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List of astronauts by selection

April 9, 1959 - 1959 NASA Group - Mercury Seven - USA

The first group of American astronauts was selected for the Mercury program by NASA in April 1959. This group. known as the "Mercury Seven", included: Scott Carpenter[?], Gordon Cooper[?], John Glenn, Gus Grissom, Wally Schirra[?], Alan Shepard and Deke Slayton[?]. All seven were military test pilots, a requirement specified by President Eisenhower to simplify the selection process.

All seven of the first group of astronauts eventually flew in space, although one, Deke Slayton, did not fly a Mercury mission due to a medical disqualification. He eventually flew on the Apollo-Soyuz mission[?]. The other six each flew one Mercury mission. For two of these, Scott Carpenter and John Glenn, the Mercury mission was their only flight in the Apollo era (Glenn later flew on the space shuttle). Three of the Mercury astronauts, Gus Grissom, Gordon Cooper and Wally Schirra, also each flew a mission during the Gemini program. Alan Shepard did not fly a Gemini mission due to a medical disqualification, but later did fly an Apollo mission. He was the only Mercury astronaut to go to the moon. Wally Schirra also flew on Apollo, as well as Mercury and Gemini, the only astronaut to fly on all three types of spacecraft. (Gus Grissom was scheduled to fly the first Apollo flight, but died in a fire on the launch pad during training.)

March 7, 1960 - Air Force Group 1 - USSR

The initial group of Soviet cosmonauts was chosen from Air Force jet pilots. The twenty, finalised on March 7, 1960 were: Ivan Anikeyev, Pavel Belyayev, Valentin Bondarenko, Valery Bykovsky, Valentin Filatyev, Yuri Gagarin, Viktor Gorbatko, Anatoli Kartashov, Yevgeny Khrunov, Vladimir Komarov, Aleksei Leonov, Grigori Nelyubov,Andrian Nikolayev, Pavel Popovich, Mars Rafikov, Georgi Shonin, Gherman Titov, Valentin Varlamov, Boris Volynov, and Yevgeni Zaikin.

March 12, 1962 - Female Group - USSR

On March 12, 1962, a group of five civilian women with parachuting experience was added to the cosmonaut group: Tatyana Kuznetsova, Valentina Ponomaryova, Irina Solovyova, Valentina Tereshkova, and Zhanna Yerkina. Only Tereshkova would fly.

September 17, 1962 - 1962 NASA Group - USA

A second group of nine astronauts was selected by NASA in September 1962. This group included Neil Armstrong, Frank Borman, Charles Conrad[?], Jim McDivitt[?], Jim Lovell[?], Elliott See, Tom Stafford[?], Ed White and John Young. All of this group flew missions in the Gemini program except Elliott See, who died in a flight accident while preparing for his Gemini flight. All of the others also flew on Apollo, except for Ed White, who died in a fire on the launch pad during training for the first Apollo flight. Three of this group, McDivitt, Borman and Armstrong, made single flights in both Gemini and Apollo. Four others, Young, Lovell, Stafford and Conrad, each made two flights in Gemini and at least one flight in Apollo. Young and Lovell both made two Apollo flights. Conrad and Stafford also made second flights in Apollo spacecraft, Conrad in Skylab and Stafford in Apollo-Soyuz. Six of this group, Borman, Lovell, Stafford, Young, Armstrong and Conrad, made flights to the moon. Lovell and Young went to the moon twice. Armstrong, Conrad, and Young walked on the moon. John Young also later flew on the Space Shuttle.

October 17, 1963 - 1963 NASA Group - USA

Five members of the third group of astronauts, selected by NASA in October 1963, also flew missions during the Gemini program. They were Buzz Aldrin, Gene Cernan, Michael Collins, Richard Gordon[?] and David Scott[?]. Each flew a single Gemini mission and at least one mission in the Apollo program. Scott and Cernan both flew a second Apollo mission. All of this group went to the moon, Cernan went twice. Aldrin, Scott and Cernan walked on the moon.

During the Apollo program, (1961-1975), the United States launched a total of 31 manned missions: 6 in the Mercury program, 10 in the Gemini program, 11 in the Apollo program, 3 in the Skylab program, and 1 in the Apollo-Soyuz[?] Test program. These 31 missions provided 71 individual flight opportunities: 6 in Mercury, 20 in Gemini, 33 in Apollo, 9 in Skylab, and 3 in Apollo-Soyuz. These 71 positions were filled by 43 individuals. Of these 43, 4 flew a total of 4 flights, 3 flew a total of 3 flights, 10 flew twice, and the remaining 26 flew only once. Thus only 17 flew more than once, and only seven flew more than twice. (Several later made additional flights on the Space Shuttle.)

Of the 31 Apollo-era flights, 2 were suborbital and 9 were lunar missions. The remaining 20 were earth orbital flights. The 9 lunar flights provided 27 individual lunar flight opportunities. These were filled by 24 individuals. Only 3 people flew to the moon twice. The 6 successful lunar landing flights provided 12 individual lunar landing opportunities. These were filled by 12 individuals. No one landed on the moon twice. Of those who landed on the moon, 2 had already flown to the moon once, 5 had made previous non-lunar flights, and 5 had no previous spaceflight experience.

All 6 Mercury flights and 3 of 10 Gemini flights had all-rookie crews, as did 1 of the 3 Skylab flights. All the Apollo missions included at least 1 veteran astronaut. Only 2 flights, the lunar landing mission and its dress-rehearsal, had all-veteran crews.

June 28, 1965 - Scientist group - USA

Owen Garriott[?], Edward Gibson[?], Duane Graveline[?], Joseph Kerwin[?], Frank Michel[?], Harrison Schmitt

April 4, 1966 - 1966 NASA Group - USA

Vance Brand[?], John Bull[?], Gerald Carr[?], Charles Duke[?], Joseph Engle[?], Ronald Evans[?], Edward Givens[?], Fred Haise[?], James Irwin[?], Don Lind[?], Jack Lousma[?], Thomas Mattingly[?], Bruce McCandless[?], Edgar Mitchell[?], William Pogue[?], Stuart Roosa[?], John Swigert[?], Paul Weitz[?], Alfred Worden[?]

October 4, 1967 - Scientist group - USA

Joseph Allen[?], Philip Chapman[?], Anthony England[?], Karl Henize[?], Donald Holmquest[?], William Lenoir[?], John Llewellyn[?], Story Musgrave[?], Brian O'Leary[?], Robert Parker[?], William Thornton

June 30, 1966 - USAF MOL Group 2 - USA

Karol Bobko[?], Robert Crippen[?], Gordon Fullerton[?], Henry Hartsfield[?], Robert Overmyer[?], Donald Peterson[?]

November 25, 1976 - 1976 Intercosmos Group - USSR

Miroslaw Hermaszewski[?], Zenon Jankowski[?], Sigmund Jähn, Eberhard Köllner[?], Oldrich Pelcak[?], Vladimir Remek[?]

January 16, 1978 - 1978 NASA Group - USA

Due to the long delay between the last Apollo mission and the first flight of the Space Shuttle in 1981, only few astronauts from the older groups stayed with NASA. Thus in 1978 a new group of 35 astronauts was selected after 9 years without new astronauts, including the first female astronauts, and also the first black astronaut Guion Bluford[?]. Roughly every two years a new group was selected since then. Two different astronaut groups were formed, pilots and mission specialists. Additionally it has payload specialists which are selected for a single mission and are not part of the astronaut corps - amoung them were mostly scientist, also a few politicians and many international astronauts.

Pilots: Daniel Brandenstein[?], Michael Coats[?], Richard Covey[?], John Creighton[?], Robert Gibson[?], Frederick Gibson[?], Frederick Hauck[?], Jon McBride[?], Francis Scobee, Brewster Shaw[?], Loren Shriver[?], David Walker[?], Donald Williams[?]
Mission specialists: Guion Bluford[?], James Buchli[?], John Fabian[?], Anna Fisher[?], Dale Gardner[?], David Griggs[?], Terry Hart[?], Steven Hawley[?], Jeffrey Hoffman[?], Shannon Lucid[?], Ronald McNair, Richard Mullane[?], Steven Nagel[?], George Nelson[?], Ellison Onizuka, Judith Resnik, Sally Ride, Rhea Seddon[?], Robert Stewart, Kathryn Sullivan[?], Norman Thagard[?], James van Hoften[?]

March 1, 1978 - 1978 Intercosmos Group - USSR

Aleksandr P. Aleksandrov[?], Dumitru Dediu[?], Jose Lopez Falcon[?], Bertalan Farkas[?], Maidarzhavyn Ganzorig[?], Zhugderdemidiyn Gurragcha[?], Georgi Ivanov[?], Bela Magyari[?], Arnaldo Tamayo Mendez[?], Dumitru Prunariu[?]

May 1, 1978 - Payload Specialists - ESA

Ulf Merbold, Claude Nicollier[?], Wubbo Ockels[?]

April 1, 1979 - 1979 Intercosmos Group - USSR

Tuan Pham[?], Thanh Liem Bui[?]

May 29, 1980 - NASA Group - USA

Pilots: John Blaha[?], Charles Bolden[?], Roy Bridges[?], Guy Gardner[?], Ronald Grabe[?], Byan O'Connor[?], Richard Richards[?], Michael Smith

Mission specialists: James Bagian[?], Franklin Chang-Diaz[?], Mary Cleave[?], Bonnie Dunbar[?], William Fisher[?], David Hilmers[?], David Leestma[?], John Lounge[?], Jerry Ross[?], Sherwood Spring[?], Robert Springer[?]

International mission specialists: Claude Nicollier[?], Wubbo Ockels[?]

December 1, 1982 - Payload Specialists - Germany

Reinhard Furrer[?], Ernst Messerschmid[?]

May 23, 1984 - NASA Group - USA

Pilots: Kenneth Cameron[?], John Casper[?], Frank Culbertson[?], Sidney Guiterrez[?], Blaine Hammond[?], Michael McCulley[?], James Wetherbee[?]

Mission specialists: James Adamson[?], Ellen Baker[?], Mark Brown[?], Manley Cartner[?], Marsha Ivins[?], Mark Lee[?], David Low, William Sheperd[?], Kathryn Thornton[?], Charles Veach[?]

June 4, 1985 - NASA Group - USA

Pilots: Michael Baker[?], Robert Cabana[?], Brian Duffy[?], Terence Henricks[?], Stephen Oswald[?], Stephen Thorne[?]

Mission specialists: Jerome Apt[?], Charles Gemar[?], Linda Godwin[?], Richard Hieb[?], Tamara Jernigan, Carl Meade[?], Pierre Thuot[?]

August 1, 1985 - 1985 NASDA Group - Japan

Mamoru Mohri[?], Chiaki Mukai[?]

June 12, 1987 - NASA Group - USA

Pilots: Andrew Allen[?], Kenneth Bowersox[?], Curtis Brown[?], Kevin Chilton[?], David McMonagle[?], William Readdy[?], Kenneth Reightler[?]

Mission specialists: Thomas Akers[?], Jan Davis[?], Michael Foale[?], Gregory Harbaugh[?], Mae Jemison, Bruce Melnick[?], Mario Runco[?], James Voss[?]

August 3, 1987 - 1998 Payload Specialists - Germany

Renate Brümmer[?], Hans Schlegel[?], Gerhard Thiele[?], Heike Walpot[?], Ulrich Walter

January 17, 1990 - NASA Group - USA

Pilots: Kenneth Cockrell[?], Eileen Collins[?], William Gregory[?], James Halsell[?], Charles Precourt[?], Richard Searfoss[?], Terrence Wilcutt[?]

Mission specialists: Daniel Bursch[?], Leroy Chiao[?], Michael Clifford[?], Bernard Harris[?], Susan Helms[?], Thomas Jones[?], William McArthur[?], James Newman[?], Ellen Ochoa[?], Ronald Sega[?], Nancy Sherlock[?], Donald Thomas, Janice Voss[?]

October 8, 1990 - 1990 Germany

Reinhold Ewald[?], Klaus-Dietrich Flade[?]

March 31, 1992 - NASA Group - USA

Pilots: Scott Horowitz[?], Brent Jett[?], Kevin Kregel[?], Kent Rominger[?]

Mission specialists: Daniel Barry[?], Charles Brady[?], Catherine Coleman, Michael Gernhard[?], John Grunsfeld[?], Wendy Lawrence[?], Jerry Lineger[?], Richard Linneham[?], Michael Lopez-Alegria[?], Scott Parazynski[?], Winston Scott[?], Steven Smith[?], Joseph Tanner[?], Andrew Thomas[?], Mary Weber[?]

International mission specialists: Marc Garneau, Chris Hadfield, Maurizio Cheli[?], Jean-Francois Clervoy[?], Koichi Wakata[?]

April 1992 - 1992 NASDA Group - Japan

Koichi Wakata[?]

May 15, 1992 - ESA Maurizio Cheli[?], Jean-Francois Clervoy[?], Pedro Duque[?], Christer Fuglesang[?], Marianne Merchez[?]

December 12, 1994 - NASA Group - USA

1995 - 1995 NASDA Group - Japan

Takao Doi[?]

May 1, 1996 - NASA Group - USA

June 4, 1998 - NASA Group - USA

October 7, 1998 - 1998 ESA Group - ESA

Frank de Winne[?], Leopold Eyharts[?], Andre Kuipers[?], Paolo Nespoli[?], Hans Schlegel[?], Roberto Vittori[?]

December 14, 1998 - 1999 NASDA Group - Japan

Satoshi Furukawa[?], Akihiko Hoshide[?], Naoko Sumino[?]

July 26, 2000 - NASA Group - USA



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