Anthony Llewellyn

John Anthony Llewellyn (22 April 1933 – 2 July 2013), was a Welsh-born American scientist and a former NASA astronaut candidate.[1]

John Anthony Llewellyn
Born(1933-04-22)April 22, 1933
Cardiff, Wales
Died2 July 2013(2013-07-02) (aged 80)
Nationalityborn British, naturalised American
Space career
NASA Astronaut Candidate
Selection1967 NASA Group
MissionsNone, resigned before completing initial training

Biography

Llewellyn was born April 22, 1933, in Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom, and graduated from Cardiff High School in 1949. He received his BSc degree from University College, Cardiff in 1955 and went on to achieve his PhD degree in chemistry in 1958. He married Valerie Mya Davies-Jones, and they had three children.[2]

Post-education

After the award of his doctorate, Llewellyn moved to Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and served as a post-doctoral fellow at the National Research Council. In 1960, he went to Florida State University as a research associate in the Chemistry Department and was subsequently appointed Assistant Professor. In 1964, he was jointly appointed Associate Professor in both the School of Engineering Science and the Department of Chemistry.[2]

Diving

Having been taught to dive by aquanaut Jacques Cousteau, Llewellyn served as training director for Florida State University's diver training program.[1] This was one of the first scuba diving certification programs in the United States. Among those he certified was sixteen year old E. Lee Spence, who received his certification on 10 July 1964. Spence went on to become one of the pioneers of underwater archaeology. Llewellyn's diving gave him experience in the feeling of weightlessness, which helped prepare him for his later training as an astronaut.

NASA selection

Llewellyn was selected as a scientist-astronaut by NASA in August 1967.[3] He participated in flight training as part of NASA Astronaut Group 6; however, he dropped out of flight school and resigned from NASA in September 1968.[4][2] Llewellyn needed to learn to fly jets, and was not able to fly the jet with the cockpit blacked out.[1]

Post-NASA experience

While with the University of South Florida's Department of Chemical Engineering, Llewellyn also served as Director of the College of Engineering's computing department, and later as University Director of Academic Computing, where he helped initiate USF's programs in High-Performance Computing and electronic and distance learning. In 2007, he retired from the directorship position and served as Professor Emeritus in the Department of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering until his death. His research interests included the development of impedance-based sensor measurement methods and instrumentation for invivo monitoring of tissue after the application of an electric field mediated plasmid delivery protocol (IEEE Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation 16(5): 1348–1355. His current work was presented at the 2010 American Society for Gene and Cell Therapy and he was an invited session leader at the 2010 Gordon Conference in Bioelectrochemistry.

Death

Llewellyn died on July 2, 2013 after suffering a stroke.[1][5]

Notes

  1. Nathan Bevan. "Wales' heroic would-be moon-shot astronaut dies, aged 80". Wales Online. Retrieved 2013-07-15.
  2. "Anthony Llewellyn NASA Biography". NASA. Retrieved January 3, 2018.
  3. "Professor at FSU Named Astronaut". Orlando Evening Star. Orlando, Florida. August 9, 1967. p. 34 via Newspapers.com.
  4. Donald K Slayton with Michael Cassutt Deke!. 1994, ISBN 0-312-85918-X
  5. "Dr. John Anthony "Tony" LLEWELLYN". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved 15 July 2013.

Further reading

Llewellyn's career is chronicled in the book "NASA's Scientist-Astronauts" by David Shayler and Colin Burgess.

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