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Note to Editors: To request a photograph
of George Hopson, contact Deidre Stalnaker at 205/348-3051, staln001@bama.ua.edu
or Mary Wymer, 205/348-6444.
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - George Hopson doesn’t consider himself
a rocket scientist. The University of Alabama graduate claims to
be “just a mechanical engineer who likes to analyze how things
work.” And he’s been doing just that for 40 years at
NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville.
Those four decades of contributions to America’s space program
were recognized recently when Hopson, manager of the Space Shuttle
Main Engine Project at the Marshall Center, accepted NASA’s
Distinguished Service Medal, the highest honor NASA confers.
The Distinguished Service Medal is awarded to those who, by distinguished
service or courage, have made a personal contribution to the NASA
mission.
Hopson began his engineering career in UA’s College
of Engineering. In 1950, he completed his bachelor’s degree
in mechanical engineering and received his commission as a second
lieutenant in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. He was awarded a
Bronze Star for his service in a combat engineering battalion during
the Korean War. After the war, Hopson returned to UA to complete
his master’s degree in mechanical engineering.
In 1954, he began working as a propulsion engineer for General
Dynamics Corp. in Fort Worth, Texas. “When I began working
for General Dynamics, they gave me a choice: propulsion or structures.
I chose propulsion because I didn’t want to work at a drafting
board all day,” Hopson said.
Hopson joined NASA’s Marshall team as chief of the Fluid
and Thermal Systems Branch in the Propulsion Division, part of the
Center’s former Astronautics Laboratory, in 1962. He later
served as chief of the Engineering Analysis Division of the Structures
and Propulsion Laboratory.
Hopson’s contributions to America’s space program include
work on the country’s first space station, Skylab; the world’s
first reusable spaceship, the Space Shuttle; and the International
Space Station.
At 75, Hopson could easily leave NASA behind to be a “gentleman
farmer” on his nearby farm. Instead, five days a week he heads
for his sixth-floor Marshall Center office to deal with a $300 million
project and to oversee more than 100 civil service and 1,800 contractor
employees.
Hopson is responsible for the design, manufacture and operation
of the Space Shuttle Main Engine, the most advanced liquid-fueled
rocket engine ever built. His responsibilities include maintaining
an inventory of flight-ready engines, as well as design, development,
production and implementation of upgrades to the Shuttle’s
engines to increase safety and reliability of the Shuttle system.
Hopson displays an enthusiasm for engineering that some people
half his age might have a hard time matching. He admits he likes
the analytical part of his job best. “Everyday brings something
different, a new challenge,” Hopson said.
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