It was over for them in seconds.With its moon program in jeopardy, NASA completely overhauled the Apollo spacecraft. For most of them, a private tour Wednesday marks the first time they&HARD BOX UNIT PACKINGS OF FIRE BLANKETS39;ve seen any of the capsule. The middle hatch appears darkened. Chaffee's daughter, Sheryl, who retired last month after working at Kennedy for 33 years, recalls having to buy a memorial wreath herself to display at the space center on the 20th anniversary."There's a long list of places where really bad things happened to our country, but we display those respectfully and appropriately," Scott Grissom said, citing the Alamo, Gettysburg and the Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor. The exhibit is in the same building that holds # one of three remaining Saturn V rockets built for moon shots. It was just one of numerous changes made to the spacecraft, as well as to procedures. The white outer hatch is still discolored and pitted, with what looks to be charring in an upper corner.From left, astronauts Virgil Grissom , Edward White II, and Roger Chaffee A relic from America's first space tragedy is finally going on display this week, 50 years after a fire on the launch pad killed three astronauts at the start of the Apollo moon program. But NASA is offering visitors at Kennedy Space Center a look at the most symbolic part: the hatch that trapped Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee in their burning spacecraft on Jan. White was the nation's first spacewalker.In the very next display case is the redesigned hatch. Exhibits at Kennedy and elsewhere would mention the fire but not highlight it. The request was denied."..The Astronauts Memorial Foundation took over the annual observance that honors all astronauts killed in the line of duty - this year's ceremony is Thursday.

As the 30th anniversary of the fire approached, Betty Grissom, Gus' widow, had pushed to have the capsule put on public display. 27, 1967. But it wasn't until NASA unveiled its tribute to the 14 Challenger and Columbia astronauts in June 2015 that the agency wondered why it hadn't done anything similar for Apollo 1. "I want them to be remembered for the other things and not necessarily for the accident," she said. Determined to make things right, he and others at Kennedy began work on a display.NASA consulted the two surviving widows and six children, explaining it wanted to honor the three men and their sacrifice, and show how Apollo 1 ultimately paved the way to the moon.All three layers of the hatch underwent preservation, but were not altered in any way. A cry came from inside: "Got a fire in the cockpit!" White struggled to open the hatch before quickly being overcome by smoke and fumes, along with his two crewmates.As the years and decades rolled by, Apollo 1 became a mere footnote in space history. NASA was embarrassed about the fire "and that's why they pretty much kept it in the closet as long as they have.The retired FedEx pilot said displaying the hatch is a start. "It's time that they show the three who died in the fire appreciation for the work that they did."On Friday - the 50th anniversary - the crew's families will help dedicate the new exhibit. The orange inner hatch is scuffed.A flash fire erupted inside the capsule during a countdown rehearsal, with the astronauts atop the rocket at Cape Canaveral's Launch Complex 34.The scorched Apollo 1 capsule remains locked away in storage.The three sections stand side-by-side.For the astronauts' families, Apollo 1 is finally getting its due. But we're excited about it," said Scott Grissom, Gus' older son. it wasn't on our radar" like the shuttle accidents were, explained Kelvin Manning, associate director of Kennedy Space Center. Chaffee was the rookie for the flight, a demo in low-Earth orbit.Bonnie Baer,

White's daughter, is grateful the entire capsule is not on display, as so many other family members have been urging for decades."This is way, way, way long overdue. Remnants of the lost shuttles have been on display at the visitor complex for 1 ? years."Like the rest of America, NASA was in shock and simply did not want to talk about it, said Martha Chaffee. The redesigned capsule - with a quick-release hatch - carried 24 men to the moon; 12 of them landed and walked on its surface.With the families' blessing, NASA last year pulled the hatch from storage at Langley Research Center in Virginia."I'm just so pleased that they finally decided to do something - visibly - to honor the three guys," said Chaffee's widow, Martha.Investigators determined the most likely cause to be electrical arcing from defective wiring. No more pure oxygen, high-pressure cabin atmosphere on the ground, for example, and everything fireproofed inside. Grissom, an original Mercury astronaut, was the second American to fly in space. The tragedy has long been overshadowed by the 1986 Challenger and 2003 Columbia accidents."This is a long overdue step at doing right."This wasn't our generation .

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