Eagle Biography
Forrest S. McCartney
In August 1960, Lieutenant General Forrest McCartney took the first
photographs of the USSR recovered from outer space, ushering in a revolution
in intelligence gathering. McCartney was born 23 March 1931 in Fort Payne,
Alabama. He received a bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering
from the Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, in 1952 and a master's degree
in nuclear engineering from the Air Force Institute of Technology at
Wright-Patterson AFB in 1955. He first became acquainted with Air Force
missile and space programs as a second lieutenant during 1952-1953 when he
served on an engineering team that installed some of the original
communications systems at Cape Canaveral.
In 1959, he was assigned to the
newly formed Air Force Satellite Control Facility in Menlo Park, California,
where he became one of the first military satellite controllers. McCartney was
on-console when Discoverer XIV snapped the first pictures of the
Soviet Union recovered from outer space. After the midair film capsule
recovery, the photographs were more than taken in all the previous U-2 flights
combined. In 1961, McCartney became project officer for the Titan III booster
rocket at Air Force Systems Command. He also had responsibility for Lincoln
Laboratories' communications satellite projects.
Following a series of
assignments in space acquisitions, he moved to the Space and Missile Systems
Organization at Los Angeles AFS in 1976 to become deputy for space
communications systems, with practically all the military communications
satellite programs under his purview. In 1979, McCartney transferred to Norton
AFB to become the vice commander of the Ballistic Missile Office, where he
later became commander and director of the M-X Peacekeeper ICBM
Program. In 1982, he was appointed vice commander of Air Force Systems
Command's Space Division.
The following year, he assumed the "dual-hatted"
position of commander of Space Division and vice commander of the fledgling
Air Force Space Command. In the wake of the Challenger accident,
McCartney was loaned from the Air Force to the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA) and appointed director of the Kennedy Space Center. He
retired from the Air Force in August 1987, but NASA continued to employ him as
Kennedy Space Center director for another four years. After consulting on the
flight worthiness of space hardware for two years, he accepted a position in
1994 as the vice president for launch operations at Lockheed Martin
Astronautics.
In that capacity, he had responsibility for consolidated launch
operations at Cape Canaveral AS and Vandenberg AFB. In 2003, following the
Columbia break-up, NASA asked him to join its accident investigation
and return-to-flight panels. General McCartney is the recipient of the 1984
Gen. Thomas D. White Space Trophy, the 1993 Goddard Trophy, and the 1987
Military Astronautical Trophy. In 2001, he was inducted into the Air Force
Space and Missile Pioneers Hall of Fame.
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On 27 April 1995, Air Force Space Command declared Final Operational
Capability for the Navstar Global Positioning System (GPS) when 24 satellites
were operating in their assigned orbits, available for navigation use. GPS is
a constellation of orbiting satellites that provides navigation data to
military and civilian users all over the world. Satellites orbit the earth
every 12 hours, emitting continuous navigation signals. With the proper
equipment, users can receive these signals to calculate time, location, and
velocity.
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