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Astronaut William C. McCool,
STS-107 pilot, talks to ground controllers from the aft flight
deck of the Earth-orbiting Space Shuttle Columbia. |
WILLIAM C. MCCOOL (COMMANDER, USN)
NASA ASTRONAUT (DECEASED)
PERSONAL DATA: Born September 23, 1961 in San Diego,
California. Died on February 1, 2003 over the southern United States
when Space Shuttle Columbia and her crew perished during entry, 16
minutes prior to scheduled landing. He is survived by his wife and
children. He enjoyed running, mountain biking, back country hiking/camping,
swimming, playing guitar, chess.
EDUCATION: Graduated from Coronado High School, Lubbock,
Texas, in 1979; received a bachelor of science degree in applied science
from the US Naval Academy in 1983, a master of science degree in computer
science from the University of Maryland in 1985, and a master of science
degree in aeronautical engineering from the US Naval Postgraduate
School in 1992.
ORGANIZATIONS: U.S. Naval Academy Alumni Association.
SPECIAL HONORS: Eagle Scout; graduated second of
1,083 in the Class of 1983 at the US Naval Academy; presented “Outstanding
Student” and “Best DT-II Thesis” awards as graduate
of U.S. Naval Test Pilot School, Class 101; awarded Navy Commendation
Medals (2), Navy Achievement Medals (2), and various other service
awards.
EXPERIENCE: McCool completed flight training in August 1986
and was assigned to Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron 129 at Whidbey
Island, Washington, for initial EA-6B Prowler training. His first
operational tour was with Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron 133,
where he made two deployments aboard USS CORAL SEA (CV-43) to the
Mediterranean Sea, and received designation as a wing qualified landing
signal officer (LSO). In November 1989, he was selected for the Naval
Postgraduate School/Test Pilot School (TPS) Cooperative Education
Program. After graduating from TPS in June 1992, he worked as TA-4J
and EA-6B test pilot in Flight Systems Department of Strike Aircraft
Test Directorate at Patuxent River, Maryland. He was responsible for
the management and conduct of a wide variety of projects, ranging
from airframe fatigue life studies to numerous avionics upgrades.
His primary efforts, however, were dedicated to flight test of the
Advanced Capability (ADVCAP) EA-6B. Following his Patuxent River tour,
McCool returned to Whidbey Island, and was assigned to Tactical Electronic
Warfare Squadron 132 aboard USS ENTERPRISE (CVN-65). He served as
Administrative and Operations Officer with the squadron through their
work-up cycle, receiving notice of NASA selection while embarked on
ENTERPRISE for her final pre-deployment at-sea period. McCool has
over 2,800 hours flight experience in 24 aircraft and over 400 carrier
arrestments.
NASA EXPERIENCE: Selected by NASA in April 1996, McCool reported
to the Johnson Space Center in August 1996. He completed two years
of training and evaluation, and is qualified for flight assignment
as a pilot. Initially assigned to the Computer Support Branch, McCool
also served as Technical Assistant to the Director of Flight Crew
Operations, and worked Shuttle cockpit upgrade issues for the Astronaut
Office. He was the pilot on STS-107 and logged 15 days, 22 hours and
20 minutes in space.
SPACE FLIGHT EXPERIENCE: STS-107 Columbia (Jan 16
to Feb 1, 2003). The 16-day flight was a dedicated science and research
mission. Working 24 hours a day, in two alternating shifts, the crew
successfully conducted approximately 80 experiments. The STS-107 mission
ended abruptly on February 1, 2003 when Space Shuttle Columbia and
her crew perished during entry, 16 minutes before scheduled landing.
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Astronaut Photos and Biographies-
Courtesy of NASA
Lucky Bag Photos- Courtesy of USNA Archives
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