Famous Veteran Guion Bluford Was First Black Astronaut in Space

FacebookTwitterPinterestEmailEmailEmailShare
Nation's first Black astronaut participates in tree planting ceremony.
Former astronauts Bonnie J. Dunbar and Guion S. ‘Guy’ Bluford talk before a tree planting ceremony in 2012. (NASA)

Air Force Col. Guion S. "Guy" Bluford has compared his first blastoff into space to a ride in a high-speed elevator through a bonfire.

However, the Aug. 30, 1983, launch that illuminated the skies for miles around was memorable for others because Bluford -- a mission specialist who had spent more than a year preparing for his trip aboard the space shuttle Challenger -- was the first Black astronaut in history. (The first Black man in outer space had been Cuban Col. Arnaldo Tamayo-Mendez on the Soviet mission Salyut 6 in 1980.)

Bluford was born in Philadelphia to a teacher mother and engineer father who encouraged all of their three sons to work hard and fulfill their personal goals. Guy, who constructed model airplanes as a child, studied math and science with his eyes on an aerospace engineering career. In 1964, he graduated from Penn State with a degree in his chosen field, and then enrolled in ROTC and attended flight school, earning his pilot's wings in 1966. He flew 144 combat missions, 65 over North Vietnam, as a member of the 557th Tactical Fighter Squadron at Cam Ranh Bay, Vietnam.

Following his tour in Vietnam, Bluford spent five years as a flight instructor at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas. He then entered the Air Force Institute of Technology and earned his master's and Ph.D., again in aerospace engineering. As he finished his dissertation in 1978, Bluford learned he was one of 35 candidates selected from more than 10,000 applicants to attend NASA's astronaut program.

Bluford's first mission, on the STS-8, was the Challenger's third, but the first to experience a night launch and night landing. After completing 98 orbits of the earth in 145 hours, the ship landed at Edwards Air Force Base, California, on Sept. 5, 1983. Since then, Bluford has served as a mission specialist on the STS 61-A in 1985, the STS-39 in 1991 and the STS-53 in 1992. He has logged more than 688 hours in space.

Bluford retired from active duty in 1993 and earned an MBA in 1997. He served as vice president and general manager of the science and engineering group, aerospace sector of Federal Data Corporation in Maryland. A recipient of many medals, awards and accolades, he was inducted into the International Space Hall of Fame in 1997.

Interested in Joining the Military?

We can put you in touch with recruiters from the different military branches. Learn about the benefits of serving your country, paying for school, military career paths, and more: sign up now and hear from a recruiter near you.

Story Continues