Jim Lovell, one of NASA’s most accomplished astronauts, passed away on August 7th at the age of 97. Back in the 1960s, did you know he brought a piece of Central New York history to space?
Jim Lovell’s Career: From Gemini to Apollo
Lovell leaves behind a legacy marked by courage, calm, and a deep connection to space exploration history. Lovell’s career was defined by four landmark missions: two in the Gemini program and two lunar voyages in Apollo, including the historic Apollo 13 mission where he famously reported, “Houston, we’ve had a problem.”
Drums Along the Mohawk: A Central New York Novel in Orbit
Among his missions, the 1965 Gemini 7 flight stands out not only for its scientific importance, but also for its unique connection to Central New York. Gemini 7, crewed by Lovell and Frank Borman, was a 14-day endurance mission designed to test human survival in prolonged weightlessness. This would be the length required for future moon missions. The cramped spacecraft offered little room. Lovell described it as “two weeks in a men’s room.” During this mission, Lovell brought with him a copy of Drums Along the Mohawk, a historical novel set in the Central New York and the Mohawk Valley during the Revolutionary War.
Drums Along the Mohawk, written by Walter D. Edmonds in 1936, portrays life on the New York frontier, blending historical figures and events with the daily struggles of settlers.
The book is peopled with historical persons such as General Nicholas Herkimer, Adam Helmer, descendants of the German immigrants who were the majority residents in the central Mohawk Valley at the time, and William Caldwell. It also features such historical events as the Battle of Oriskany and the Attack on German Flatts (1778).
Lovell’s space career peaked with the Apollo missions. Apollo 8, the first crewed orbit of the moon, carried Lovell alongside Borman and Bill Anders, a momentous flight broadcast worldwide on Christmas Eve 1968. Then came Apollo 13, where an explosion forced the crew into a desperate fight for survival, a story immortalized in a book co-written by Lovell and a film staring Tom Hanks. Despite never walking on the moon, Lovell’s command brought his crew safely home.
His quiet humility extended beyond his missions…