You can look at this a few different ways. The USS Arizona and the Twin Towers are more "war memorials" than they are anything else.......
The Apollo 1 Capsule, Challenger, etc, are all wreckage from accidents.
While the warbird industry makes a fair amount of money from restoration of wrecked aircraft in which people have gotten killed, and more money is made fromt hose aircraft at airshows (which never seems to trickle down to the aircraft owners, but someone makes something) and there never seems to be a shortage of pilots willing to sit in the seat where the last person there died............. Restoration to flight seems somewhat different to me than making a memorial out of scrap iron. It also seems that those who knew the pilot, want to put it out of their minds by glossing over it, ignoring what may have caused the accident "out of respect to the pilot and his family, then trying to restore the airplane to further remove the tragedy that occurred........ If you don't know the pilot, then, the crash becomes more of a curosity.
Memorials seem to ignore what the dead person went through and only seem to try to glorify it in some way. Watch Apollo 13 the movie, there is a split second (I recall) on the Apollo 1 fire where a glove comes near the window as burns, trying to get out. I think that 5 seconds of film is a better memorial than anything you can do with the wreckage.
If you want to see Apollo Capsules, there a lot of them out there. I saw Apollo 15 at the USAFM in Dayton yesterday. There isn't a real need for another "restored" Apollo Capsule in a museum. There were people walking by it who never looked at it. They didn't have a clue what it was, where it went, or what it did. Look at one close, its small, cramped and you had to live in there for 2 weeks with 2 other guys. Its not too darn comfortable, built by the lowest bidder, complex, crude (by today's standards) and you also had to fly it to the moon and come home.
In Sept 1994, USAir Flight 427 screwed itself into the ground (no better term since they never really figured out what happened) in Pittsburgh. My father had been a mechanic for USAir for 34 years and spent the last 10+ year working on B737s. He was asked to look at it to work on the reassembly. He came home the first night and told me "I worked on those planes for years and the only part I could identify was the tires...." Not much left, not anything that "tourists" would want to see............
I saw the "Titanic" exhibit in Chicago one year on the way to OSH. There were a lot of items picked off the bottom of the Ocean, and even a piece of steel probably 8' X 20' or so. You know, it was all simply a bunch of junk and garage sale items as far as I was concerned. It was all hyped up and didn't reach the levels the promoters claimed it would.... What got me about the Titanic was something that Robert Ballard wrote when he went to it. He said he saw a lot of pairs of shoes, near each other. Then he realized that lying on the seabed were shoes that the dead had been wearing and their bodies had decomposed, leaving shoes (which for some reason, survived). Every time he saw 2 shoes, he knew that he was looking at a place where there had been a body.............
There is no way to present wreckage of the spacecraft in a dignified manner that can convey any message. Maybe to make it popular, its time to display the autopsy photos of the charred remains of the Astronauts or for Shuttles, photos of pieces of the bodies. Probably the biggest might be finger sized, I'm not sure how that would help.
I know our government well enough to know that displaying this wreckage may well hurt future funding for space exploration, and cost some of them their jobs, hence maybe its not a good idea to do it............ Nothing can be gained from displaying the wreckage
That capsule has been locked away for 40 years, let it stay and let the dead rest in peace......
Mark H
_________________ Fly safe or you get to meet me .......
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