Jack Swigert Statue
In the middle of a busy airport, a statue honoring the astronaut who told Houston that Apollo 13 had a problem.
Deep in the bowels of Denver International Airport, while waiting to enter trains at B Gates to get to or from their flights, passengers are greeted by a rather dramatic statue honoring Apollo 13 astronaut John Leonard (Jack) Swigert Jr.
Swigert was born in Denver in 1931 and died in Washington, D.C. in 1982. He was a star football player at the University of Colorado and obtained a B.S. Degree in Mechanical Engineering. He became a Fighter Pilot in Korea and Japan and was a test pilot for two aviation companies. When he applied for astronaut training, NASA turned him down. He then decided he needed more education and attended two universities and received two master’s degrees. He applied again and NASA accepted him as one of the few civilians in the program and he became the command module pilot on the moon flight Apollo 13.
The spaceship was 250,000 miles from Earth when an oxygen tank exploded. The tank fed the fuel cell. “Houston, we’ve had a problem here” was his calm voice regarding the situation (the line was later incorrectly quoted as “Houston, we have a problem” in film and the same mistake has entered popular culture and was applied to the plaque on the statue).
With the help of Mission Control in Houston and fellow astronauts James Lovell, Jr. and Fred Haise, Jr., Swigert maneuvered the crippled spaceship around the moon and steered the ship to a safe landing. He was later elected to Congress, but died of cancer seven days before assuming office.
This statue is an exact replica of the one in Statuary Hall at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. It was created by George Lundeen and Mark Lundeen, brothers and prominent members of the community of sculptors in the city of Loveland, Colorado.
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