Americans stunned by shuttle disaster

The breakup of Columbia over Texas stunned relatives of the crew and people waiting to watch the space shuttle’s landing at Cape Canaveral, and it revived sorrowful memories for relatives and friends of the astronauts killed in the loss of the shuttle Challenger 17 years ago.

“To have this happen with 15 minutes to go until it was over was just unbelievable,” said Daniel Salton, whose sister, Laurel Clark, was aboard Columbia.

Salton of Milwaukee had received an e-mail from his sister just the day before saying how much she was enjoying her time on the shuttle.

“I’m just so glad she got to get up to space and got to see it because that had been a dream for a long time,” Salton said.

Betty Haviland, Clark’s aunt, of Ames, Iowa, said she and her husband, Doug, and other members of the family were in shock.

“It sort of brought back our son Timothy (who) had perished in the World Trade Center disaster and you know we’d been watching on TV the fires up in the towers and so you sort of had the sickening feeling that here we go again,” said Doug Haviland, 76.

The disaster struck deeply for Americans who follow the space program.

“I saw their faces; I saw who they were, and to watch this happen is just unbelievable,” Traci France, 28, said as she went for a somber walk in Denver. “It really gets you; you feel it. Even though you never met these people, you can think about their families and just imagine the pain. It’s terrible.”

For Grace Corrigan, it was a reminder of the Jan. 28, 1986, Challenger accident that killed her daughter, Concord, N.H., high school teacher Christa McAuliffe.

“I’m not doing too well,” Corrigan said from her home in Framingham, Mass. “All I know is it’s very upsetting. I feel the same way everyone around the country feels.”

Ben Provencal, who was in a third-grade class with McAuliffe’s son and is now a special education teacher in Concord, said he always thought another accident was inevitable.

“I’ve always waited for the next thing to happen,” the 25-year-old man said. “I conditioned myself — maybe that’s how I dealt with Challenger. But it’s still horrible.”

At Titusville, Fla., near the Kennedy Space Center, Ted Kretschmer, a retiree from Ventura, Calif., was among the roughly 200 people waiting to watch the landing from Riverfront Park in Titusville.

“What struck me after about 10, 15 minutes past the time it was supposed to land, I saw the people on the pier slumped over, slowly walking back depressed,” Kretschmer said.

At the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, former Sky Lab astronaut Bill Pogue spoke to tourists.

“We will go on,” Pogue told the crowd. “It’s a terrible tragedy, but you don’t stop flying airplanes because an airplane crashed. You don’t stop driving automobiles because you have an automobile accident. It’s the same sort of thing, but it’s that this is so dramatic it tears at you emotionally.”