were sacrificed for nothing.

    • @carmenmorissette3591
      @carmenmorissette3591 3 года назад

      weird flex but okay

    • @anthonysmith3577
      @anthonysmith3577 3 года назад +3

      Don't forget about the Columbia accident. Engineers requested 3 times to use the shuttle's imaging sensors to inspect the damage. The program integration manager Linda Ham denied the requests to focus more on scientific experimentation. The Atlantis was already being prepped for another scheduled launch. An orbital rescue may have been feasible

    • @runyanpiano
      @runyanpiano 3 года назад +2

      @@anthonysmith3577 For the sake of exploration, innovation, and human achievement, lives will often be lost. All they can do is build numerous redundancies into the systems, train the hell out of the crew, and repeatedly inspect for safety. But even with all that accidents will still happen.

  • @liaonac9428
    @liaonac9428 3 года назад +4

    No matter how much time passes, my whole heart breaks for the 7 people that died, and for the family members who were watching their loved ones dying, and for their friends who mourned them. And for the rest of us who never got to see them live to their full potential. RIP Challenger 86’

  • @bhorozal
    @bhorozal 3 года назад +7

    Wherever you are in the world, this was a very sad thing to experience, I still feel very sorry for the scientists and other flight attendants who lost their lives when I think about the event.

    • @Cal90208
      @Cal90208 2 года назад

      To call astronauts flight attendants is unbelievably insulting. That’s not to say flight attendants don’t go through a lot, but astronauts are something else.

  • @22250able
    @22250able 5 лет назад +60

    Our 9th grade class was watching this live, the second it happened we couldn't really comprehend what happened. Our teacher knew immediately and started crying and switched off the tv. Just so sad

    • @krissanchez4816
      @krissanchez4816 5 лет назад +6

      And we didn’t need grief counselors did we. Amazing how we survived ! Today’s kids would all be admitted to a hospital for evaluation.

    • @nutellafoxvideos7350
      @nutellafoxvideos7350 4 года назад

      @@krissanchez4816 eh... no... They'd be open for anyone to come to the office and talk about what happened if they needed to. That's what happened at my school whenever someone died...

    • @krissanchez4816
      @krissanchez4816 4 года назад

      NutellaFox 🤣.

    • @krissanchez4816
      @krissanchez4816 4 года назад

      Life went on in my town when a classmate died or some tragic event happened.

    • @nutellafoxvideos7350
      @nutellafoxvideos7350 4 года назад

      @@krissanchez4816 yeah my town decided that wasn't a good idea when one student suicide led to a chain of 4 more.

  • @beckyb7872
    @beckyb7872 5 лет назад +111

    I cry every time I see this. Still, as heartbreaking now, as the day it happened. May we NEVER forget them. 😞

    • @beckybiehl7322
      @beckybiehl7322 5 лет назад +1

      I was a junior, and still remember how shocked and sad I felt, but I had schoolmates who reacted so oddly to the news. They actually laughed and joked about it. I believe they were all boys, but it was still certainly an unexpected immature response. When I think back on it though, maybe it was their way of dealing with grief.

    • @suziohug
      @suziohug 5 лет назад +1

      Awe , I feel for you Becky but you know sweetheart space travel is dangerous. Come to think 🤔 about it 🚂 driving on the interstate in my city is also dangerous. There are some crazy drivers that do dumb maneuvers.

    • @beganday4824
      @beganday4824 5 лет назад

      @Buzz Armstrong moon landing was fake do you have photos of them still alive after this?

    • @marleneboring4458
      @marleneboring4458 4 года назад

      Amen

  • @Tiddley
    @Tiddley 2 года назад +7

    Heartbreaking to hear their last conversations with each other and their final words. They were all such amazing people achieving amazing things. What a huge loss to their families and the world. To hear how excited Smith was for his first flight to space and in an instant it was over. I was just a baby when this happened but after watching challenger the final flight on Netflix I wanted to know more about each and every one of them. Each story breaks my heart. Rip crew of the challenger.

    • @chrissinclair4442
      @chrissinclair4442 Год назад +2

      They were alive and at least some conscious until they hit the water. There is a audio recording from in the cockpit. It gets hotter and hotter as they continue to fall. This video doesn't have the transcript of their last words.

  • @spagerrhowtaf8673
    @spagerrhowtaf8673 3 года назад +40

    I was 28 years old, working at Rockwell International Flight Systems Laboratories at Downey, CA. I heard that Sy Rubenstien voted no on launching from the Shuttle manufacturing side due to cold temperature limits. I met him once when he came to building 4 and needed directions. We walked and talked for 1/4 mile.

  • @jamesbuckley4347
    @jamesbuckley4347 5 лет назад +202

    Was in 10th grade ,sitting in my science class in a small town in NM . Our teacher was preparing to start a lesson when our school secretary ,a very sweet lady ,came into the classroom looking like she'd seen a ghost. She obviously wanted to tell us something but didn't seem to have the words. Finally she kinda stiffened up and said very slowly and deliberately " I just want to let you all know that the space shuttle Challenger exploded moments after take off and it appears there were no survivors" and with that she kinda slumped a little and her tears started. We all sat in a stunned silence for about 3-4 minutes unable to comprehend, and then our teacher slowly walked over placed his arms around her gave her a hug and whispered something to her .whatever it was he said now allowed her to regain her composure and move to a desk to sit ,while our teacher went to notify all the other classrooms one at a time. This was and is one of Those moments in my life,that when I think of it ,every detail comes back to life. As a combat veteran ,a father,and someone who has experienced a lot ,this one event probably had as big of an effect on me as any .

    • @NoseyNana
      @NoseyNana 5 лет назад +14

      The shooting of JFK had such an impact on my generation. One big difference for some I'm sure, at my school we got word he'd been shot & then there was the wait before the final pronouncement :( Us Kennedy Kids grew up to: "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country" I retired career civil service: School District, State of California, DoD. Sadly the majority of old farts left in our government at present didn't pick up the same message :(

    • @jamesbuckley4347
      @jamesbuckley4347 5 лет назад +7

      @@NoseyNana I'm sure that day when our country was changed forever by the events in Dallas does resonate for those who were alive ,much as Pearl Harbor ,and 911 for those generations. I think every generation has it's defining moment and it's what they choose to do from that moment on that defines the generation. I have been lucky,or unlucky enough to have 3 defining moments. The Challenger tragedy,the day the war started (Desert Storm ) and I awaited my orders to cross into Iraq as part of Stormin Norman's Hail Mary (24th infantry division) and of course 911. While all three were traumatic ,they also taught me much about myself and our nation as well as the human spirit and it's ability to pick itself up and go on.

    • @joeruiz4804
      @joeruiz4804 5 лет назад +5

      Oyr 8th grade teacher put on the TV and we watched it live! Sad day.

    • @JohnDoe-dh4fi
      @JohnDoe-dh4fi 5 лет назад +2

      there was a school teacher from New Hampshire on the shuttle and school where she worked at the whole school was watching the launch live in the gym.

    • @jamesbuckley4347
      @jamesbuckley4347 5 лет назад

      @@JohnDoe-dh4fi can't imagine the pain and horror those kids and co-workers felt. Pride and excitement,to punched in the gut....

  • @pauld8604
    @pauld8604 5 лет назад +164

    i saw it with my own eyes ..will never forget

    • @loripatterson7882
      @loripatterson7882 5 лет назад +3

      Me too. So shocking. :(

    • @bobbybands1957
      @bobbybands1957 5 лет назад +2

      Yes fairies wear boots and you gotta believe me! Yeah I saw it I saw it with my own two eyes!

    • @jurekogorek6715
      @jurekogorek6715 5 лет назад +8

      @@bobbybands1957 I've been to San Francisco and can confirm, some do wear boots.

    • @waynegouin939
      @waynegouin939 5 лет назад +6

      I watched it live too, it was heartbreaking.

    • @oculusnomadslosttribe5672
      @oculusnomadslosttribe5672 5 лет назад +2

      @Paul D....same...
      immediately after silence and confusion. Brave men and woman risked their lives in pursuit of a greater understanding of this world and life. RIP ✌🏾

  • @carolnartker
    @carolnartker 4 года назад +4

    I saw this live at work while working at the hospital. I was in one of of the lobbies waiting for the elevator when I witnessed the explosion. A sight & tragedy I will never forget.

  • @chucksucks8640
    @chucksucks8640 4 года назад +5

    I always remember that nice teacher lady that died in the shuttle. It was a big deal at the time for her to go in space because she wasn't a real astronaught.

  • @joecombs7468
    @joecombs7468 5 лет назад +4

    I will never forget that day. It is as if it happened yesterday.
    I was standing on the deck of my submarine. We had just tied up in Norfolk. I was the last man from line 2 still on deck putting my sound powered phone away. My chief stuck his head up out of the hatch & told me. At first I didn't believe him. Then I slid down the hatch to crews mess and watched the replay on tv. The crews mess was packed from wall to wall and deathly quiet as we all watched, unbelievably, the tragedy unfold before our eyes.

  • @kregg123
    @kregg123 6 лет назад +16

    I hope none of them sufferd.
    I feel sorry for them and their loved ones.

  • @stevenjschuler1169
    @stevenjschuler1169 4 года назад +4

    I was stationed in Germany in the Army and when I saw it I was devastated and it will forever be a scar in our history.

  • @trumancapote9097
    @trumancapote9097 3 года назад +5

    I was 17 when this happened. Had only been living in north Florida for two years then. I think that was the day my childhood came to an end. Never forgot it.

  • @stevenattanasso2003
    @stevenattanasso2003 5 лет назад +59

    Men died to build Their Pharaoh's Tombs .....
    But still a Billion teeming wombs .....
    How many Men to conquer Mars .....
    How many Dead to reach the Stars ......

    • @winnifredforbes8712
      @winnifredforbes8712 4 года назад

      Who wrote that?

    • @matthiasrandler669
      @matthiasrandler669 4 года назад

      The next star(other than our sun) is roughly 60000 years away with our technology. Good luck

    • @stevenattanasso2003
      @stevenattanasso2003 4 года назад

      @@winnifredforbes8712 Saigon Bride // Joan Baez ( I changed the lyrics slightly )

    • @stevenattanasso2003
      @stevenattanasso2003 4 года назад

      @@matthiasrandler669 Our Technology ?
      The Wright Brothers flew in 1903 .....
      66 years later Americans were walking on the Moon .....
      Luck has NOTHING to do with it ......

    • @matthiasrandler669
      @matthiasrandler669 4 года назад

      @@stevenattanasso2003 You dont get my point.
      Good luck reaching the next star if you need to fly 60000 years,....do you understand that? Or do i even need to further explain it.

  • @RRRIBEYE
    @RRRIBEYE 6 лет назад +20

    It was definitely one of those days where you'll always remember where you were when.... I was 24 and over at my farmer neighbors house drinking coffee as I was waiting for him to get all his coveralls and boots on as we were going out with our twin Ford 8N tractors to remove snow from our mile long lane. While sitting and waiting, I turned on his tv and saw the launch was about to go and i hollared at him to come and watch this! So we both paused and were drinking coffee and going on about how cool all this is and 3..2..1...Go baby go! It was so cool! And then the ball and the twin boosters going off in separate directions. I said immediately, "Shit! They're dead!" And that was a full 10-15 seconds before the NASA guy was going "we're looking carefully at the situation. ... .. . Obviously a major malfunction." YA THINK?! Dayamm. Anyway, we watched while the cameras zoomed in on the spiraling, falling debris and I felt horrible. But, still had work to do and we went out to push snow and that whole day, I was kinda in a funk. I felt so sad for the families...and the space program for loosing these fine people.

  • @Jukeboxster
    @Jukeboxster 3 года назад +2

    The most heartbreaking video was the one of the families watching the launch. The switch from happiness, to silent shock to unimaginable grief in the course of a minute.

  • @greathoonta3461
    @greathoonta3461 4 года назад +2

    A quote from a soldier in Afghanistan I feel fits this: “tragedy isn’t like it is in the movies, time doesn’t slow for you.”

  • @markkinsler4333
    @markkinsler4333 5 лет назад +7

    The best technical description of the failure was in a 1986 issue of "IEEE Spectrum," a magazine for electrical engineers. The O-rings were not supposed to provide the seal between the sections of the solid fuel rocket. This was done by a fire-resistant putty, which was held in place by the O-rings. The cold might have contributed to the failure, but the boosters were found to have leaked during previous launches, presumably on warmer days. This time, however, the leak occurred on the side of the rocket next to the fuel tank. After the accident, a new all-metal seal was designed and installed.

  • @bethfirey7363
    @bethfirey7363 4 года назад +24

    Its so casual and jokingly at the beggining but at the end uh oh says it all

    • @paulhynes170
      @paulhynes170 3 года назад +3

      all that excitement and months of training just for it to end like this

    • @Scioneer
      @Scioneer 3 года назад +1

      Its as if they may have heard something bad moments before the ship flew apart.

    • @Big_Sierra
      @Big_Sierra 3 года назад

      @@Scioneer My guess is when the commander throttled up he felt the lack of power due to the leaking fuel or something, then BOOM.

  • @stephanielewis-cooper4094
    @stephanielewis-cooper4094 4 года назад

    I was 16 and had just come home from school here in the UK when I sat down to watch this with my younger brothers and my grandmother while my Mum was cooking dinner. My grandmother started crying when it happened and I ran into the kitchen to tell my Mum. We all just sat round the TV while the broadcaster tried to find words and something - anything - to broadcast. My grandmother died several months later, but I remember this moment so, so clearly, sitting there with my family; my brothers and I in our school uniforms. It seemed so so far away - almost half a world away - and yet, as an adult, I've travelled to this part of the USA so many times that it feels familiar now.
    Terrible and yet so easily recalled, this footage of this moment, both in film and in terms of where I was, where my family was, what happened later that year. It brings back that specific moment so sharply.

  • @kl6902
    @kl6902 4 года назад +3

    I wanted to be an astronaut when I was growing up and dreamed about being the first woman to go to space. Was in awe of Christa and watched this happen live in my 5th grade classroom. I was devastated and heartbroken that she never made it there because her dream was my dream.

  • @charlesbaker3710
    @charlesbaker3710 5 лет назад +10

    I was in the seventh grade watching this live at school. This gave me goosebumps. Still grabs my heart.

  • @Jim-zy3lf
    @Jim-zy3lf 5 лет назад +5

    I was 29 and It was My Father's birthday , The sky was beautiful as We listened for the Lift Off ! Elation filled our hearts , then Disaster and Dispare . God Less there Brave Souls 🙏🇺🇸 Jimmy

  • @er7586
    @er7586 3 года назад +3

    I was a 12th grader in high school. I came home to find my mom crying. It was the only time in my life I'd seen her cry....

    • @itssquirrelman
      @itssquirrelman 3 года назад

      @One with nature right? i was going to say...... and she waited to do it until some random people she didnt know died in an accident? fuck lol

  • @darneyoung537
    @darneyoung537 3 года назад +5

    R.I.P. to those poor souls you will never be forgotten ✝️🙏🏻🙏🏻✝️

  • @MDarkraven
    @MDarkraven 7 лет назад +263

    My god...I remember everything on that day.The transcripts only... drive it home. The loss of Commander Francis Richard Scobe and his crewmembers Michael Smith, Ellison Onizuka, Judith Resnik, Ronald McNair, Christa McAuliffe, and Gregory Jarvis.
    Some of the comments I have read. Just reminds me of the detachments of those who have never experienced tragic things in their own lives...how sad some of you are so ignorant. These souls are to be respected and remember as the heroes they are. Not as comic relief. It is disrespectful to their memory and their families.

    • @ryublueblanka
      @ryublueblanka 6 лет назад +2

      nothing tragic about it all those astronauts ate still alive look it up

    • @pgroove163
      @pgroove163 6 лет назад +1

      amen...

    • @erdwest
      @erdwest 6 лет назад +7

      MORON ALERT! They died of course. Plus all you conspiracy idiots, unfortunately, are still alive.

    • @erdwest
      @erdwest 6 лет назад +2

      IDIOT!! www.snopes.com/fact-check/false-crew-members-of-1986-space-shuttle-challenger-are-still-alive/

    • @memyself6271
      @memyself6271 6 лет назад +1

      Once you grow up and see a lot of people die in your lifetime you'll lighten up about it, kid.

  • @alrob7381
    @alrob7381 5 лет назад +17

    I went to the same high school as Judith Resnik. She had a nice memorial in the school's library.

    • @elephant35e
      @elephant35e 5 лет назад +1

      They give all of the astronauts good memorials :)
      I live in the same neighborhood that Ronald Macnair lived in when he was an astronaut. The big park in the neighborhood is named after him.

    • @craigcorson3036
      @craigcorson3036 5 лет назад

      No, Morton Thiokol recommended that they not launch. They knew it was too cold for those O-rings.

  • @AniWatX
    @AniWatX 3 года назад +4

    And all we could do was look on in horror and hope they didn’t suffer and think of their loved ones. Such a tragedy. RIP brave astronauts.

  • @benwaist
    @benwaist 3 года назад +1

    I was a freshman in high school when this disaster took place. My biology teacher, Mr Redmond, was a science fanatic, and had expected us to write about the experience thereafter. So, he’d made sure that we’d watched the excitement live. I was so excited when I saw the explosion thinking that it was just a part of the booster acceleration. It didn’t occur that this had been a disaster until Mr. Redmond started saying, “Oh my God…Oh my God…Oh my God…” repeatedly. This nightmare experience stayed with me for years. I couldn’t imagine how the immediate families of the affected might have felt. So, for this type of disaster to have occurred again decades later, during a re-entry was hard to swallow. May all the heroes that have sacrificed their lives in the name of science RIP!

  • @Vaddinn
    @Vaddinn 5 лет назад +15

    I remember watching the live feed in high school with classmates when Challenger exploded.Was heartbreaking even then 30 years ago,even more heartbreaking now and Im 48

  • @SissyD61
    @SissyD61 7 лет назад +292

    I lived In Orlando back then. Just had arrived at work. Decided to go outside and watch the Challenger. It seemed "smooth" for a bit...Then.. BAM...Smoke Entrails were going everywhere. A sight that has never been lost in my mind unfortunately. God Bless the crew and their families and loved ones on that "cold" January morning in Florida.

    • @stevemcgarret9897
      @stevemcgarret9897 7 лет назад +7

      SissyD61 yeah it was heartbreaking to see it happen in the sky I saw it too bit on my patio

    • @SissyD61
      @SissyD61 7 лет назад +10

      Then you know how I feel. Will never forget that day!

    • @watchgoose
      @watchgoose 7 лет назад +6

      entrails? better look that one up

    • @SissyD61
      @SissyD61 7 лет назад +5

      OK...I said it for lack of a better word. Geez

    • @stevefowler1787
      @stevefowler1787 7 лет назад +5

      @Sissy...entrails not withstanding...your story is similar to mine but with a twist. I had just started my first Engineering job at Martin Marietta in Orlando a few weeks before the launch..as Martin Marietta made the external fuel tank when ever there was a launch a lot of people would go up on the roof of the 6 story bldg. I worked in at that time...so a few of my coworkers came by my office to take me up to the roof and I was busy at my computer terminal and told them, I'm busy and besides I grew up in Cocoa Beach and have seen plenty of shuttle launches so I'll pass...about 5 minutes later they come back ashen faced telling me it blew up...I could tell by the looks on their faces they weren't kidding and then the managers immediately formed a Tiger Team to start looking at the incident.

  • @michelleholliday5136
    @michelleholliday5136 3 года назад +3

    I remember sitting in class and watching this happen ...the silence....I remember the silence...no one could believe what we just saw

  • @flyjarrett
    @flyjarrett 11 месяцев назад

    I was in the third grade when this happened. We returned to the classroom from lunch and could see that our teacher had been crying. She sat the class down on the carpet at the front of the room and trying to hold back tears, asked the class, “Does anyone know what a tragedy is?” I’ll never forget it.

  • @torontocookie
    @torontocookie 5 лет назад +10

    sad day...very sad day...we will never forget these brave souls...may God continue to give each one in their families His Peace each moment!

  • @jessemask2562
    @jessemask2562 2 года назад +1

    The fact that this mission was rushed and safety therefore compromised is criminal

  • @pamelamason3004
    @pamelamason3004 3 года назад +9

    Michael Smith grew up in my county. His relatives still live here. The local airport was renamed for him after the tragedy. I think of him and this day every time I drive past it.

  • @Plmncvb
    @Plmncvb 6 лет назад +49

    I was teaching high school American History when this happened, and set up a TV so at least the 1st period class could watch it live. A terrible thing to see and experience in that way. One of those moments (like JFK assassination) when everybody who witnessed it happening will never forget where they were at the time; it still bothers me.

    • @rambojohnj.6117
      @rambojohnj.6117 6 лет назад +3

      That’s called “flashbulb memory”, where something occurs so unexpected and profound and tragic and unprecedented that it is forever imprinted into your memory bank.
      9/11 is a perfect example.

    • @miguelasantiago9543
      @miguelasantiago9543 6 лет назад

      Plmncvb
      You just wanted to watch tv at work.

    • @tetsurokuroo7085
      @tetsurokuroo7085 6 лет назад +5

      @@miguelasantiago9543 Real mature. Not even in the realm of funny

    • @ChefBuckeye
      @ChefBuckeye 5 лет назад +2

      @@miguelasantiago9543 That is not even one strand of funny, no humor. A complete insult of saying "you just wanted to watch tv at work" Do you know the number of school children who were basically traumatized? There were even reports of PTSD in some kids. Think before you speak because no one's laughing.

    • @jonstefanik9400
      @jonstefanik9400 5 лет назад

      @@miguelasantiago9543 were you even alive or in this country in 1986?

  • @StringsUp58
    @StringsUp58 5 лет назад +110

    So sad, that engineers even in a screaming match with their superiors, couldn't stop them from going ahead with that launch, even with the sub temps that shrunk those fuel "O" rings.

    • @flinch622
      @flinch622 5 лет назад +3

      They were talking to the wrong people - tell the pilots it was a suicide mission, and then you get to have a conversation the moment they decide they're not suiting up. But... the operational types always give mission briefings and engineers are not necessarily in the room.

    • @seannorman9169
      @seannorman9169 5 лет назад +2

      We are killing eachother because we want to cut cost...shame...
      we are still doing it and it's very unfortunate..

    • @RedfurredPikachu
      @RedfurredPikachu 5 лет назад +2

      If it was down to me I'd have told the crew about it no questions.

    • @seannorman9169
      @seannorman9169 5 лет назад

      Very unfortunate because we are killing ourselves in the name of cutting cost...

    • @petegaslondon
      @petegaslondon 5 лет назад +12

      @@RedfurredPikachu All the engineers get is a conference call with the NASA people - no way to warn the Astronauts themselves - tragic, and yeah there SHOULD have been criminal charges for this

  • @CatLives9
    @CatLives9 3 года назад +38

    So scary how they were in high spirits and kinda joking with each other right before lift off and then everything was going as plan when a sudden "Uh oh" is said. Then they're gone instantly. I cannot imagine.

    • @smilergrogan1725
      @smilergrogan1725 3 года назад +6

      Unfortunately, it wasn't instant. They were all still alive falling for several minutes inside the capsule. They died upon impact with the water.

    • @onethousandtwonortheast8848
      @onethousandtwonortheast8848 3 года назад

      @@smilergrogan1725 Is this verified as true?

    • @pboyd8354
      @pboyd8354 3 года назад

      Forgive my ignorance, isnt there an eject button these days?

    • @kevinmael3862
      @kevinmael3862 3 года назад +1

      @@onethousandtwonortheast8848 yes

    • @vodyaoriginal8543
      @vodyaoriginal8543 3 года назад

      @@smilergrogan1725 ~3 of them were alive after the blast.

  • @craigusselman546
    @craigusselman546 4 года назад +4

    Watched this live as a 5 year old-they were so exited heartbreaking.

  • @corky7ca
    @corky7ca 7 лет назад +11

    He said "uh oh" He must have known something was terribly wrong.

  • @johnajax631
    @johnajax631 5 лет назад +39

    They live forever like few others in memory and deed unmatched in life or death.

  • @hothmandon
    @hothmandon 4 года назад +1

    Since the cockpit detached intact there is no doubt in my mind the crew survived the explosion. However hurling back down into the ocean was a different story.

  • @juliet3827
    @juliet3827 3 года назад +1

    OMG, this brings tears to my eyes. They were so excited, so proud, so honored to be going on this mission. And they all died.

  • @teestjulian
    @teestjulian 5 лет назад +5

    I was 7 months prego, getting ready for work, eating a bowl of Captain Crunch, sitting in my mom in laws livingroom watching with her.
    I screamed.