40 years later - Challenger explosion

I was sitting on our family room sofa, feeding our 15 mo old baby. I didn't believe it until it was replayed several times.

Our 6 yr old was in kindergarten - I never asked him if they were watching.

I wonder what trauma the school age kids watching their teacher - from pride of their teacher to a violent death
 
I had gone to a mom’s support group with my 4-week-old colicky first child and heard the news when driving home. Couldn’t believe it was real. It was so tragic. I grew up in VA where many of our neighbors worked on the Mercury project, and my brother and I both worked at that same NASA facility while in college. We were very close to the manned space program. Along with 11/22/1963 and 9/11, this is a date I’ll always remember. Thank you for posting this. Incidentally, that first child is now a rocket scientist.
 
I was at work and we stopped and gathered in front of a tiny tv. The picture of the crew happily walking to the shuttle and "go with throttle up" are etched in memory.
 
I was getting out of a class in basic training. They let us watch the news on tv. Was the only tv we got to see besides the Super Bowl.
 
I was in grad school and working in the lab. We all watched it in shock. The group had been involved in some projects with NASA and some materials had gone up in the space shuttle previously. It was so sad… I’m glad they investigated and did not cover up the root cause, which should not have been ignored as a possibility in the first place.
 
I was in 8th grade. I don't think anyone in the school watched it on TV (although I remember watching the landing of the first (?) space shuttle in elementary school), but i heard about it from a classmate. This girl had a habit of saying bizarre things that she'd misheard and turned out not to be true, so at first I didn't believe her but she said one of the teachers had told her. By the end of lunch, everyone was talking about it. :(
 
I was at home watching on TV. I remember I was in disbelief, and I guess because it was so shocking. I then cried. I realized the loss all the families would experience and began praying for them. It was one of the saddest days for the nation.

I posted a link yesterday to an article about in the Astronomy thread I had started. Here's the link if anyone wishes to read my post.

 
I was in English class and a student who was one year ahead of me popped in with seemingly sketchy information. She wasn't prone to misinformation, but our teacher dismissed it. After class, we ate lunch in a hurry and then went to the library to watch on tv.
 
I had a good talk with my fifth grade teacher on Facebook today about this. We were in Tampa and he had taken the class outside to see the trail in the sky when the shuttle launched ... and then of course we were left in confusion. Even when we got back inside and had more information, we were all confused and some were joking and laughing. I think we were so young that we just didn't get it, but I expressed some remorse for that today, and he said he'd rather have had us laughing until we knew more and could talk with more certainty about it. Such a sweet guy. He was just in his first year of teaching then -- it must have been really hard for him to guide a classroom full of fifth graders through that.
 

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