Background
Veach was born September 18, 1944, in Chicago, Illinois, but considered Honolulu, Hawaii, to be his hometown.
Astronaut fighter pilot officer
Veach was born September 18, 1944, in Chicago, Illinois, but considered Honolulu, Hawaii, to be his hometown.
1962: Graduated from Punahou School, Honolulu, Hawaii
1966: Received a Bachelor of Science degree in Engineering Management from the.
He enjoyed surfing, bicycling, reading and activities with his family. He was also known as Lacy Veach. Veach was commissioned in the United States Air Force upon graduation from the United States Air Force Academy.
Over the next 14 years, he served as a United States Air Force fighter pilot, flying the F-100 Super Sabre, the General Dynamics F-111, and the F-105 Thunderchief, on assignments in the United States, Europe, and the Far East, including a 275-mission combat tour in the Republic of Vietnam.
Veach left active duty in 1981, but continued to fly fighters as an F-16 Fighting Falcon pilot with the Texas Air National Guard. His name still adorns the museum display F-16 Fighting Falcon just inside the front gate of the Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base in Houston Texas.
He had logged over 5,000 flying hours. Veach came to work for National Aeronautics and Space Administration in January 1982 as an engineer and research pilot at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas.
His primary duty was as an instructor pilot in the Shuttle Training Aircraft, the highly modified Gulfstream II used to train astronaut pilots to land the Space Shuttle.
Veach was selected as an astronaut candidate in May 1984, and became an astronaut in June 1985. He held a variety of technical assignments, and had flown as a mission specialist on two Space Shuttle missions, STS-39 in 1991 and STS-52 in 1992. He had logged 436.3 hours in space.
Most recently, Lacy had worked as the lead astronaut for the development and operation of robotics for the International Space Station.
On STS-39, Veach was responsible for operating a group of instruments which included an ultraviolet astronomical camera, an x-ray telescope, and a liquid helium-cooled infrared telescope which performed landmark observations of the Earth"s atmosphere and the Aurora Australis (the Southern Lights). The 8-day unclassified Department of Defense mission aboard the Orbiter Discovery launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on April 28, 1991, and landed at Kennedy on May 6, 1991.
STS-52 was a 10-day mission aboard the Orbiter Columbia during which the crew successfully deployed the Laser Geodynamic Satellite (LAGEOS), a joint Italian-American project They also operated the first United States. Microgravity Payload (USMP) with French and American experiments.
Veach was the primary Remote Manipulator System (Rated Maximum Sinusoidal) operator on the mission, supporting the initial flight tests of the Canadian-built Space Vision System (SVS).
STS-52 launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on October 22, 1992, and landed at Kennedy on November 1, 1992. Lacy Veach died in Houston, Texas, on October 3, 1995, of cancer. He is interred at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaii.
In 1976 and 1977, he was a member of the United States Air Force Air Demonstration Squadron, the Thunderbirds, flying the T-38 Talon.