Donald K. "Deke" Slayton
Aviator / Astronaut
Name at birth: Donald Kent Slayton
Donald K. "Deke" Slayton was one of the original seven astronauts chosen for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) Project Mercury, the first program in the United States for manned space flight. As Slayton once put it, he was "the one screwed out of a mission for medical reasons." Slayton was a pilot during World War II and flew combat missions over Europe and Japan. In the 1950s he was a test pilot before being chosen as one of the first U.S. astronauts in 1959. Although he had been scheduled for one of the first orbital flights, a heart condition kept Slayton grounded for a decade. On the ground Slayton worked for NASA as a director of flight crews (he's the one who chose Neil Armstrong to be the first man on the moon) until he was cleared for space flight in 1972. His only space flight was the 1975 Apollo-Soyuz mission, the first international meeting in space (the Apollo, piloted by Slayton, hooked up to the Soviet's Soyuz). Slayton worked for NASA until 1982, when he retired and founded Space Services, one of the first companies designed to provide rockets for commercial payloads.
Extra credit: Space Services was the original contractor for the Celestis Group, the ones who sent the cremated remains of Gene Roddenberry and Timothy Leary into space in 1997... Slayton's nickname is an abbreviated form of his first initials, D.K.
Deke Slayton joins Daryl Hannah and Boris Yeltsin in our loop Celebs Missing Fingers.
Other astronauts on Who2 include John Glenn, Sally Ride and Ham the Chimp.
Four Good Links
Deke Slayton
Career background from NASA
Deke's Final Flight
Briefly mysterious anecdote about the day of his death
Donald K. (Deke) Slayton
Career summary from the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation
Deke Slayton
Very brief glimpse of his career with a cool photo
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
Death
13 June 1993
(brain cancer, age 69)
Best Known As
The 'Original Seven' astronaut who later flew Apollo-Soyuz

