James Beggs, NASA Administrator Who Resigned After Challenger Disaster, Dies at 94
He was not on the list.
Former NASA administrator James M. Beggs, who led the agency
during the early years of the space shuttle program and resigned after the Challenger
disaster killed seven astronauts in 1986, died Thursday at his home in
Bethesda, Maryland. He was 94.
Congestive heart failure is suspected to be the cause of his
death, according to one of his sons, Charles Beggs.
President Ronald Reagan nominated Beggs to become the sixth
administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. He served
in the agency’s top position from July 1981 to December 1985.
Beggs was on a leave of absence from the post when the
Challenger space shuttle broke apart 73 seconds after launch on Jan. 28, 1986,
killing all seven astronauts aboard, including New Hampshire school teacher
Christa McAuliffe.
Beggs’ resignation took effect nearly a month later. His
son, Charles Beggs, recalls asking his father years later why he resigned. He
said his father told him that NASA needed to move on from the disaster with
strong leadership that he couldn’t provide under the circumstances.
“Instead of hanging on, he resigned for the good of the
organization,” Charles Beggs said. “It wasn’t about him. It was about others.”
Charles Beggs said his father was proud to receive a NASA
award named after Robert Goddard, a pioneer in the rocketry field.
NASA had more than 20 successful space shuttle missions
during Beggs’ tenure. The Washington Post described him as a popular and
charismatic figure who was skilled at dealing with lawmakers on Capitol Hill.
“There is no telling where our vision and imagination will
lead us once we have the space station,” he said in 1985, according to the
newspaper. “As Shakespeare put it, ‘Thoughts are but dreams till their effects
be tried.’”
NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said Beggs’ work on the
space shuttle program helped NASA “open a whole new era of exploration.”
“We continue to build on his legacy today as we take
advantage of our long-term presence in low-Earth orbit to make the advances to
travel farther, and seed an entirely new segment of the economy through the
innovations of commercial partners,” Bridenstine said in a statement.
Beggs, a Pittsburgh native, graduated from the U.S. Naval
Academy in 1947 and served in the Navy until 1954. He was an executive vice
president and a director of General Dynamics Corp. before becoming NASA
administrator.
Beggs took a leave of absence as NASA administrator after he
was indicted on federal charges that he and three other General Dynamics
executives illegally billed the government. All charges were dropped in 1987. A
Justice Department review found no laws had been violated. Then-Attorney
General Edwin Meese III sent a written apology to Beggs for the prosecution.
Beggs worked as a Maryland-based consultant after leaving
NASA. He had five children with his wife of 62 years, Mary Harrison Beggs, who
died in 2015.
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