Class Of 1964 USAF Academy

USAFA Announces Gregory Hall


from The Denver Gazette April 25, 2021

The Air Force Academy plans to honor 1964 graduate and astronaut Frederick Gregory by renaming a building in his honor.

The Consolidated Education and Training Facility which houses astronautical and civil engineering laboratories aligned with the chemistry and biology departments will be renamed Gregory Hall later this year. The academy didn't announce when.

Gregory Hall will serve as an inspiration to cadets for generations to come, said academy Superintendent Lt. Gen. Richard Clark. Col. Gregory excelled in academics, in the air and in space. He epitomizes the Academy's heritage and also its future as the academy of the Space Force.

Gregory logged roughly 7,000 hours in more than 50 different aircraft, including 550 combat missions during the Vietnam War, according to his NASA biography. During his nearly 30-year career, he was both a fighter and helicopter pilot. He became an engineering test pilot for the Air Force and NASA after graduating from naval test pilot school.

During his years with NASA, he was a test pilot, astronaut, flight safety programs manager and, eventually, the first Black deputy administrator. It the administrator role he oversaw management of the International Space Station and space shuttle operations.

As an astronaut, Gregory logged 455 hours in space, piloting Challenger in 1985 and running things as spacecraft commander aboard Discovery in 1989 and Atlantis in 1991.


[ My History ] [ Home ] [ Table Of Contents ]