Texas Town Marks Shuttle Crash Anniversary
Five Years Later, Nacogdoches Remembers Day Columbia Disintegrated In Sky
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Debris from the space shuttle Columbia streaks across the sky over Texas on Saturday, Feb. 1, 2003. (Dr. Scott Lieberman / AP)
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Mac Powell examines a piece of debris he found behind his home near Nacogdoches, Texas, on Feb. 2, 2003. (The Daily Sentinel, A.D. Brosig)
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Nacogdoches County Sheriff's deputy Mike Metteauer checks a tank believed to be from the Columbia that was found Feb. 9, 2003, in the woods east of Nacogdoches, Texas. (AP)
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One of the larger pieces of recovered debris was Columbia’s nose gear, shown here with tires still intact. (NASA/Columbia Accident Invest. Bd.)
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First Columbia Space Mission
On April 14, 1981, Rather anchors the CBS Evening News from Edwards Air Force Base for the landing of the space shuttle Columbia from its first mission.
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Shuttle Columbia Disaster
This Week In History: Thousands witnessed debris fall from the sky as Space Shuttle Columbia tried to reenter Earth's orbit. CBS News Bob McNamara reports.
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The Columbia Disaster
The crew and their mission, the accident and investigation.
But it is there - engraved with the name of the space shuttle Columbia and the date five years ago Friday that the spacecraft exploded over the skies of eastern Texas.
The metal disc serves as a quiet tribute to the spot where a piece of the shuttle's wing crashed to Earth in downtown Nacogdoches, and the day this tranquil town of about 30,000 was catapulted into national consciousness.
It's that way all over Nacogdoches, which proudly bills itself as "The Oldest Town in Texas" and where quaint brick streets mimic the red clay dirt found in this part of the state. Inside hotels, homes and offices - everywhere that pieces of the shuttle rained down from the heavens - reminders of that day remain. Some are tucked away meticulously in private memory, others displayed in public memorials.
Five years after Columbia disintegrated 39 miles over Texas as it returned from a 16-day mission, it's clear the identity of this community will be forever twinned with the fate of the shuttle.
"It is something that is still a part of my life, and probably everybody else who had part in this particular mission. And I think it always be," said Nacogdoches County Sheriff Thomas Kerss, who helped lead the recovery efforts after the disaster. "Regardless of how long I live, I will always have a keen awareness of what we had to go through, and the obstacles we overcame to accomplish some of what we did."
It was this town, about 135 miles north of Houston, that lay directly under the shuttle's flight path and directly under the path of the debris scattered across hundreds of miles when Columbia exploded just 16 minutes from landing, killing all seven astronauts on board.
And it was this town that became the epicenter of the search for whatever was left of the shuttle. More than 85,000 pieces that comprised only about 38 percent of the craft were eventually recovered.
In the first few hours after the explosion, no one knew what to expect. Townspeople stood on the street staring at the piece of wing that dropped and was quickly surrounded by National Guardsmen. More than 2,000 volunteers and searchers, including the Guard, U.S. Forest Service workers and NASA engineers, descended on Nacogdoches and its neighboring towns.
Today, Nacogdoches seems to cradle the events of Feb. 1, 2003, and the days that followed with a special reverence.
On a back wall inside the Commercial Bank, the disaster is memorialized in a collage of photographs, newspaper clippings and handwritten notes. "We rember you Columbia," reads one note in a misspelled childish scrawl.
Like any disaster, great things came out of it and then there are memories I don't really want to go to.
Dr. James C. Kroll"Like any disaster, great things came out of it and then there are memories I don't really want to go to," said Dr. James C. Kroll, director of the Columbia Geospatial Service Center, which put on the exhibit.
At the Nacogdoches County Expo Center, a 45-acre complex that served as the staging area for the recovery efforts, wooden bleachers and dirt-floored barns normally used to stage rodeos and horse shows were transformed into waiting areas and tent housing for hundreds of searchers and volunteers.
Every day, hundreds of volunteers - undaunted by sleet and freezing temperatures - appeared at the gates and offered to assist in the search, recalled Bill Plunkett, a retired Houston police officer who manages the Expo Center.
"I'll never forget about it, and the people who volunteered never will," Plunkett said. "It was part of something you gave of yourself to help someone else you never knew."
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- Those who risked their lives to venture into space have elevated us all. Their efforts to open up the heavens to us have inspired many a young man to reach for the stars. I asalute them.
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- I watched the new movie "The Invasion". They used stock footage from the Columbia tragedy and some of the interviews from residents from the news.
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- I remember that day. It was a Saturday and I was watching the news, they had planned to show live footage of the space shuttle coming in to land and the news person began to "search" for words because the shuttle wasn''t appearing on schedule ... although the responsible side of this news person didn''t want to say what was obvious ... it was obvious to me. You only had to wait for confirmation. A tragic day in American history.
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