1. Headline
  1. Headline
Image: Funeral Of Columbia Astronaut Michael Anderson
Horse-drawn caissons carry the casket of astronaut Lt. Col. Michael P. Anderson during a full honor funeral service Friday at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.

Shuttle crew member Michael P. Anderson had tried to prepare his daughters for his darkest hour, should it come aboard the Columbia. On Friday, one hugging a teddy bear, they helped lay him to rest.

Anderson, who died Feb. 1, was buried in Arlington National Cemetery a few steps from the grave of Dick Scobee, the commander of the shuttle Challenger, which exploded 17 years earlier.

A blustery wind whipped the more than 100 mourners at the hilltop grave site, where Anderson, 43, was given full military honors.

An Air Force lieutenant colonel and pilot, he had tried to prepare those close to him for this moment.

“If this thing doesn’t come out right, don’t worry about me; I’m just going on higher,” Anderson is said to have told his minister just before leaving on his second and final visit to space aboard Columbia.

And before blasting off on the flight, he tried to warn Kaycee, 9, and Sydney, 13, of “all the things that could happen,” mother-in-law Mabel Hawkins told The Columbian newspaper of Vancouver, Wash.

With official funeral duties over and a visit with President and Laura Bush still ahead, the graveside service became personal.

One by one, a dozen family members transferred single red roses from their own fingertips to the top of Anderson’s silvery casket.

Anderson had craved his job since childhood in Spokane, Wash. His sense of wonder took him from there to the University of Washington and Creighton University and pilot training in the Air Force.

By the time NASA selected Anderson in 1994 to train as one of its few black astronauts, he had become an instructor pilot and tactics officer in the 380 Refueling Wing at Plattsburgh Air Force Base.

He visited the Mir space station in 1998 and afterward declared to his wife, Sandra: “I’m a lifer. I want to go back.”

  1. More from TODAY.com
    1. Jersey Shore to celebrate re-opening 7 months after Sandy

      Seven months after being devastated by the worst storm in New Jersey history, most of the beaches and boardwalks of the Je...

    2. Man finds first Superman comic stuffed in wall
    3. Girl, 14, rocks Internet with Van Halen guitar solo
    4. One-of-a-kind African school gives girls 'Right to Dream'
    5. Cops stand in for fallen officer at daughter's kindergarten graduation

Mourners wiped away tears as they watched Air Force and NASA officials carry out their official burial duties.

A KC-135 Stratotanker — refueling boom extended — overflew the site in a tribute to Anderson, the same model he piloted as an instructor before taking his NASA assignment in 1995.

Air Force Secretary James G. Roche and NASA Administrator Sean O’Keefe presented Anderson’s widow, Sandra, with the Defense Distinguished Service and the NASA Space Flight medals.

Out of the media’s earshot, Lt. Col Derek Green delivered a brief eulogy, and Chaplain Col. Richard Hum conducted a short graveside service.

A seven-member firing party rendered a “volley of three” shots in tribute, followed by the sounding of “Taps.”

Air Force Space Command Gen. Lance W. Lord knelt to present Anderson’s widow, Sandra, and parents, Barbara and Bobbie, with flags that had draped the caskets.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Discuss:

Discussion comments

,

Most active discussions

  1. votes comments
  2. votes comments
  3. votes comments
  4. votes comments

More on TODAY.com

None
  1. Jersey Shore to celebrate re-opening 7 months after Sandy

    Seven months after being devastated by the worst storm in New Jersey history, most of the beaches and boardwalks of the Jersey Shore are back and open for business in time for Memorial Day weekend.

    5/23/2013 10:00:28 PM +00:00 2013-05-23T22:00:28
  2. TODAY visits the Jersey Shore: A behind-the-scenes look
  3. RSVP: TODAY at the Jersey Shore
  4. Mel Evans / AP
None
  1. Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

    Boy Scouts vote to lift ban on gay youth

    5/24/2013 1:51:01 AM +00:00 2013-05-24T01:51:01
None
  1. Arias jury hung on penalty phase

    Jurors in the high-profile Jodi Arias trial on Thursday failed to reach agreement over whether she should receive the death penalty for killing her ex-boyfriend.

    5/23/2013 11:42:40 PM +00:00 2013-05-23T23:42:40
None
  1. NBC News

    Man finds first Superman comic stuffed in wall

    5/23/2013 10:03:08 PM +00:00 2013-05-23T22:03:08
None
  1. YouTube

    Girl, 14, rocks Internet with Van Halen guitar solo

    5/23/2013 9:06:52 PM +00:00 2013-05-23T21:06:52