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Donald E. Williams papers

Overview

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Administrative Information

Detailed Description

Papers, Photographs, Artifacts (12 Folders)

Artifacts

Flight Helmet



Contact us about this collection

Donald E. Williams papers, 1978-1990 | Purdue University Libraries, Archives and Special Collections

By Mary A. Sego, 2009

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Collection Overview

Title: Donald E. Williams papers, 1978-1990Add to your cart.

Primary Creator: Williams, Donald E. (1942-)

Extent: 1.7 Cubic feet. More info below.

Arrangement: By type of material, folders are dated.

Subjects: Astronauts, Flight Archives at Purdue University, Purdue University--Alumni and alumnae, Space flights, United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Forms of Material: Artifacts (object genre), Black-and-white photographs, Color photographs, Personal papers

Languages: English

Scope and Contents of the Materials

Papers and artifacts of Donald Williams (Don Williams), astronaut and Purdue alumnus (BSME 1964).

Biographical Note

Donald E. Williams was born February 13, 1942 in Lafayette, Indiana. Williams graduated from Otterbein High School in 1960 and went on to earn a B.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering from Purdue University in 1964.

Williams received his commission through the NROTC program at Purdue University. He completed flight training at Pensacola, Florida; Meridian, Mississippi; and Kingsville, Texas, receiving his wings in May 1966. After A-4 training, he made two Vietnam deployments aboard the USS ENTERPRISE with Attack Squadron 113. He served as a flight instructor in Attack Squadron 125 at Naval Air Station Lemoore, California, for 2 years and transitioned to A-7 aircraft. He made two additional Vietnam deployments aboard the USS ENTERPRISE with CVW-14 staff and Attack Squadron 97. Williams completed a total of 330 combat missions.

In 1973, Williams attended the Armed Forces Staff College. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School at Patuxent River, Maryland, in June 1974, and was assigned to the Naval Air Test Center's Carrier Suitability Branch of Flight Test Division. From August 1976 to June 1977 he was head of the Carrier Systems Branch, Strike Aircraft Test Directorate. He reported next for A-7 refresher training and was assigned to Attack Squadron 94 when selected by NASA. Williams was selected by NASA in January 1978 as an astronaut candidate. He became an astronaut in August 1979, and qualified for assignment as a pilot on future Space Shuttle flight crews. Since then he has had various support assignments, including working at the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory as a test pilot, and at the Kennedy Space Center participating in Orbiter test, checkout, launch and landing operations. From September 1982 through July 1983, he was assigned as the Deputy Manager, Operations Integration, National Space Transportation System Program Office at the Johnson Space Center. From July 1985 through August 1986, Williams was the Deputy Chief of the Aircraft Operations Division at the Johnson Space Center, and from September 1986 through December 1988, he served as Chief of the Mission Support Branch within the Astronaut Office. Twice flown, Williams served as pilot on STS-51D in 1985, and was the spacecraft commander on STS-34 in 1989. He has logged a total of 287 hours and 35 minutes in space. In March 1990, Williams retired from the U.S. Navy and left NASA. He went on become a Division Manager with Science Applications International Corporation, working on several projects in the Houston area, nationally, and internationally.

Williams was honored many time and his awards include: the Legion of Merit, Distinguished Flying Cross, Defense Superior Service Medal, 2 Navy Commendation Medals with Combat V, 2 Navy Unit Commendations, a Meritorious Unit Commendation, the National Defense Medal, an Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal, the NASA Space Flight Medal, the NASA Exceptional Service Medal, the Vietnam Service Medal (with 4 stars), a Vietnamese Gallantry Cross (with gold star), and the Vietnam Campaign Medal.

Discovery (April 12-19, 1985) was launched from and returned to land at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida. During the mission, the crew deployed ANIK-C for Telesat of Canada, and Syncom IV-3 for the U.S. Navy. A malfunction in the Syncom spacecraft resulted in the first unscheduled EVA, rendezvous and proximity operations for the Space Shuttle in an attempt to activate the satellite. Additionally, the crew also conducted several medical experiments, two student experiments, activated two Getaway Specials, and filmed experiments with toys in space. The mission was accomplished in 109 orbits of the Earth in 167 hours, 54 minutes. STS-34 Atlantis (October 18-23, 1989) was launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida and returned to land at Edwards Air Force Base, California. During the mission the crew successfully deployed the Galileo spacecraft, starting its journey to explore Jupiter, operated the Shuttle Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet Instrument (SSBUV) to map atmospheric ozone, and performed numerous secondary experiments involving radiation measurements, polymer morphology, lightning research, microgravity effects on plants, and a student experiment on ice crystal growth in space. The mission was accomplished in 79 orbits of the Earth in 119 hours, 41 minutes.

Subject/Index Terms

Astronauts
Flight Archives at Purdue University
Purdue University--Alumni and alumnae
Space flights
United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Administrative Information

Repository: Purdue University Libraries, Archives and Special Collections

Alternate Extent Statement: 3 boxes

Access Restrictions: Collection is open for research.

Acquisition Source: Donation

Preferred Citation: MSA 12, Donald E. Williams papers, Archives and Special Collections, Purdue University Libraries


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Box:

[Box 1: Papers, Photographs, Artifacts (12 Folders), 1978-1989],
[Box 2: Artifacts, Undated],
[Box 3: Flight Helmet],
[All]

Box 1: Papers, Photographs, Artifacts (12 Folders), 1978-1989Add to your cart.
Folder 1: Mission Checklists, 1985Add to your cart.
Orbit OPS Checklist, STS 51-D (Bobko * Williams * Seddon * Griggs * Hoffman * Walker * Garn).
Folder 2: Mission Checklists, 1985Add to your cart.
Contingency Deorbit Prep, STS 51-D (Landing Site Data Chart).
Folder 3: Mission Checklists, 1985Add to your cart.
Contingency EVA Operations Checklist, STS 51-D
Folder 4: Press Kit, 1981Add to your cart.
NASA Press Kit, STS-1, First Shuttle Mission, April 1981.
Folder 5: Press/Publicity, 1985-1989Add to your cart.

Press/publicity about Donald E. Williams:

The Joy of Zero-G Juggling: With 'Small Cascade for a Man,' Astronaut Williams Takes Giant Step In History of Juggling, by Bill Giduz, Jugglers' World, Summer 1985, pp. 4-6.

Astronauts umpire to get feet back on ground, by Greg Huchingson, Balls & Strikes, Vol. 57, No. 3, 1989, pp 12-13. Photo of Astronaut Williams on the cover.

Folder 6: Photographs, 1989 & undatedAdd to your cart.

10 color photographs and one black and white photo of Astronaut Williams, some with other individuals in them.

Grissom Air Force base, with a "Welcome Capt Williams" sign in the background.

NASA, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, Houston Texas 77058.

STS-34 Onboard Scene --- Astronaut Donald E. Williams spent a portion of the five-day STS-34 flight at Atlantis' commander's station and, appeared to enjoy his second space flight, his first as a mission commander. Astronaut Michael J. McCulley, pilot, leans over the pilot's station at right. This 35 mm scene was in the first 12 photos released by NASA on Oct. 24, 1989.

Folder 7: Artifacts, ca. 1980sAdd to your cart.
Donald William's NASA Medical Certification for Spaceflight, ID Card, ca. 1980s.
Folder 8: Artifacts, 1989Add to your cart.
STS-34 Causeway Vehicle Permit, 1989.
Folder 9: Artifacts, UndatedAdd to your cart.

NASA name patch

U.S. flag patch

Name patch with wings, undated

NASA patch

Folder 10: Artifacts, 1978-1989Add to your cart.

Patches, in chronological order:

1978, 35 years patch, 1980 patch; STS-2, 1981, Columbia patch; STS-4, 1982, Columbia patch; Senator Jake Garn patch, undated (possibly STS-51 D, 1985; Challenger patch, undated; STS-34, Atlantis patch, 1989; T-38, Supersonic Trainer jet patch; NASA West, El Paso patch; America's Shutle Recovery Team patch; Weightless Environment Training Facility patch; Mach "25 years" patch.

Folder 11: Artifacts, 1978-1989Add to your cart.

Twenty-seven decals, in chronological order:

1978 Decal (35 years); Manned Flight Awareness Decal (NASA), undated; Spartan 1 Decal, undated; Hasselblad Space Shuttle Camera Decal, undated; 3M Space Research Applications Decal, undated (ca. 1980s); NASA Small Self-Contained Payloads Decal, undated (ca. 1980s); Hasselblad Cameras Decal, undated (ca. 1980s); NASA Spartan Decal, undated (ca. 1980s); National Space Society Decal, undated (ca. 1980s); Mission Franco-Americaine Decal, undated (ca. 1980s); Telesat Anike D Decal, undated (ca. 1980s); Canadarm decal, undated (ca. 1980s); SSBUV Shuttle Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet Decal, undated (ca. 1980s); Telestar 3 Skynet Services, AT&T Decal, undated (ca. 1980s); IMAX OMNIMAX Decal, undated (ca. 1980s); STS-2 Columbia Decal, 1981; STS-S Columbia Decal, 1982; STS-6 Challenger Decal, 1983; STS-9 Columbia Decal, First Flight of Spacelab Module, 1983; STS-8 Challenger Decal, First Space Shuttle Night Launch & Landing, 1983; STS-7 Challenger, First U.S. Woman in Space (Ride), 1983; STS-51 D Discovery Decal, Carried U.S. Senator Jake Garn, 1985; 3M PVTOS Decal, STS-26 Discovery, 1988; STS-27 Decal, Atlantis, 1988; STS-27, Atlantis Decal, 1988; STS-26, Discovery Decal, 1988; STS-34, Atlantis Decal, 1989.

Folder 12: Artifacts, 1989Add to your cart.
STS-34 Card with mission logo, Atlantis, 1989 - Lucid * Williams * McCulley * Baker * Chang-Diaz


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