The Apollo 1 Tragedy
Virgil "Gus" Grissom, Commander
Edward White, Command Pilot
Roger Chaffee, Pilot

One of the worst tragedies in the history of spaceflight occurred on January
27, 1967 when the crew of Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee were killed
in a fire in the Apollo Command Module during a preflight test at Cape
Canaveral. They were training for the first crewed Apollo flight, an Earth
orbiting mission scheduled to be launched on 21 February. They were taking part
in a "plugs-out" test, in which the Command Module was mounted on the Saturn 1B
on the launch pad just as it would be for the actual launch, but the Saturn 1B
was not fueled. The plan was to go through an entire countdown sequence.
At 1 p.m. on Friday, 27 January 1967 the astronauts entered the capsule on
Pad 34 to begin the test. A number of minor problems cropped up which delayed
the test considerably and finally a failure in communications forced a hold in
the count at 5:40 p.m. At 6:31 one of the astronauts (probably Chaffee)
reported, "Fire, I smell fire." Two seconds later White was heard to say, "Fire
in the cockpit." The fire spread throughout the cabin in a matter of seconds.
The last crew communication ended 17 seconds after the start of the fire,
followed by loss of all telemetry. The Apollo hatch could only open inward and
was held closed by a number of latches which had to be operated by ratchets. It
was also held closed by the interior pressure, which was higher than outside
atmospheric pressure and required venting of the command module before the hatch
could be opened. It took at least 90 seconds to get the hatch open under ideal
conditions. Because the cabin had been filled with a pure oxygen atmosphere at
normal pressure for the test and there had been many hours for the oxygen to
permeate all the material in the cabin, the fire spread rapidly and the
astronauts had no chance to get the hatch open. Nearby technicians tried to get
to the hatch but were repeatedly driven back by the heat and smoke. By the time
they succeeded in getting the hatch open roughly 5 minutes after the fire
started the astronauts had already perished, probably within the first 30
seconds, due to smoke inhalation and burns.
The Apollo program was put on hold while an exhaustive investigation was made
of the accident. It was concluded that the most likely cause was a spark from a
short circuit in a bundle of wires that ran to the left and just in front of
Grissom's seat. The large amount of flammable material in the cabin in the
oxygen environment allowed the fire to start and spread quickly. A number of
changes were instigated in the program over the next year and a half, including
designing a new hatch which opened outward and could be operated quickly,
removing much of the flammable material and replacing it with self-extinguishing
components, using a nitrogen-oxygen mixture at launch, and recording all changes
and overseeing all modifications to the spacecraft design more rigorously.
The mission, originally designated Apollo 204 but commonly referred to as
Apollo 1, was officially assigned the name "Apollo 1" in honor of Grissom,
White, and Chaffee. The first Saturn V launch (uncrewed) in November 1967 was
designated Apollo 4 (no missions were ever designated Apollo 2 or 3). The Apollo
1 Command Module capsule 012 was impounded and studied after the accident and
was then locked away in a storage facility at NASA Langley Research Center. The
changes made to the Apollo Command Module as a result of the tragedy resulted in
a highly reliable craft which, with the exception of Apollo 13, helped make the
complex and dangerous trip to the Moon almost commonplace. The eventual success
of the Apollo program is a tribute to Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chafee,
three fine astronauts whose tragic loss was not in vain.