Rene Carpenter, last surviving member of the "Astronaut Wives Club" from Project Mercury Dies at 92
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/24/us/rene-carpenter-dead.html
Rene Carpenter watching the launch of her husband, Scott Carpenter, aboard the Aurora 7 capsule in 1962. She declined to conform to the expectations of astronauts wives.Credit...Ralph Morse/The LIFE Picture Collection, via Getty Images
Rene Carpenter, Astronauts Wife Who Broke NASA Mold, Dies at 92
The last living member of the Mercury 7 couples who helped define Americas early space program, she went on to become a writer and television host.
By Katharine Q. Seelye
July 24, 2020
Rene Carpenter, the last surviving member of the much-glorified cohort of Mercury 7 astronauts and their wives, whom Tom Wolfe immortalized in his best-selling 1979 book The Right Stuff, died on Friday in Denver. She was 92.
Her daughter Kris Stoever said the cause was congestive heart failure.
Ms. Carpenter, who retained that surname even after she was divorced and remarried, was the wife of Scott Carpenter, one of the seven original Project Mercury astronauts, who carried the hopes of an anxious nation on their shoulders in the early days of space travel.
Thanks to NASAs public relations machinery and coverage in publications like Life magazine, these 14 men and women were lionized at a time when the United States was seeking to catch the Soviet Union in the space race. Ms. Carpenter became the last living member of the group with the death of Annie Glenn, the wife of the astronaut John Glenn, in May at the age of 100.
Perhaps more than any of the seven wives, Ms. Carpenter broke the NASA mold, emerging with her own identity. On photo shoots, when the women were told to wear solid pastel dresses, Ms. Carpenter, a striking platinum blonde, showed up in a sleeveless red floral pattern. People magazine called her the undisputed prom queen of the early space program.
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Cross gently, Rene.