Biographical Data
Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center
Houston, Texas 77058
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National Aeronautics and
Space Administration
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NAME:
James C.
Adamson
(Colonel, U.S. Army, Ret.)
NASA Astronaut (former)
PERSONAL DATA: Born March
3, 1946,
in Warsaw, New York. Currently resides in Fishersville, Virginia with his wife Ellen and
two of his three children. Adamson
enjoys many outdoor sports: hunting, fishing, snow skiing, long distance
running, and camping. He is an
accomplished woodworker and a master machinist and gunsmith.
EDUCATION: Adamson
completed his Bachelor of Science in Engineering and was commissioned a Second
Lieutenant in the Army at West Point in 1969. In 1977 he completed a Master of Science
degree in Aerospace Engineering at Princeton University. Additionally he has completed undergraduate
and graduate pilot training, paratrooper training, arctic water and mountain
survival training, Nuclear weapons training, basic and advanced officer
training, Command and General Staff School, and the U. S. Navy
Test Pilot School.
SPECIAL HONORS: He was a
two time All American in pistol competition, winner of the Army's Excellency In Competition Award, and recipient of the George S. Patton
award. Named an Outstanding College
Athlete of America, Adamson captained West Point's pistol team to the
national championship in 1969. He was
distinguished graduate of his pilot training class as well as distinguished
graduate of both his graduate fixed wing and multi-engine pilot training
classes. During aerial combat in Southeast Asia he earned 2
Distinguished Flying Crosses, 18 air medals, and 3 Vietnamese Crosses of
Gallantry for valor. He also has earned
his Nation's Defense Superior Service Medal, Defense Meritorious Service Medal,
The Army's Meritorious Service Medal, Two Army Commendation Medals, the Bronze
Star, NASA's Exceptional Service Medal, 2 NASA Space Flight Medals, the NASA
Public Service Medal, and is a world record holder for space flight lifting the
most weight to orbit.
MILITARY EXPERIENCE: As a
military test pilot, Adamson has flown research aircraft at Edwards Air Force
Base, Princeton University, West Point, Patuxent
Naval Air Station, and NASA Houston. He
has logged over 3,000 hours of flight time in over 30 types of helicopters,
piston props, turbo props, and turbo jet aircraft. During Vietnam, he flew in the IV
Corps area and Cambodia with the Air Cavalry as
Scout Pilot, Team Lead, and Air Mission Commander. He has also flown with several peacetime
flight units at Fort Bliss, Texas, West Point, New York, and Houston, Texas. Following completion of his Masters Degree in
Aerospace Engineering at Princeton University, he became Assistant Professor
of Aerodynamics at the United States Military Academy at West Point. While at West Point, he developed and
taught courses in Fluid Mechanics, Aerodynamics, Aircraft Performance, and
Stability and Control. He also developed
flight laboratories in aircraft flight testing and completed a text on aircraft
performance. In addition to being an
Experimental Test Pilot and Master Aviator, Adamson is also a Certified
Professional Engineer and licensed Commercial Pilot. In ground assignments with the Army, Adamson
has commanded nuclear capable missile units in Europe and in the United States.
NASA EXPERIENCE: Adamson
was employed at the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center from 1981 to 1992. During the Operational Flight Test phase of
the Shuttle Program,
he served as a research test pilot and aerodynamics officer in Mission
Control. Following completion of the
operational test flights he became Guidance Navigation and Control Officer for
Shuttle Missions 5 through 11. As research
test pilot he also conducted airborne remote sensing studies in Biospheric Research.
Selected by NASA as an
Astronaut in 1984, Adamson became qualified for mission assignment on Space
Shuttle flights. In November 1985, he
was selected to the crew of a Department of Defense mission, which was
subsequently delayed due to the Challenger Accident. During the Shuttle Program reconstruction
period Adamson was one of eleven astronauts selected to hold management positions
within NASA. He served as Shuttle
Program Office Assistant Manager for Engineering Integration. In this position he was responsible for the
initial development of a reliability based maintenance program for the Space
Shuttle program. He also initiated an
enhancements program for Shuttle ground processing.
In February 1988 Adamson
was assigned to the flight crew of STS-28, the first flight of Columbia following the
reconstruction period. Columbia launched from the
Kennedy Space Center, Florida, on August 8, 1989. The mission carried a classified Department
of Defense payload and a number of secondary payloads. After 80 earth orbits in 121 hours, this five
day mission concluded with a dry lakebed landing on runway 17 at Edwards Air
Force Base, California, on August
13, 1989.
Following STS-28 Adamson once again returned to
management. This time he was assigned to
the Kennedy Space Center as Director of Shuttle Processing
Analysis. He served in this post from
September 1989 until October 1990 when he was assigned to the flight crew of
STS-43. During this period Adamson
developed risk based processing and scheduling programs which resulted in
reduction of processing times from 80 days to 50 days.
The nine day STS-43 mission aboard Atlantis
launched from the Kennedy Space Center on August
2, 1991
setting a new world record for payload weight lifted to orbit. The five member crew deployed a Tracking and
Data Relay Satellite (TDRS-E), and conducted 32 physical and life sciences
experiments. During this flight Adamson
performed the first flight test of the Orbital Digital Autopilot following
Shuttle retrofit with new General Purpose Computers and new software. After 142 earth orbits in 213 hours, the
STS-43 mission concluded with a landing on runway 15 at the Kennedy Space Center on August
11, 1991.
Following Adamson’s
retirement from government service in June 1992 he continued as a management
consultant to NASA and the aerospace industry.
Until September of 1994 he served as management consultant and strategic
planner for Lockheed Corporation in the area of Human Space Flight
Operations. He was also selected by the
NASA Administrator to serve on the NASA Advisory Council.
In September 1994
Adamson joined Lockheed Corporation as Executive Vice President of Lockheed
Engineering and Science company (LESC) where he was shortly promoted to
President and CEO. In late 1995 he was selected by Lockeed Martin to start up and become the first COO of the
United Space Alliance (USA), a joint venture with Rockwell International
Corp. USA subsequently won the
Space Flight Operations Contract with NASA to operated
the Space Shuttle Program and grew to $1.5 billion annual revenue in the first
year.
In 1999 Adamson was recruited by Allied Signal
Corporation to be the President of Allied Signal Technical Services
Corporation. He remained in that post through Allied Signal’s merger with
Honeywell until his retirement in March 2001.
Adamson is still active as a consultant and board
member for the aerospace industry and still serves on the NASA Advisory Council
for the NASA Administrator.
A veteran of two space
flight missions, Adamson has logged over 334 hours in space.
PUBLICATIONS:
1. "Synthesis of BIS-2-(1,3-Diphenylimidazolidinylidene)",
West
Point,
1969
2. "A Helicopter Simulator Study of Control
Display Tradeoffs in a Deceleration Approach", Article to the American
Helicopter Society Journal, 1976.
3. Fundamentals of Applied Aerodynamics,
Text rewrite, West
Point,
1978.
4. Principles of Aircraft Performance, Text
for USMA Dept. of Mechanics, 1979.
5. T41-B Aircrew Training Manual, West Point, 1979.
6. "The USMA Flight Laboratory
Program", Paper to ASEE, 1980.
7. "A Simulator Study of Control and
Display Tradeoffs in a Decelerating Approach", Adamson, Born, Dukes, MAE
Tech. Rpt. No. 1428, Princeton NJ, 1976.
8. "A Helicopter Simulator Study of Control
Display Tradeoffs in a Decelerating Approach", Masters Thesis, Princeton NJ, 1976.
9. "Dynamic Methods for Performance Flight
Testing", Paper to the U.S. Navy Test Pilot School, Patuxent
River MD, 1981.
10. "An Analysis of
The Projected Manpower Requirements for the Shuttle Processing Contract",
NASA Report JSC-22662, 1988.
11. NASA Response to the Presidential Commission
on the Challenger Accident, contributing author, Houston, 1986.
OCTOBER
2002