Today In History logo TIH
Scott Carpenter completed three orbits of Earth aboard the Mercury-Atlas 7 "Auro
1962 Event

May 24

Carpenter Orbits Earth: Mercury Mission Nearly Lost at Sea

Scott Carpenter completed three orbits of Earth aboard the Mercury-Atlas 7 "Aurora 7" capsule on May 24, 1962, becoming the fourth American in space and the second to orbit. The mission was plagued by equipment malfunctions: a pitch horizon scanner failed, forcing Carpenter to manually control the spacecraft's attitude, consuming excessive fuel. He was so absorbed in photography and scientific observations that he forgot to turn off certain thruster systems. During reentry, a combination of a 25-degree yaw error and a three-second late firing of the retrorockets caused him to overshoot the planned landing zone by 250 miles. NASA lost contact for 40 agonizing minutes before a search plane spotted his life raft. Walter Cronkite, live on CBS, told the nation Carpenter might be dead.

May 24, 1962

64 years ago

Key Figures & Places

What Else Happened on May 24

Talk to History

Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.

Start Talking