James McDivitt
James Alton McDivitt Jr. (June 10, 1929 – October 13, 2022) was an American
test pilot,
United States Air Force (USAF) pilot,
aeronautical engineer, and
NASA astronaut in the
Gemini and
Apollo programs. He joined the USAF in 1951 and flew 145
combat missions in the
Korean War. In 1959, after graduating first in his class with a Bachelor of Science degree in
Aeronautical Engineering from the
University of Michigan through the U.S.
Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT) program, he qualified as a test pilot at the
Air Force Experimental Flight Test Pilot School (Class 59C) and
Aerospace Research Pilot School (Class I), and joined the Manned Spacecraft Operations Branch. By September 1962, McDivitt had logged over 2,500 flight hours, of which more than 2,000 hours were in
jet aircraft. This included flying as a
chase pilot for
Robert M. White's
North American X-15 flight on July 17, 1962, in which White reached an altitude of and became the first X-15 pilot to be awarded
Astronaut Wings.
In 1962, McDivitt was selected as an astronaut by NASA as part of
Astronaut Group 2. He commanded the
Gemini 4 mission, during which
Ed White performed the first U.S.
spacewalk, and later the
Apollo 9 flight, which was the first crewed flight test of the
Apollo Lunar Module and the complete set of Apollo flight hardware. He later became the manager of lunar landing operations and was the Apollo spacecraft program manager from 1969 to 1972. In June 1972 he left NASA and retired from the USAF with the rank of
brigadier general.
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