![]() The calls of a wild chimp were recorded on the Voyager Golden Records, now heading out beyond the Solar system. We don’t send animals into orbit any more as proxies for human experience. On November 26, Enos the chimp completed an orbit. Ham’s spaceflight made him more than animal, but still less than human.Ī mere 10 weeks after Ham’s feat, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space when he orbited Earth on April 12. Ham was leapfrogging to the front of the evolutionary queue in a Planet of the Apes-style interspecies competition. In some versions of the famous ‘March of Progress’ illustration of human evolution, the first figure is a knuckle-walking ape and the last is an astronaut. On both sides of the Iron Curtain, being controlled by machines was felt to diminish masculinity.Ĭhimps in space also threatened the accepted evolutionary order. This refers to an ongoing battle among both Soviet and US astronauts about how much autonomy they would have as pilots. “He can’t make any decisions, we might as well have a robot up there,” says Major Nelson. They are envious that Sam gets to go to the Moon before them. In the I Dream of Jeannie episode ‘Fly me to the Moon’ (1967), astronauts Tony Nelson and Roger Healey train Sam the chimp for spaceflight. ![]() Well none of us wants to think that they’re going to send a monkey up to do a man’s work … what they’re trying to do to us is send a man up to do a monkey’s work.” In a scene from the 1983 film ‘The Right Stuff’, based on Tom Wolfe’s book for which he did extensive interviews with the astronauts, one says: The astronauts of the 1960s Mercury program felt their masculinity threatened by performing the same tasks as chimps. Pilot Jerrie Cobb said she would take the place of one of the chimps if it meant having a shot at space. While the chimps were in training at the Holloman Airforce Base, women were actively excluded from spaceflight. “Ham” was an acronym for Holloman Aero Medical, but as American philosopher of science Donna Haraway has pointed out, “Ham’s name inevitably recalls Noah’s youngest and only black son”. Ham sits at an interesting intersection of race, gender and species. The National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington DC retains his bones. Ham’s flesh was stripped from his skeleton, cremated, and buried at the Space Hall of Fame in Almogordo, New Mexico. Photo: NASAĪfter his flight, Ham lived for 20 years by himself, in a zoo in Washington DC.People wrote him letters, and some were answered by zoo staff signed with Ham’s fingerprint.In 1980 he was sent to another zoo to live with a group of chimps.He died in 1983 at the age of 26.Ī proposal to stuff and display his body was abandoned after an outcry. Ham clasps the hand of a member of the recovery team. Ham’s treat on emerging from the spacecraft was an apple, which he devoured eagerly. Ham survived the flight itself, but nearly drowned when the capsule started filling with water after its ocean splashdown.įortunately, the helicopter recovery team reached him in time. Jane Goodall, an expert in primate behaviour, said she had never seen such terror in a chimp’s expression. ![]() The biomedical data showed Ham experienced stress during acceleration and deceleration. He experienced 6.6 minutes of free fall and 14.7_g_ of acceleration on descent – much greater than predicted. Photo: NASA Throughout the journey Ham was obliged to pull a lever.He received two shocks for not doing this correctly, out of 50 pulls.He achieved this with a 16cm rectal thermometer in place to monitor his temperature. Ham with one of his handlers on the day of the spaceflight. The whole flight took 16 minutes from launch to return. The rocket travelled at 9000km/hr, and reached an altitude of 251km. On January 31, 1961, Ham was launched into space, strapped into a capsule inside the nose-cone of a Mercury-Redstone rocket. Ham showed great aptitude, and was selected the day before the flight. The chosen chimp would test life support systems and demonstrate that equipment could be operated during spaceflight. The astro-chimps were trained to pull levers, with a banana pellet as a reward and an electric shock to the feet for failure.
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