|alt=Silver memorial in the form of a combined 7 and Mercury symbol The Mercury spacecraft was less finished than the astronauts' previous vehicles. After watching an
Atlas rocket explode during launch on May 18, 1959, they publicly joked "I'm glad they got that out of the way"typical
gallows humor that test pilots used to cope with dangerbut privately calculated that one of the seven would die during Project Mercury. The astronauts participated in the project's design and planning, dividing the work between them. Carpenter had training in airborne electronics and
celestial navigation, so he assumed responsibility for the spacecraft's communications and navigation systems. Grissom had a degree in mechanical engineering, so he became responsible for the attitude control systems. Glenn had experience flying many types of aircraft, so he oversaw the cockpit layout. Schirra drew responsibility for the life support systems and the
pressure suits. Drawing on his experience as a Naval officer, Shepard looked after the tracking network and liaised with the Navy on recovery operations. Cooper and Slayton were Air Force officers with engineering backgrounds, so they dealt with the
Redstone Arsenal and
Convair, who built the
Redstone and
Atlas boosters used by Project Mercury. The astronauts affected the design of the Mercury spacecraft in significant ways, insisting that a window be installed, and pressing for a greater degree of astronaut autonomy in flying the spacecraft. The astronauts remained on active duty as military officers, and were paid according to their
rank. To supplement their travel, they were provided a $9
per diem () for day trips, and a $12
per diem () for overnight trips, which did not cover the cost of hotels and restaurant meals. As a result, astronauts avoided spending money while traveling, as they were personally responsible for costs over their allotted
per diem. An important component of their income was monthly flight pay, which ranged from $190 to $245 (equivalent to $ to $ in ). The astronauts traveled to frequent meetings around the country on commercial flights, which forced them to earn their flight pay on weekends. Grissom and Slayton regularly drove to
Langley Air Force Base, and attempted to fly the required four hours a month, but had to compete for
T-33 aircraft with colonels and generals. Cooper traveled to
McGhee Tyson Air National Guard Base in
Tennessee, where a friend let him fly higher-performance F-104B jets. This came up when Cooper had lunch with
William Hines, a reporter for
The Washington Star, and was duly reported in the paper. Cooper then discussed the issue with
Congressman James G. Fulton. The matter was taken up by the
House Committee on Science and Astronautics. Within weeks the astronauts were given priority access to USAF T-33s, F-102s and F-106s at Langley. In 1962, NASA acquired a fleet of
T-38s for their use. After
General Motors executive
Ed Cole presented Shepard with a brand-new
Chevrolet Corvette,
Jim Rathmann, a race car driver who won the
Indianapolis 500 in 1960 and who was a Chevrolet dealer in
Melbourne, Florida, convinced Cole to turn this into an ongoing marketing campaign. Henceforth, astronauts were able to lease new Corvettes for a dollar a year. All of the Mercury Seven but Glenn took up the offer. Cooper, Grissom and Shepard were soon racing their Corvettes around Cape Canaveral, with the military and local police ignoring their exploits. From a marketing perspective, it was very successful, and helped the highly priced Corvette become established as a desirable brand. The Mercury astronauts established the style and appearance of astronauts. "I soon learned",
Gene Kranz later recalled, "if you saw someone wearing a short-sleeved
Ban-Lon shirt and
aviator sunglasses, you were looking at an astronaut." While busy with the intense training for their flights, they also drank and partied. Some had affairs with the female
groupies that flocked around them. NASA actively sought to protect the astronauts and the agency from negative publicity and maintain an image of "clean-cut, all-American boy[s]." The seven Mercury astronauts agreed to share equally any proceeds from interviews regardless of who flew first. They were forbidden from being compensated for radio or television appearances, or endorsing commercial products, but were allowed to sell their personal stories. In August 1959, they hired an agent,
C. Leo DeOrsey, and he negotiated an exclusive contract with
Life magazine on behalf of the astronauts for $500,000 () in exchange for exclusive access to their private lives, homes, and families. The money was used as life insurance. Between August, 1959, and May 15, 1963, they each received $71,428.71 (). Their official spokesman from 1959 to 1963 was NASA's public affairs officer, USAF Lieutenant Colonel
John "Shorty" Powers, who as a result became known in the press as the "eighth astronaut". As additional groups of astronauts were selected in the 1960s, the Mercury Seven remained in control of management decisions. The Astronaut Office, which was headed by Shepard, was one of three divisions in the Directorate of Flight Crew Operations, which was headed by Slayton. Since twenty-six of the first thirty astronauts were military personnel, the Astronaut Office had a military character, although few of the astronauts wore their uniforms even as much as once a year. There was a bi-weekly military-style pilots' meeting at which activities planned for the upcoming two weeks would be discussed. A "
captain's mast" was held afterwards to adjudicate disputes. Shepard ran the Astronaut Office on a "rank has its privileges" basis. The Mercury and 1962 astronauts had their own allocated parking spaces outside Building 4 at
Johnson Space Center, while astronauts from later groups had to compete for the remaining spaces allotted to astronauts. While Shepard prohibited junior astronauts from receiving gifts and consulting or teaching part-time, he remained vice president and part owner of the Baytown National Bank in Houston, and devoted much of his time to it. Training was always ungraded; the Mercury astronauts had nothing to gain and much to lose from being objectively compared to the newer classes, as it could threaten their privileged status, managerial control, and priority for flight assignments. The astronaut's attendance at their training events was voluntary. The character of the Astronaut Office would only change after Mercury astronauts retired in the 1970s, and control passed to
George Abbey. The Mercury Seven wrote first-hand accounts of their selection and preparation for the Mercury missions in the 1962 book
We Seven. In 1979
Tom Wolfe published a less sanitized version of their story in
The Right Stuff. Wolfe's book was the basis for the 1983
film of the same name directed by
Philip Kaufman, and the 2020
TV series of the same name. Together with
Betty Grissom, Gus Grissom's widow, in 1984 the Mercury astronauts founded the Mercury Seven Foundation, which raises money to provide college scholarships to science and engineering students. It was renamed the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation in 1995. Shepard was elected its first president and chairman, positions which he held until October 1997, when he was succeeded by Jim Lovell.
Scott,
Virgil,
Gordon,
John, and
Alan Tracy from
Gerry Anderson's television series
Thunderbirds were named in honor of the astronauts Carpenter, Grissom, Cooper, Glenn, and Shepherd. == Awards and honors ==