Thomas Logsdon Obituary
Thomas Stanley Logsdon, 82, of Seal Beach, California, passed away on May 1, 2020. Tom was an internationally recognized rocket scientist, author, expert witness, keynote lecturer, and short course instuctor. He used his extraordinary knowledge of mathematics and physics to help put a dozen astronauts on the moon and was recognized as as one of the 28 inventors of the Global Positioning System (GPS), a system that is so vital to our modern world.
Tom was born on Sept. 27, 1937, to George Stanley Logsdon and Margaret Buckman Logdson in Springfield. After graduating from Springfield High School in 1955 he went on to earn a Bachelor's degree in Math & Physics at Eastern Kentucky University and a Master's Degree in Point-Set Topology (Mathematics) from the University of Kentucky. He was closely mentored by Dr. Smith Park, a beloved Mathematics professor at EKU. In 1984, he was awarded an honorary PhD from EKU and was the Alumni of the year for EKU's 100 anniversary.
After graduation, Tom landed his first job as an Aero-ballistics Engineer for McDonnell Douglas Aircraft in Santa Monica, CA kicking off 32-year career in the aerospace industry. He was recruited by Rockwell International to become a Trajectory Mathematicain on the Apollo Space program. When asked about his job on a television interview, he said, with his clever sense of humor, "before the flight, we predict where the rocket will go, after the flight we try to explain why it didn't go there!"
He went to work on the Shuttle Spacecraft program and in the mid-1970s Tom employed his mathematical genious to determine the placement of 24 satellites (satellite constellation) which make up our worldwide GPS. He was recently recognized as one of the 28 original inventors of the GPS. While at Rockwell, he also worked on the Saturn V moon rocket, Skylab flight maneuvers, and unmanned Mars missions. He was also awarded the Rockwell Presidential Award and held a patent centered around navigation of jetliners.
In addition Tom was a well-respected author, writing over 30 books, from his first book about space travel, "A Rush Toward the Stars," to some of the first computer programming books, to his best selling "Six Simple Solutions that Shook the World." He also taught computer science at USC for many years.
After retiring from Rockwell, Tom ran a full-time business up until his death, producing books, magazine articles, and techincal papers; teaching GPS & Orbital Mechanics short courses for NASA & JPL, lecturing around the world, being a guest speaker for Crystal Cruises (averaging 8 cruises a year), and appearing on radio and TV.
He was passionate about playing tennis and did so until just prior to his death. His career took him to over 100 countries, all seven continents, and around the globe several times over. In 2016, Tom was inducted into the Kentucky Aviation Museum Hall of Fame.
Tom wed Cynda (Cyndi) Hendrick in Newport Beach, CA and became stepfather to Chad. Cyndi actively supported Tom's business by designing his charts & course materials, giving him feedback on his courses, books, and presentations, keeping him organized, and accompanying him to coordinate his appearances. Tom was preceded in death by his parents, Stanley and Margaret Logsdon, his wife Cynda, his sister Ann Logsdon Sims of Bardstown, KY and two sisters who died in infancy, Molly and Rose Mary. He is survived by his daughter, Donna (Drew) Schilder; his stepson Chad; his brother, Pat (Patsy) Logsdon of Loretto, KY; seven nieces and nephews; and numerous greatnieces and nephews.
Published by The Springfield Sun from May 13 to May 20, 2020.