Alex McCool

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Alex McCool Jr.
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Alex McCool Jr.

Alex A. McCool Jr., manager of the Space Shuttle Projects Office at the NASA George C. Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. During his career, McCool contributed to several space developments including Skylab and the Space Shuttle program.

After graduating from high school in Florida in 1942, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy and became a first class petty officer and machinist mate. He received his bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette (then named the University of Southwestern Louisiana). He earned a master's degree in fluid mechanics from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.

After college, McCool first went to work for the Army Corps of Engineers, which assigned him to work on hydraulics projects in Mississippi. Soon afterward, he began his career in rocket development in 1954 at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, working on the design of the Redstone Jupiter rocket. In 1960 he joined NASA.

As a charter member of the Marshall Center, McCool was instrumental in the design of the propulsion systems for the Saturn launch vehicles that propelled Project Apollo to the Moon and directed project engineering for Skylab, the first space science laboratory.

McCool also served as director of the Structures and Propulsion Laboratory at Marshall during the design of the Space Shuttle’s propulsion elements. He played a leadership role in engineering the shuttle’s main engine and solid rocket boosters.[1]

McCool is the recipient of several awards, including the Presidential Rank of Meritorious Executive from President George W. Bush in 1991, as well as the NASA Distinguished Service Medal, NASA Exceptional Achievement Medal, Outstanding Leadership Medal and the National Space Club's 2002 Astronautics Engineer Award.

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