View Full Version : Today was 18 years ago that the Challenger shuttle exploded


PZelda
01-28-2004, 02:40 AM
Tuesday, January 28, 1986.

Any thoughts? Any memories? (This is directed at the people old enough to remember it or born before it happened)

I was only five and a half months old at the time, so naturally I don't remember it, but I was alive when it happened. :(

Nanny Fine
01-28-2004, 03:23 AM
I was in high school, in algabra (my most loathed class). This kid, andy, came runnign down the hall banging on lockers yelling "The shuttle exploded". We sat in the little tiny library the rest of the day watching the news coverage. I still to do this day have a tape of some of the original news broadcasts surrounding this. IT's very sad to watch.

We went to Disneyworld 6 weeks ater the shuttle blew up and they had a huge display down there about it. My mom has pictures somewhere.

Mijada
01-28-2004, 06:53 AM
I remember that. I was in Junior High and heard about it in Math class. I still have newspapers and magazines with the 7 astronauts on the covers that my mom saved. It seems to me that the Challenger tragedy received a lot more media attention than the Columbia, but maybe it seems that way because I was still in school and the teachers were always talking about it.

TJL
01-28-2004, 10:01 AM
I remember that day. I was in High School.
For some reason I was off from school that day.
I was watching another program when my brother calls to me to switch channels. "Something happened to the shuttle!" he said.
I changed the channel in time to see the smoke and clouds, and dead silence from the newspeople covering the event.
A friend called me a few minutes later.
"Are you watching this," he asked. "Can you believe what just happened?"

Very sad.

Jenya
01-28-2004, 11:29 AM
I remember it slightly. That accident was covered on the news in Russia. But 1986 was not a good year. The biggest (and saddest) news event from that year was undoubtedly the Chernobyl nuclear disaster on April 25, 1986 in Ukraine. :(

Kazza
01-28-2004, 12:48 PM
That day will always be in my memory. I was only in 6th grade, when I came home from school it was on every channel. It looked like a Steven Spielberg movie....I couldn't believe it. :(

Titania
01-28-2004, 01:28 PM
I was only a couple months old at the time, my mother saved the newspaper from it in my baby book and remembers that she was watching me and my cousins (they were 5 and 6 then) when she saw it on tv.

Just from the clippings it's almost unreal; so sad.

EricIdlefan
01-28-2004, 03:14 PM
I was 11 and in Tennessee me and my older siblings were out of school and watching tv when it happened. I got mad when they interrupted my game shows but my parents said that the astronaults being killed was more important and their families and loved ones also. I was only a kid but then I know that they were important.

Janice
01-28-2004, 03:38 PM
I was working nights as a bartender back then, so I was sleeping late when it happened. I remember my husband came in the bedroom and told me. It felt surreal.

Kay Scarpetta
01-28-2004, 05:47 PM
Originally posted by Jenya
I remember it slightly. That accident was covered on the news in Russia. But 1986 was not a good year. The biggest (and saddest) news event from that year was undoubtedly the Chernobyl nuclear disaster on April 25, 1986 in Ukraine. :(

I'm unfortunately doing a report on Chernobyl now.... saddens me :(

¤I Love Clay Aiken¤
01-28-2004, 05:52 PM
I was just about to turn 2 at the time, so I have no recollection. We have a memory book though that came out about it, and I first remember hearing about it on the episode of Punky Brewster.:(

dandelion wine
01-28-2004, 11:07 PM
I was 11 years old and in school, watching it with the rest of my class as it happened. I remember total and complete silence as we sat in our chairs, stunned. A few years ago, my mom gave me the newspapers that came out the next day.

musicradio77
01-28-2004, 11:20 PM
I was in Puerto Rico back in '86 when I was 7 years old when the space shuttle exploded. Soon it will mark one year since the shuttle disaster crash landed over Texas.

Liza
01-28-2004, 11:33 PM
I was one of the kids who was told to watch the launch - the very first teacher in space. I was only in kindergarten, but I remember it because it was such a big deal in my school. All of the preschool, kindergarten, and probably first grade were all in the same room to watch the launch on TV - and we all counted out loud along with the TV. And I remember seeing a huge spark and it was gone, and at the time, I thought something was wrong. I'd never seen a rocket in my life, and the teachers seemed to have decided not to tell us. None of us kids knew what to think, but since no one said anything, we all just assumed that that's what a normal launch looks like - someone switched off the TV right away, and then they sent us home, without telling us what had happened. All of us just assuming it all went alright. It wasn't until I got home that my mom had to explain to me what it was I'd seen.

Ags2000
01-28-2004, 11:35 PM
I was 7 1/2 at the time and living in Florida. We hadn't been there that long. I remember that day like it was yesterday. My class was outside on the playground at the time having snacks and watching the shuttle take off. (You could see the shuttle take off and land where I lived) I can remember sitting there watching it go and then all of a sudden *poof* it was just gone. You could see the debris falling back down. It was somplete silence then somebody screamed. The teachers put us into the nearest classroom. They wanted us in because you could see debris falling for awhile.

The next time a shuttle went up I was in 5th grade. They wouldn't let anyone outside incase anything happened. They had all the windows closed and nobody was allowed to change classes. A teacher was standing by the tv set incase anything happened they could turn it off. We all sat there really quiet until it passed the time the Challenger exploded.

About 2 years ago, I went to Washington D.C. for the first time and when we went to Arlington Cemetery I visited the memorial that had been erected for the Challenger, it's really nice. I have a picture here.

D

Rebel Queen 1980
01-29-2004, 02:08 AM
I was 6 years old at the time and I was home from school
that day,well at my aunt's house taking a nap and she
woke me up and told me about it.,I didn't know what was
really going,until the next school day when our teachers
and the all other kindergartens told us about it.So long
ago,But I remember it like as if it were just yesterday.

dandelion wine
01-29-2004, 02:34 AM
Originally posted by Ags2000
I was 7 1/2 at the time and living in Florida. We hadn't been there that long. I remember that day like it was yesterday. My class was outside on the playground at the time having snacks and watching the shuttle take off. (You could see the shuttle take off and land where I lived) I can remember sitting there watching it go and then all of a sudden *poof* it was just gone. You could see the debris falling back down. It was somplete silence then somebody screamed. The teachers put us into the nearest classroom. They wanted us in because you could see debris falling for awhile.

The next time a shuttle went up I was in 5th grade. They wouldn't let anyone outside incase anything happened. They had all the windows closed and nobody was allowed to change classes. A teacher was standing by the tv set incase anything happened they could turn it off. We all sat there really quiet until it passed the time the Challenger exploded.

About 2 years ago, I went to Washington D.C. for the first time and when we went to Arlington Cemetery I visited the memorial that had been erected for the Challenger, it's really nice. I have a picture here.

D

Thanks for sharing that picture with us, Ags. It's beautiful.

Ags2000
01-29-2004, 02:42 PM
Originally posted by little insomniac
Thanks for sharing that picture with us, Ags. It's beautiful.

No problem.

D

Janice
01-29-2004, 02:43 PM
Originally posted by little insomniac
Thanks for sharing that picture with us, Ags. It's beautiful.
It really is.

Ags2000
01-29-2004, 02:47 PM
Originally posted by Janice
It really is.

It was really emoyional seeing it for the first time. It's location is right across from the tomb of the Unknown Soldier. The 2nd time I went happened to be the day Columbia exploded. People had turned that into a memorial for Columbia. It was really neat.


D

I am Him
01-29-2004, 03:17 PM
I was 11 at the time. I was eating lunch in the school cafeteria.

That disaster had a much bigger impact than the more recent Columbia disaster.

It happened in 1986 when the shuttle program was still relatively new. NASA had launched so many successful manned missions that it wasn't believed an accident like that was possible.

There were so many high hopes for the future of back then. People still believed there would be space stations and moon bases by the year 2000.

Since NASA landed the first men on the moon, the US was in the lead with regards to manned space flight.

So the Challenger exploding was as shocking as “911” was.

Suddenly the future of manned space exploration was in question. No space stations and no moon base.

A month after the Challenger exploded, the Soviet Union began launching Space Station Mir into orbit. The United States lost the lead in manned space flight.

Liza
01-29-2004, 05:09 PM
Originally posted by I am Him
I was 11 at the time. I was eating lunch in the school cafeteria.

That disaster had a much bigger impact than the more recent Columbia disaster.

It happened in 1986 when the shuttle program was still relatively new. NASA had launched so many successful manned missions that it wasn't believed an accident like that was possible.

There were so many high hopes for the future of back then. People still believed there would be space stations and moon bases by the year 2000.

Since NASA landed the first men on the moon, the US was in the lead with regards to manned space flight.

So the Challenger exploding was as shocking as “911” was.

Suddenly the future of manned space exploration was in question. No space stations and no moon base.

A month after the Challenger exploded, the Soviet Union began launching Space Station Mir into orbit. The United States lost the lead in manned space flight.

This is true, but I think the real reason that the Challenger had such a bigger impact was the fact that a teacher was onboard. She wasn't an astronaut, she won a contest from around the country to be the first teacher in space. Her entire class was outside watching, and schoolchildren around the country (like me) were gathered around the tvs to watch. I think it was that it was an educational program - intended to further interest in space exploration for young kids - and it blew up before our very eyes. It happened so long ago and I still haven't forgiven my old teachers for sending us home without telling us what we'd seen.

Jokerette
01-29-2004, 05:19 PM
I was only three years old at the time the Challenge exploded but I saw news clips of the report on the day it happened and cried. Such an tragic thing. :(

RIP to all the victims and deepest sympathies to their families.

MikeZ
01-29-2004, 05:38 PM
I live in Florida, and was standing outside in our shopping center, with a group of people. It was a very clear day, with few clouds. We saw the shuttle once it got above the treetops. What a great sight it was, gleaming in the bright sunlight. Then, we saw the explosion, and a few seconds later heard the boom. At first some people thought it was just the booster droping off the shutttle, but very soon it was way too clear that it was a huge problem. We all watched until everything had dropped down below our view. The two white trails of where it exploded remained hanging in the air for what seemed forever. That scene has replayed in my mind hundreds ot times. Also, the sight of the faces of the parents of the teacher, as they slowly realized what had happened.

Lynn
01-31-2004, 03:21 AM
Originally posted by Liza
This is true, but I think the real reason that the Challenger had such a bigger impact was the fact that a teacher was onboard. She wasn't an astronaut, she won a contest from around the country to be the first teacher in space. Her entire class was outside watching, and schoolchildren around the country (like me) were gathered around the tvs to watch. I think it was that it was an educational program - intended to further interest in space exploration for young kids - and it blew up before our very eyes. It happened so long ago and I still haven't forgiven my old teachers for sending us home without telling us what we'd seen. Yes, exactly. It was such a big deal that a teacher was going into space so all the schools made a huge event out of it. I was in 3rd grade and I remember watching it on TV in the library. At first when it exploded, no one really knew what happened. When the teachers finally realized what was going on, they told us what happened and we bowed our heads for a moment of silence. It seemed like the TV kept showing it explode over and over again. It was so shocking and so many kids watched it happen. I'll never forget it.