EDWARD G. GIBSON - ANNOTATED SPECIAL COVER SIGNED CO-SIGNED BY: COLONEL GERALD P. "JERRY" CARR, COLONEL WILLIAM R. "BILL" POGUE - HFSID 48194
Sale Price $245.00
Reg. $300.00
EDWARD GIBSON, GERALD P. CARR and BILL POGUE
Edward Gibson, Gerald P. Carr, and Bill Pogue sign a commemorative envelope
honoring Skylab.
Commemorative Envelope signed: "Jerry Carr/Skylab III", "Ed Gibson/Skylab III", and "Bill
Pogue/Skylab III", 6½x3½. Cover honoring Skylab-4 Tracking Telemetry, one affixed 8¢
stamp, postmarked Balsam Grove, North Carolina, November 16, 1973. . Dr. EDWARD
G. GIBSON (born in 1936) was a member of the crew of the final Skylab mission
(November 16, 1973-February 8, 1974), which serviced an unmanned Saturn workshop and
obtained medical data for extending space flights. During the mission, the crew observed the
Comet Kohoutek. Selected as a scientist-astronaut by NASA in 1965, Gibson served on the
astronaut support crew and was involved in the design and testing of the Skylab space
station. After resigning from NASA in 1974, Gibson was involved in research and began his
own consulting firm. GERALD P. "JERRY" CARR (1932-2020) was commander of the
third and final manned visit to the Skylab Orbital Workshop. This was the longest
manned flight (84 days, 1 hour, 15 minutes) in the history of manned space exploration
to date. From November 16, 1973-February 8, 1974, the three-member crew, which also
included Dr. Edward G. Gibson (science pilot) and William R. Pogue (pilot), successfully
completed 56 experiments, 26 science demonstrations, 15 subsystem-detailed objectives and
13 student investigations during their 1,214 revolutions of the Earth. Carr, who was one of
19 astronauts selected by NASA in April 1966, had previously served in the U.S. Navy
before joining the U.S. Marine Corps. Between the time of his selection and his journey into
space, Carr was a member of several astronaut support crews and was involved in the
development and testing of the lunar roving vehicle used during the Apollo Moon
landings. Carr, who retired from the Marine Corps in 1975 and from NASA in 1977, then
became involved in several aerospace-related businesses. He is married to artist/sculptor Pat
Musick. WILLIAM R. "BILL" POGUE, a Korean War veteran and a former member of
the Air Force Thunderbirds, trained aerospace research pilots before being accepted into
NASA's astronaut program in 1966. A member of the astronaut support crews for Apollo
missions 7, 11 and 14, he later piloted Skylab-4, the third and final manned visit to the
orbital workshop (1973-1974). This mission, at 84 days, was the longest manned space
flight up to that time. Colonel Pogue, who made two space walks during the mission,
including a record seven-hour EVA, retired from the Air Force in 1975 to pursue a career as a
private consultant and to produce videos about space flight. Slightly creased and toned at
edges. Otherwise, fine condition.
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