December 15, 2017

— A memorial marker will be erected at Arlington National Cemetery honoring NASA's Apollo 1 astronauts who were killed in a fire on the launch pad 50 years ago.



President Donald Trump on Tuesday (Dec. 12) signed into law the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018, which in addition to calling for appropriations for the military activities of the Department of Defense, included a provision to construct a memorial to the crew of Apollo 1.



The act directs the Secretary of the Army to authorize "the construction, at an appropriate place in Arlington National Cemetery [in] Virginia, of a memorial marker honoring the three members of the crew of the Apollo 1 who died during a launch rehearsal test on January 27, 1967."



The act calls for the NASA Administrator, the Commission of Fine Arts and Advisory Committee on Arlington National Cemetery to consult with the Secretary of the Army on the marker.







Apollo 1 astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee are seen participating in a 1966 spacecraft design review in California. The three men died in a launch pad fire on Jan. 27, 1967. (NASA)

The Apollo 1 memorial was first proposed in Congress in September 2016 by Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX), the ranking member of the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology. Johnson originally introduced the idea for the monument in a dedicated bill but after it failed to reach a vote, she resubmitted the "Apollo 1 Memorial Act" as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act.



"I'm deeply grateful that the House of Representatives has accepted my amendment ... to honor astronauts Virgil I. 'Gus' Grissom, Edward H. White II, and Roger B. Chaffee, who perished 50 years ago while preparing for the Apollo 1 mission," Johnson said in a statement. "It is both right and long overdue that we honor the memory of these heroes by means of a memorial."



Grissom, White and Chaffee were conducting a pre-launch "plugs out" test when a fire ignited inside their Apollo 204 command module. The fire engulfed the capsule, fueled by a pure-oxygen atmosphere, leading to the men's death.



Although other NASA astronauts had died in earlier aircraft and automobile accidents, the Apollo 1 fire marked the first time that the U.S. space program suffered a fatal tragedy as part of its active spaceflight efforts.



Grissom and Chaffee were interred at Arlington Cemetery. White was buried at the Military Academy at West Point in New York.



The act does not direct where in the cemetery the Apollo 1 marker will stand, other than it is not to be constructed "in a location that is otherwise suitable as an interment site."



The Apollo 1 memorial will join similar markers erected for NASA's two subsequent tragedies during the space shuttle program.







The monuments at Arlington National Cemetery honoring the STS- 51L Challenger and STS-107 Columbia crews. (NASA/Bill Ingalls)