Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP
Ed Dwight, the man who six decades ago nearly became America’s first Black astronaut, made his first trip into space at age 90 on Sunday along with five crewmates aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket.
The flawless liftoff from a West Texas launch site marked the first passenger flight in nearly two years for the commercial space venture run by billionaire Jeff Bezos. The approximately 10-minute suborbital flight put Dwight in the history books as the oldest person ever to reach space. He beat out Star Trek actor William Shatner for that honor by just a few months. Shatner was a few months younger when he went up on a New Shepard rocket in 2021.
Dwight shared the capsule with Mason Angel, a venture capitalist; Sylvain Chiron, the founder of a French craft brewery; entrepreneur Kenneth Hess; aviator Gopi Thotakura and Carol Schaller, a retired accountant.
The rocket reached more than 347,000 feet, crossing the 330,000 foot high Kármán line, the imaginary line that denotes the boundary of space. They experienced a few brief moments of weightlessness.
Soon after, the New Shepard booster touched down in a cloud of dust near the launch site. The crew capsule landed under two of its three parachutes, with one redundant chute failing to fully deploy.
Emerging from the capsule, a beaming Dwight shook two fists in the air in triumph.
“Fantastic! A life-changing experience. Everyone needs to do this!” he remarked.
“I didn’t know I needed this in my life, but now I need it in my life,” he said.
He said the separation of the rocket and the capsule was “more dynamic” than he’d anticipated.
In the 1960s, Dwight, an Air Force captain, was fast tracked for space flight after then-President John F. Kennedy asked for a Black astronaut. Despite graduating in the top half of a test pilot school, Dwight was subsequently passed over for selection as an astronaut, a story he detailed in his autobiography, Soaring On The Wings Of A Dream: The Untold Story of America’s First Black Astronaut Candidate.
After leaving the Air Force, Dwight went on to become a celebrated sculptor, specializing in creating likenesses of historic African American figures.
Dwight, speaking to NPR last month, said he was surprised to get a call from Blue Origin to go on the flight. “They called me up and asked me if I was interested. And of course I said yes,” he said.
In another conversation with NPR in 2022, Dwight said that he’d never faced such intense competition at the Aerospace Research Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base in California, where he trained as a test pilot in the early 1960s.
“They’d blow your eardrums out to see how long it would take you to recover,” Dwight recalled. “Those are the kinds of fascinating things they did to your body to see how far they could stretch it before it kind of broke.”
The cost of Dwight’s ticket is being shared among Blue Origin, Space for Humanity and the Jaison and Jamie Robinson Family Foundation. (Jaison Robinson, who flew on a previous Blue Origin flight, is on the NPR Foundation Board of Trustees.)
The first crewed New Shepard flight was launched in July 2020 and included Bezos, his brother Mark Bezos, pilot Wally Funk and 18-year-old Dutch citizen Oliver Daemen, who was, at the time of launch, the youngest person ever to go into space.