"I touch the future. I teach."
Sharon Christa Corrigan (Christa McAuliffe) was born in Boston, Massachusetts on September 2, 1948. In 1985, NASA chose her to be the first civilian in space, hoping to reinvigorate America's interest in space exploration. On January 28, 1986, she was one of seven astronauts onboard Space Shuttle Challenger, a flight that was destined for disaster. The shuttle exploded shortly after takeoff, killing all seven aboard. It became a defining "where were you when" moment for an entire generation.
McAuliffe, who was of both Irish and Lebanese descent, beat out more than 11,000 applicants for NASA's Teacher in Space Project. On her application, she recalled watching John Glenn orbit the Earth in Friendship 7, writing "I watched the Space Age being born, and I would like to participate."
Upon her selection, McAuliffe made the media rounds, promoting her upcoming flight. While appearing on the Today Show in July 1985, she told host Bryant Gumbel, through a thick New England accent, that applying to NASA was like playing the lottery. "If you don't play it, you don't win. When I filled out that application, that's really how I felt. I figured there'd be at least 50,000 people sticking that same application in the mailbox."
Six months later, she boarded Challenger on that fateful January morning. The shuttle launched from Florida's Cape Canaveral at 11:38 ET, as people all over the world watched at home and in classrooms, while her friends and family watched from below. Nobody was expecting the tragedy that would occur just 73 seconds into the flight, when a rocket booster failure led to the shuttle's explosion at an altitude of 48,000 feet, killing all seven aboard.
NASA began a search and recovery operation, but it would take more than three months to locate the crew compartment and all human remains. NASA would later state their belief that several of the crew members survived the initial breakup of the shuttle, only to perish in the descent to the ocean floor below.
Christa McAuliffe was laid to rest at Blossom Hill Cemetery in her hometown of Concord, New Hampshire.
Rest in peace.
Trivia
- If you want to learn more about Christa McAuliffe, take a voyage to Amazon. Its all in books. You can also watch the 2007 documentary Christa McAuliffe: Reach for the Stars on YouTube.
- In 1990, the McAuliffe-Shepard Discovery Center opened its doors in Concord. Named in her honor, as well as that of fellow astronaut Alan Shepard, the center serves as an air and space museum, offering an observatory, a planetarium, vintage aircraft and more. That same year, the Christa McAuliffe Space Center opened in Pleasant Grove, Utah. Offering a planetarium, starship simulators and laser shows, its goal is to introduce elementary school-aged children to the world of astronomy.
- McAuliffe's runner-up in the Teacher in Space project, Barbara Morgan, became a professional astronaut in 1998, flying aboard Space Shuttle Endeavour to the International Space Station.
- Ten months after the disaster, Paramount Pictures released Star Trek 4: The Voyage Home. The film opened with a dedication to the Challenger crew, stating that their "courageous spirit shall live to the 23rd century and beyond."
- In 2019, President Trump signed the Christa McAuliffe Commemorative Coin Act. Subsequently in 2021, the Department of Treasury issued $1 silver coins in her memory.
- The grave of Dr. Ronald McNair, who was also onboard Challenger, was previously profiled by this blog.
- In 2024, the New Hampshire State Capitol unveiled a statue of McAuliffe on its grounds, inscribed with the quote that headlined this blog post.



















