Walter M. Schirra Jr.

Walter M. Schirra Jr.

Walter Schirra Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on May 3, 2007.
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Walter M. Schirra Jr., one of the original Mercury Seven astronauts and the only man to fly on NASA's Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs, died Thursday. He was 84.

Schirra, who commanded the first rendezvous of two spacecraft in orbit, died of a heart attack at Scripps Green Hospital in La Jolla, said Ruth Chandler Varonfakis, a longtime family friend and spokeswoman for the San Diego Aerospace Museum. San Diego Medical Examiner's investigator Paul Parker said Schirra died early Thursday.

An aviation buff since childhood, known to fellow astronauts for his colorful personality and independent streak, Schirra became the third American to orbit the Earth in October 1962. He encircled the globe six times in a flight that lasted more than nine hours.

Americans in space before him were Alan Shepard and Virgil "Gus" Grissom, who flew suborbital flights in 1961, and John Glenn and Scott Carpenter, who orbited Earth earlier in 1962. The Soviet Union had beaten the United States into space, putting cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin into orbit in April 1961, weeks before Shepard's suborbital trip.

Schirra returned to space in 1965 as commander of Gemini 6 and guided his two-man capsule toward Gemini 7, already in orbit. On Dec. 15, 1965, the two ships came within a few feet of each other as they shot through space, some 185 miles above the Earth. It was the first rendezvous of two spacecraft in orbit.

His third and final space flight in 1968 inaugurated the Apollo program that the following year put men on the moon.

The former Navy test pilot said he initially had little interest when he heard of NASA's Mercury program. But he grew more intrigued over time and the space agency named him one of the Mercury Seven in April 1959.

Supremely confident, Schirra sailed through rigorous astronaut training with what one reporter called "the ease of preparing for a family picnic."

"He was a practical joker, but he was a fine fellow and a fine aviator," Carpenter recalled Thursday. "He will be sorely missed in our group." Carpenter said he last saw Schirra several months ago and talked to him just a few days ago.

Roger Launius, a space historian at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, said Schirra "had a personality that was fun and effervescent. He had the gift of gab. He was able to take complex engineering and scientific ideas and translate that to something that was understandable."

Launius recalled that Schirra smuggled a corned beef sandwich on his Gemini flight and also reported seeing Santa Claus.

Schirra blasted off from Cape Canaveral on Oct. 3, 1962, aboard the Sigma 7 Mercury spacecraft.

"I'm having a ball up here drifting," Schirra said from space.

At the end of his sixth orbit, Schirra piloted the capsule for a perfect splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.

"No one has flown better than you," NASA Administrator James E. Webb told him a few days later.

The only Mercury Seven astronauts who survive him are Glenn and Carpenter.

Although he never walked on the moon, Schirra laid some of the groundwork that made future missions possible.

He liked to stress that NASA never planned to simply send a person to the moon.

"Moon and back," Schirra would point out. "We did confirm a round trip from the very beginning. And 'moonandback' is one word. No hyphens. No commas."

His Gemini mission represented a major step forward in the nation's space race with the Soviet Union, proving that two ships could dock in space. Schirra's Apollo 7 mission in October 1968 restored the nation's confidence in the space program, which had been shaken a year earlier when three astronauts, including Grissom, were killed in a fire on the launch pad.

The Apollo 7 crew shot into space atop a Saturn rocket, a version of which would later carry men to the moon. But Schirra and his two fellow crewmembers were grumpy for most of the 11-day trip. All three developed bad colds that proved to be a major nuisance in weightlessness.

The following year, Schirra resigned from NASA and retired from the Navy with the rank of captain. He had logged 295 hours 154 minutes in space.

A native of Hackensack, New Jersey, Schirra developed an early interest in flight. His father was a fighter pilot during World War I and later barnstormed at county fairs with Schirra's mother, who sometimes stood on the wing of a biplane during flights.

Wally, as he liked to be called, took his first flight with his father at age 13 and already knew how to fly when he left home for the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.

After graduation in 1945, Schirra served in the Seventh Fleet and flew 90 combat missions during the Korean War. He was credited with shooting down one Soviet MiG-15 and possibly a second. He received the Distinguished Flying Cross and two Air Medals.

In 1984, he moved to the San Diego suburb of Rancho Santa Fe, serving on corporate boards and as an independent consultant. His favorite craft became the Windchime, a 36-foot (11-meter) sailboat.

Schirra was inducted into the Naval Aviation Hall of Honor in 2000.

Survivors include his wife, Josephine, daughter Suzanne and son Walter Schirra III.


Copyright © 2007 The Associated Press

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100 Entries

May 4, 2020

My condolences to the family. May the God of Comfort, continue to comfort the family.

March 12, 2018

May the love of friends, and family carry you through your grief.

Harry Simpson

May 5, 2017

Fair winds and following seas sailor.

Thank you for your service to this nation.

Mark Billingsley

June 22, 2011

A real MAN with a wonderfull sense of humor. My favorite of the seven.
ps: save me a seat

March 30, 2010

For Walter...

WEEP NOT FOR ME


Do not weep for me when I no longer dwell among the wonders of the earth; for my larger self is free, and my soul rejoices on the other side of pain...on the other side of darkness.

Do not weep for me, for I am a ray of sunshine that touches your skin, a tropical breeze upon your face, the hush of joy within your heart and the innocence of babes in mothers arms.

I am the hope in a darkened night. And, in your hour of need, I will be there to comfort you. I will share your tears, your joys, your fears, your disappointments and your triumphs.

Do not weep for me, for I am cradled
in the arms of God. I walk with the angels, and hear the music beyond the stars.

Do not weep for me, for I am within you;
I am peace, love, I am a soft wind that caresses the flowers. I am the calm that follows a raging storm. I am an autumns leaf that floats among the garden of God, and I am pure white snow that softly falls upon your hand.

Do not weep for me, for I shall never die, as long as you remember me...
with a smile and a sigh.


© Joe Fazio
~
[email protected] /Joe Fazio,
Beverly Hills, California

ALMA RENNER

July 25, 2008

an amazing astronaut

GOD GIVE GRACE

diane gregerson

January 2, 2008

1/1/08
My sympathies to the Schirra family. Wally was a friend of my fiance Henry Phelps, also retired Captain in the Navy and was born in Hackensack, N.J. He spoke very kindly of you Wally and your comradeship at your meetings at QED.
I believe you attended the services for Hank in Coronado, Ca, in Feb. 2007. I wanted to thank you again for attending.
God be with the family of Wally Schirra and may the light glow amongst you two in heaven.
Diane M. Gregerson
Julian, Ca
Fiance of Henry Phelps

Richard, Ralph Strother

May 14, 2007

Our thoughts and prayers are with you in your time of grief. May your memories bring you comfort.

Virginia & Owen Kieran

May 13, 2007

Sincere condolences to the Schirra family, and sincere appreciation to them for being a family who could let this man live such a life and be a hero to so many.
We are thankful for him and for his fellow earthmen who dared to make dreams a reality. We are also thankful for his service in wartime and peace - we are reminded that freedom is never free but bought by heroes.

Dorothy Pettinato

May 13, 2007

My deepest sympathy goes out to the Schirra family. Walter M. Schirra, Jr was the kind of man our youth can look up to and see a real hero. He was a very courageous man.

D.L. ZIMMERMAN

May 13, 2007

REST IN PEACE WALLY

Jim & Carol Doerksen

May 10, 2007

Wally,
You will be sorely missed and the space program has lost a great champion.

Sherry Runion-Lamb

May 9, 2007

Memories are wonderful. I remember the Schirra Family from Pax River, Md. where my family, the Runions, played with yours. I used to babysit for your children, and water ski with the gang out on the river. They were wonderful days and I'll never forget Wally. God Bless you,

A Wallace

May 9, 2007

I grew up in Huntsville, and I remember as a child the days that NASA would light and test the Saturn rockets. Our home was 10 miles from the test site, but the dishes in our cupboard would rattle as the ground shook from that immense power. I have often thought of the extreme bravery of those first astronauts who sat atop those powerful rockets and trusted that they would safely return home again. That was heroism beyond compare. How proud the Schirra family must be of this man. God bless your family. Truly a life well lived.

Wade Houck

May 8, 2007

My sympathies to the family.I'm sure I am not the only one who will remember the Santa sighting as a child and has shared it with children and grandchildren still.My prayers are with you.God Bless

Nick Krawchuk

May 8, 2007

I rememer being sick from Dougal public school in Windsor Ontario just to be near the tv and radio and witness the trips from my bedroom. I realize how short life is when i see the years go by since that great era in space flight

Karen Howser

May 7, 2007

I remember Wally Schirra from Pax River, Md. where we played on the river every weekend with all the families. During the week it was test pilot school or flying but on the weekends it was water skiing and picnics. I'm sure Dad (Cmdr. Dallas Runion) and Wally are reliving those old fun times together. My sympathy goes out to Mrs. Schirra and family. Sincerely, Karen Runion Howser

Ron and Elizabeth Sullivan

May 7, 2007

My husband and I both worked with Capt. Schirra and he was many things to many people. Nevertheless, each person he met he made a lasting and profound impression upon them. With his passing he leaves a legacy beyond compare. My husband and I both feel blessed to have known him. His family is in our thoughts and prayers. The Ronald Sullivan Family

Jim Ketchum

May 7, 2007

Wally I miss you. We met several times on the old guided missle range. Grand Turk, San Salvadore and, I think once, on Ascension.

The world is a little less exciting now that you have left us for new adventures.

Go with God

The Daly's

May 7, 2007

Sincere sympathy & thoughts go to the family of Walter Schirra, Jr. from Oradell, NJ where he lived as a young man & where there is a street & park named for him.

Randy Tracy

May 7, 2007

You are an inspiration for all humankind. God Bless you and your family, and sympathy to all who knew and loved him.

Bill Harris

May 7, 2007

God's speed Wally for you are now flying above the stars and I'll see you up there in the future.

Daniel

May 5, 2007

Captain Shirra, Thank you for serving your country.

Jim Hay

May 5, 2007

I worked in Mission Control Center in the telemetry section, I recorded your EKG and respiration during launch, it was exciting times. Rest in peace Wally.

Alex Bromberg

May 5, 2007

To The Family Of Walter M. Schirra Jr. I offer my sincere condolences.May his memory be a blessing.

The Healy Family

May 5, 2007

What better life than to know you have made such a worthwhile contribution to mankind. May God bless you and your family.

Brian Phillips

May 5, 2007

My condolences to all the Schirra family. My Mother & an Uncle(who also passed this week) were both fortunate enough to work for NASA/Langley during the Mercury years. It is one of my fondest childhood memories when my cousin & I were fortunate enough to meet several of the "Original Seven" including "Uncle Wally" in the 60's.
America & NASA lost two great Americans this week. Our prayers are with you all as we mourn both passings.

Mary Winkowski

May 4, 2007

Wally was always so much fun and a
good pilot.
He was a "Moonshiner" of VF124 as was my late husband Jack Wink---
My prayers are with his family.

ANNIE

May 4, 2007

BEAM ME UP WALTER!!!!!!!!!
WALTER WAS JUST HIGH CLASS LIKE SCOTTY ON STAR TREK, AND A VERY GOOD HUMAN BEING AND ROLE MODEL FOR OUR NEXT GENERATION OF SPACE EXPLORERS...... THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES AND MY SINCER SYMPATHY TO THE SCHIRRA FAMILY.....
THOU GOESTH!!!!! MY BEST WALTER

Patricia Gould

May 4, 2007

"Wally" you were my hero then and now. I love to tell my grandson about the early space program and how you flew the perfect flight. I have a picture in my bedroom of the orginal seven and the last picture taken in your service uniforms. This picture keeps my grandson and now grand daughters interested in space and the men, like you, that paved the way for space exploration. God Bless you and your family.

Vincent Dietrich

May 4, 2007

I would like to express my condolences
to his sister who was a class mate at Dwight Morrow High School, Englewood, NJ.

Richard Schrader

May 4, 2007

God speed, Walter Schirra Jr.

John Pickar

May 4, 2007

Schirra Family- God's blessings and comfort during your difficult time of saying goodbye to a remarkable man and pioneer. He paved the way for so many. Now, Wally is welcomed into the heaven he so boldly traveled through.
Congradulations upon a life so richly lived.

D.L. ZIMMERMAN

May 4, 2007

GOD BLESS THE SCHIRRA FAMILY, REST IN PEACE WALLY

Carol McLean

May 4, 2007

Quite a guy, excellent role model.

Michael Iezzi

May 4, 2007

Father we entrust our brother Walter to your mercy. You loved him greatly in this life: now that he is freed from all its cares, give him happiness and peace forever. Welcome him now into paradise where there will be no more sorrow, no more weeping or pain, but only peace and joy with Jesus your Son, and the Holy Spirit forever and ever.
May God hold Walter in the palm of His hand. My thoughts and prayers are with you and your family. My deepest sympathy.

Mike Dugan

May 4, 2007

I will always remember your contributions to the space program most especially your mission back on October 4, 1962.As a young (high school) journalist I remember writing a story about that mission.

Dear Lord please bless the Schirra family at this time.

louis carwell

May 4, 2007

your contributions to explorations in space never be forgotten. rest in peace.

Patsy Jo Reed Sircy

May 4, 2007

Sincere sympathy and love to all who care, to family and friends, to fans and admirers, a GREAT man, an icon is gone! Pat - "PJ" a nurse in TN

John Martin

May 3, 2007

I was 19 years old in 1962 when I walked into Cathy's coffee shop in Cocoa Beach, Fla., sat down at the counter and ordered breakfast. The nice man beside me struck up a conversation and we talked all thru our meal. The waitresses smiled at us. When he left, the waitress told me who he was. Thanks for the memories Walley and rest in peace.

Jason Rhian

May 3, 2007

Dear Wally:

Be sure and pull a few "gotchas" upstairs. We'll miss your wonderful sense of humor.

dave

May 3, 2007

May you forever be in the Stars.

Rest in Peace.

Stanley Smith

May 3, 2007

R.I.P.

Kristine Tolman

May 3, 2007

I was born in 1965 and remember very little from the early flights. What I know of these early astronauts and most amazing heroes I learned from the movie "The Right Stuff", which I watched countless times. Mr. Shirra, you did indeed have the "right stuff." I encourage any of my young students who show an interest in space. You are a model to all.

D.L. ZIMMERMAN

May 3, 2007

MY PRAYERS ARE WITH YOU, REST IN PEACE WALLEY

Sheila & Jack Horowicz

May 3, 2007

Our sincerest sympathy in the loss of a truly great American Hero! Walter achieved what most people could only dream of achieving in their lifetime. He's made his final journey home to heaven, far outside of any galaxy he's traveled before. May he rest in peace and may God's eternal light shine upon him always! Thanks for the memories Walter!

Ellie Schirra

May 3, 2007

Thank you Wally, My modeling career had a jump start because we share the same last name. So in the 60's and 70's my last name was always in the headlines. Ad agencies saw my name and would call me to do a commericial shoot.
Thank you, with love Ellie Schirra

Helena & Neil Perlmutter

May 3, 2007

Our sympathy to the family of Walter M. Schirra Jr. He was a true hero. May he Rest in Peace.

May 3, 2007

A Free Spirit on a Endless Flight

Armando Corbelle

May 3, 2007

Wally Schirra has broken free from the bonds of Earth.

Godspeed to one of the Mercury 7 astronauts who this Thursday embarked on his final journey.

Laura Mahoney

May 3, 2007

What a wonderful gift you gave us all, humor from space! And now, you are off on another wonderful journey of exploration! God's speed to you!

JIM HELM

May 3, 2007

HEAVEN KNOWS MR.Schirra.

GOD SPEED

steve wexle

May 3, 2007

VERY SIMPLY...A TRUE HERO..

Rick & Elain Barnes

May 3, 2007

We grew up wishing as kids we could be with you on your adventures in space.

Lydia Guzman

May 3, 2007

Wally, thank you for making us understand how much there really is out there for us to learn and how this world is really a small place. Your words inspired us to all get along better.

For your contributions to science and life; Thank you!

keith degrouchy

May 3, 2007

My dad thought alot of you while working with you at NASA and you were the reason the space prgram is where it is today,RIP

Michael Skaggs

May 3, 2007

You were among the heroes then. You are among them now.

Rick Lendley

May 3, 2007

You are in my thoughts and prayers.

May 3, 2007

He was, simply put, a marvelous marvelous man, I had the good fortune to know him late in his life and his humour, exuburance and great love of life and his fellows was as remarkable as the genius of his accomplishments.

Joe Harden

May 3, 2007

Godspeed, Captain Schirra. You are a true American hero.

J Stewart

May 3, 2007

I grew up in the NASA heyday of Mercury, Gemini and Apollo and remember well our heroes like Wally. Those were special times in the United States of America during our cold war with Russia. Time passes us by quickly but its these people and our memories that last forever. Wally, thanks for the good times and great memories, and your contribution to America!!

Darryl Drake

May 3, 2007

I was born in 1960...too young to know Mercury and Gemini, but I do remember Apollo 7's mission, but just vaguely. It doesn't matter, though, because I had such an interest in the space program as a child. Those original seven were personal heroes of mine and the World's. Godspeed, Sir!

KEVIN FOLEY

May 3, 2007

THANK YOU SIR FOR BEING A FAITHFUL MAN OF THE CLOTH; AND A WONDERFUL FAMILY MAN; MAY THE GOOD LORD ALWAYS BLESS YOU AND KEEP YOU IN HIS STRONG RIGHT HAND; THANK YOU FOR SERVING, SIR...KEVINFOLEY

Sheila Smith

May 3, 2007

May your hearts soon be filled with wonderful memories of joyful times together as you celebrate a life well-lived.

Rhonda Stafford

May 3, 2007

Thank you for giving us the gift of space. You were a true hero!

Charles Balint

May 3, 2007

God Bless You Captain from Budapest
Theresa Victoria Charles

Calvin Sims

May 3, 2007

As a small child growing up in an abusive foster home, I had little hope for the future. That is until I found heroes and role models in the men who climbed atop explosives and rocketed into space. It is easy to assume that courage was one of the examples set by Mr. Schirra and his colleagues, but there were many other character traits that were it not for the example set by these men, I would not have become the man I am today. Thank you for what you provided. You gave a young black man a reason to hold his head towards the sky.

D.L. ZIMMERMAN

May 3, 2007

GOD BLESS YOU, REST IN PEACE WALTER

Dragonrider

May 3, 2007

From a Pilot who did not get to slip the surly bonds of earth, to one who did. May your final flight be CAVU.

Matt Lundberg

May 3, 2007

Since I was a child, I was always interested in space. Capt. Shirra was one of my heroes. He and the other "Original 7" were risking their very lives doing something we had never done. He is a true American Hero and had the "Right Stuff". God Speed.

The Family of Salvatore Ministero, Sr.

May 3, 2007

Reach higher, strive harder go further; may your lifes' journey continue in the next world as it did here.

Cdr William Jansson, USN

May 3, 2007

Thank you for your courage and inspiration. God Bless you and your family.

Howard Cooper

May 3, 2007

May God grant you Fair Winds and Following Seas Captain.

Chris Turner

May 3, 2007

You one of my heros as a boy Wally. You guys had the right stuff and helped a young boy dream big.
God Speed and God Bless

Tim F

May 3, 2007

Thanks for your efforts in space exploration. The true Last Frontier.

May 3, 2007

As Ronald Reagan would have said "Wally has slipped the surly bonds of earth to touch the face of God."
RIP

John Flynn

May 3, 2007

My sympathies to the family.
I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Schirra at the National Aerospace Museum in Washington, DC in February, 1979. He was on a tour of the museum with some of the museum people. He was very gracious and wanted to know my name and where I was from and what I was doing in Washington. He is a true American hero for his pioneering work, especially aboard Apollo 7. I remember the broadcasts from space - the most humorous astronaut in NASA history.

Robert Fesmier

May 3, 2007

Walley was one of the best
astronauts we had. He was insistent
on accuracy. There was a story that
NASA moved the recovery ships off
target so he would not land on the
deck.

Pat Wittorf

May 3, 2007

Walter M Shirra, Jr. - one of the men for whom the title "American Hero" was created. You have truly let slip the surly bonds of earth one last time. God Speed.

M.W. Holland

May 3, 2007

May God bless Mr. Schirra, who was a REAL American hero.

I hope his family and friends find comfort.

George Tardiff

May 3, 2007

God speed Captian Schirra

James Harvin

May 3, 2007

Thank you for everything that you did. Apollo 7 was the last to splashdown in the Atlantic. I was in north Florida, and I saw you pass nearly overhead during your reentry that morning.

Brenda Conner

May 3, 2007

God Speed, Wally Schirra. May you reach out and "touch the face of God".

Bill Yardley

May 3, 2007

Rest in Peace.

May 3, 2007

Wally was a true hero, patriot and American.
God speed Wally Schirra.

Stephanie

May 3, 2007

Take comfort in knowing that now you have a special guardian angel to watch over you.

Diana George

May 3, 2007

As a child growing up during the Space Race,I never missed a launch. Mr. Schirra captured the true spirit of what being an astronaut was.He was courage with a sense of humor; not taking himself too seriously and yet he did his job with the awareness that it could end his life. I looked forward to his transmissions to earth. He always explained things so a common person could understand.I know I will never forget him. My sympathies to his family.

Jane Wallace-Branham

May 3, 2007

Truly an American Hero. I was a teenager when the first space flights began and it was such a thrill. Thank you for your courage and your service to our country.

Gail Siegel

May 3, 2007

I remember watching the launch on tv while in school. I also remember watching the capsule re-enter the atmosphere and the recovery.
Rest In Peace, Wally Schirra. You were a bigger-than-life hero.

HOWARD STANSBERRY

May 3, 2007

THEY SAY ONLY HEAVEN KNOWS
BUT GOD HAS YOUR SEAT FOR SURE

Laura Stief

May 3, 2007

I was just a girl, I remember being glued to the TV watching, and wishing the time would be quick and the astronauts would come back home and be safe.

Times have changed and so have we. Rest in Peace Mr. Schirra Jr.

May 3, 2007

Rest in space....

Jim & Colleen Donkel

May 3, 2007

On this, your final journey, we salute you.

May 3, 2007

May you explore the heavens for with your fellow commrads for all eternity. God Speed!!

James Brown

May 3, 2007

Godspeed Wally Schirra. A true American hero.

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