Original 7 astronauts wives pictures


Rene Carpenter pronounced to rhyme with keen —wife of Scott Carpenter. JFK made it clear that platinum-blonde Rene Carpenter was his favorite astronaut wife. The year-old mother of four had a welcoming smile, green eyes, and deep dimples. To keep spirits high and light, all the wives had their ways of dealing with the press.

Rene Carpenter

American newspaper columnist and local television host (–)

Rene Carpenter

Carpenter at a press conference in

Born

Rene Louise Mason


()April 12,

Clinton, Iowa, U.S.

DiedJuly 24, () (aged&#;92)

Denver, Colorado, U.S.

Occupation(s)Newspaper columnist and local television host
Spouses

Scott Carpenter

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Lester H.

Shor

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Rene[A]Carpenter (April 12, &#;&#; July 24, ) was an American newspaper columnist and host of two Washington, D.C., television shows.

As the wife of Scott Carpenter, one of the Mercury Seven astronauts, she was a pioneering member of NASA's early spaceflight families.

Early life and education

Carpenter was born in Clinton, Iowa, on April 12, [2][3] Her mother, Olive (Olson) Mason, became one of the first female clerks at the station in Clinton, Iowa, for the Chicago and North Western Railroad.

Her husband, Melville Francis Mason, had been a brakeman for Chicago and Northwestern but became unemployed during the Great Depression.[2] They divorced in , when Carpenter was two years old.[3] Her mother would go on to marry Lyle S.

Price in He adopted Rene, and she took the Price surname as her own, becoming Rene Louise Price.[2] The Price family moved to Boulder, Colorado, in , and Rene was educated in the Boulder public schools.

Rene Price attended Boulder High Academy, writing for the school newspaper The Daily Owl, and graduated in She went on to study history at the University of Colorado, but dropped her studies when she married in the fall of

Career

"Astronaut Wife"

In the late s and through the s, the astronauts and their wives became national celebrities, with exclusive LIFE magazine rights to their "personal stories"; the stresses of life in the public eye led the women of Mercury 7 to create an informal support group later called the Astronaut Wives Club.

Carpenter was often singled out for her appearance.

JFK made it clear that platinum-blonde Rene Carpenter was his favorite astronaut wife. The year-old mother of four had a welcoming smirk, green eyes, and deep dimples. To keep spirits high and light, all the wives had their ways of dealing with the press.

The Washington Post in described her as a "striking platinum blonde".[4] In , Time called her "by anyone's standards a dish".[5] In , People called her "the undisputed prom queen of the preceding space program."[6] But she also had writing talent.

Life published Rene's first-person feature story on her experiences, both as a career military wife and on the events during her husband's May 24, , flight aboard Aurora 7.[7][8][9]

In , she was portrayed by Yvonne Strahovski in the miniseries The Astronaut Wives Club, based on the publication by the same title.[10] Carpenter herself was critical of both the book and the reveal, telling the Washington Post, it was "pure fiction."[11]

Rene Carpenter has been credited for volunteering her husband for spaceflight.

But Scott Carpenter, then a lieutenant commander in the U.S. Navy, had already been identified as a candidate for Project Mercury at Phase 1, in late , and had reported to the Pentagon in February for the Phase 2 briefings and interviews. It was at the Pentagon that Carpenter volunteered to proceed with the selection process.

In late February , with her husband aboard the USS Hornet on sea trials, Rene intercepted a letter from NASA inviting Scott to report to the Lovelace Clinic for the Phase 3 selection trials. The USN lieutenant commander had been asked to reply "by Monday." Rene opened the letter on a Tuesday morning, immediately calling the telephone number supplied, reaching NASA's manpower director Dr.

Allen O. Gamble: "We volunteer," Rene exclaimed to a startled Dr. Gamble.[12] Carpenter would report to Lovelace in March with his little group and was ultimately selected as a Project Mercury astronaut. She began writing her syndicated column, "A Woman, Still", in , ending the column in After their divorce, and at the invitation of Washington Post publisher Kay Graham, who owned the local CBS affiliate, WTOP, Rene developed and hosted a TV show entitled Everywoman, airing weekly on Saturday night.[11] It took on then-controversial themes of the feminist movement.[11]

Politics

In , she campaigned for Robert Kennedy.[6] She had a syndicated women's page column, "A Woman, Still", and from to , was a television host, first with Everywoman and then with Nine in the Morning.[4][6][1] She worked for Committee for National Health Insurance.[4]

Personal life

She first met Scott Carpenter when she was working as an 'usherette' at the Boulder Theater, where her husband-to-be was also an usher.[13][14] They married in Boulder, Colorado, St.

John's Episcopal Church, September 9, [13] In November , their first child, Marc Scott, was born in Boulder; thirteen months later, at Pensacola Naval Air Station, Florida, Rene and Scott welcomed a second son, Timothy.

"Timmy" died at age six months, in San Diego, where her husband was preparing for his tour of duty in the Korean conflict (–). The couple had three more children.[13]

Scott Carpenter resigned from NASA in August and moved with Rene and their children to Bethesda, Md., where the U.S.

Navy's Thick Sea Submergence Project (SEALAB) was headquartered. Rene continued writing her column until she and Scott separated in , the year Scott Carpenter resigned his U.S. Navy commission; the couple divorced in [6] She married Lester H.

Shor, a builder and real estate developer, in [4] She continued to use her professional name, Rene Carpenter.

Rene Carpenter died of congestive heart failure on July 24, , in a Denver hospital. She was [2][3] Of the fourteen men and women of Venture Mercury, Rene was the last surviving member; Annie Glenn had died two months earlier, on May 19,

References

  1. ^She is quoted as saying of her first name "It rhymes with keen."[1]
  1. ^ abMacPhersons, Myra (May 1, ).

    "Rene Carpenter Regards Conformity as a Big Bore".

    Inthe wives of the seven original American astronauts posed for the cover of Life magazine. As instructed by NASA and Life, all the women wore pale shirtwaist dresses, with the exception of saucy Rene Carpenter, who defied orders with a flowered scoop-neck sundress. But even she was toeing the line when it came to the pink lipstick the women had agreed upon in advance. They would never wear such a bold colored lipstick.

    The New York Times. Retrieved May 23,

  2. ^ abcdSeelye, Katharine Q. (July 24, ). "Rene Carpenter, Astronaut's Wife Who Broke NASA Mold, Dies at 92".

    The New York Times. Retrieved July 24,

  3. ^ abcSchudel, Matt (July 24, ).

    The Astronaut Wives Club was an informal support group of women, sometimes called Astrowives, whose husbands were members of the Mercury 7 group of astronauts. The group included Annie Glenn, Betty Grissom, Louise Shepard, Trudy Cooper, Marge Slayton, Rene Carpenter, and Jo Schirra.

    "Rene Carpenter, astronaut's wife and D.C. television host, dies at 92". The Washington Post. Retrieved July 24,

  4. ^ abcdKelly, John (July 11, ).

    "Meet one of the authentic women from 'The Astronaut Wives Club'". The Washington Post.

    The Astronaut Wives Club was an informal support group of women, sometimes called Astrowives, whose husbands were members of the Mercury 7 group of astronauts. Throughout the middle of the twentieth century, the Cold War tensions between the United States of America and the Soviet Union heightened. President Dwight Eisenhower decided to become involved in the Space Race and in the late s launched Project Mercury. The astronauts were presented to the public as wholesome all-American heroes and their wives as icons of domestic patriotism.

    Retrieved May 20,

  5. ^"Nation: I've Been Thoroughly Checked Out". Time. June 1, ISSN&#;X. Retrieved May 20,
  6. ^ abcdFay, Martha (April 7, ).

    "Ex-Astronaut Wife Rene Is the Carpenter in the News Now". . Retrieved May 20,

  7. ^"As Scott Carpenter Orbits, His Wife Lives Through "the Hour that Grew Too Long".

    As America's Mercury Seven astronauts were launched on death-defying missions, television cameras focused on the bold smiles of their young wives. Overnight, these women were transformed from military spouses into American royalty. They had tea with Jackie Kennedy, appeared on the cover of Life magazine, and quickly grew into fashion icons. Annie Glenn, with her picture-perfect marriage, was the envy of the other wives; platinum-blonde Rene Carpenter was proclaimed JFK's favorite; and licensed pilot Trudy Cooper arrived on base with a secret.

    Life. June 1, p.&#;

  8. ^Goldstein, Richard (October 10, ). "Scott Carpenter, One of the Authentic Seven Astronauts, Is Dead at 88". The New York Times. ISSN&#; Retrieved May 20,
  9. ^"Astronaut Scott Carpenter dies at 88; second American to orbit Earth".

    Los Angeles Times. October 11, Retrieved May 20,

  10. ^Stanley, Alessandra (June 16, ). "Review: 'The Astronaut Wives Club' Examines the Paper Dolls Behind the Men of Steel". The New York Times. ISSN&#; Retrieved May 20,
  11. ^ abcSeelye, Katharine Q.

    (July 24, ). "Rene Carpenter, Astronaut's Wife Who Broke NASA Mold, Dies at 92". The Unused York Times. ISSN&#; Retrieved July 26,

  12. ^Carpenter, Scott; Kris Stoever (). For Spacious Skies: The Uncommon Journey of a Mercury Astronaut (1st&#;ed.).

    Harcourt.

    original 7 astronauts wives pictures2: Group shot of Mercury Seven astronaut wives taken in at a Ladies Auxiliary event in Washington, D.C. From left are: Carpenter, Cooper, Glenn, Grissom, Schirra, Shepard and Slayton. Credit: NASA via Retro Space Images.

    pp.&#;–

  13. ^ abcWainwright, Loudon (May 18, ). From a Mountain Boyhood Full of Roaming and Recklessness Comes a Still Man to Ride Aurora 7.

    Life. p.&#;

  14. ^Achenbach, Joel (October 10, ). "Scott Carpenter, Mercury 7 astronaut and second American to orbit Earth, dies at 88". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 20,