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‘He had the weight of Canada on his shoulders’: An oral history of Canada’s first trip to space, 40 years later

Marc Garneau flew aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger on Oct. 5, 1984, becoming the first Canadian in space. This is the story of that flight, told by those who lived it.

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Marc Garneau waves to photographers as he leaves the Operations and Checkout Building on Nov. 30, 2000 for a trip to Kennedy Space Center and a liftoff on the space shuttle Endeavour in Cape Canaveral, Fla. 


By 1984, Canada’s space industry was picking up steam.

The country had launched its first satellite, Alouette 1, in 1962. In 1974, NASA commissioned Canada to design and build a robotic arm — later named the Canadarm — that would fly on the space shuttle. By 1981, the Canadarm flew for the first time.

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Mark Colley

Mark Colley is a ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½-based general assignment reporter for the Star. Reach him via email: mcolley@thestar.ca

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