Joined The Agency When It Was Still NACA
Long before Edgar Cortright joined the NACA or became Langley Center Director or even graduated elementary school, he planned a career in aviation. "I always knew, from about age five on, what I wanted to be, because my father flew in World War I. I used to put his uniform on as a little kid, and I decided I wanted to be in aviation," Cortright said in an oral history interview conducted in 1998. He fulfilled that dream and more. Cortright's career spanned, not only some of the most ground-breaking years of aviation in the U.S., but all the early days of robotic and human space exploration.
Born on July 29, 1923, in Hastings, Pennsylvania, Cortright served as a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy during World War II, and later resumed his education at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, where he received both a B.S. and an M.S. degree in aeronautical engineering. After graduation. Cortright joined the NACA as an aeronautical research scientist at Lewis Flight Propulsion Laboratory in Cleveland. From 1954-1958, he was Lewis' Chief of the Supersonic Wind Tunnel Branch and conducted research on supersonic aerodynamics. In 1958 he was appointed Chief of the Plasma Physics Branch.
But, Sputnik changed everything. In 1958, NACA became NASA, and Cortright was named Chief of Advanced Technology Programs. He directed initial formulation of NASA’s meteorological satellite program, including TIROS and Nimbus. Later, he was appointed Assistant Director for Lunar and Planetary Programs. In 1961, he was appointed Deputy Director of NASA’s Office of Space Sciences. In 1963, he was appointed Deputy Associate Administrator for Space Sciences, the office responsible for applications, planning and directing NASA’s programs for robotic scientific exploration and utilization of space, including the lunar and planetary probes, the geophysical and astronomical satellites and probes, biosciences, applications satellites, and the development and use of light and medium launch vehicles. Over the next 10 years, he played a key role in planning and directing many human and robotic space programs. In 1968, Dr. Cortright was named Deputy Associate Administrator, Office of Manned Space
Flight.
Later in 1968, Cortright became Director of NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. Under his leadership the NACA's original research laboratory turned its talents to Mars and successfully ran Project Viking. Launched in 1975, the two Viking probes (each including an orbiter and lander) sent the first high- resolution images of the Martian surface and analyzed surface samples in the landers' on-board laboratory searching for signs of life. Viking 1 was the first human-made object to successfully soft-land on the Red Planet. In 1970 Cortright was also called upon to lead the Apollo 13 failure review board (also known as the Cortright Commission). Cortright retired from NASA in 1975 after 30 years of government service. He went on to further accomplishments in private industry, eventually retiring as President of the Lockheed- California Company in 1983.
Cortright is the author of numerous technical reports and articles. He was proud of his books, “Exploring Space With a Camera” and “Apollo Expeditions to the Moon.” His awards and citations include the Arthur Flemming Award (1963); the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal (1966); the NASA Distinguished Service Medal (1967); and the AAS Space Flight Award (1970). Cortright also received honorary doctorates from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and George Washington University.
(Images provided by NASA. Top: On his first day as director (Wednesday, 1 May 1968), Edgar M. Cortright met with Langley's senior staff. Bottom: NASA officials present President John F. Kennedy with a model of the Mariner 2 spacecraft, including Edgar M. Cortright, Deputy Director of NASA's Office of Space Sciences [right])