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‘It was a dream of his:’ Cremated remains of 47 people to launch into space from Florida

3-day memorial held in Brevard County prior to launch

BREVARD COUNTY, Fla. – The cremated remains of 47 people from five countries are set to launch from the Space Coast on Wednesday.

The company, Celestis, said the remains will be attached to a telecommunications satellite, which is expected to orbit for about a decade. Once the satellite is decommissioned, the contents are expected to burn upon re-entry into the Earth’s atmosphere.

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Celestis was created by Charles Chafer in the 1990s and credits space innovations for allowing the company to increase their amount of launches from one flight during a seven-year period, to five scheduled launches set to take place within the next 14 months.

“I’d like to say that there aren’t any other funerals or memorial services that have as much cheering and high fiving as we do when that rocket rocket lifts off,” Chafer said.

The company said their packages start at about $5,000.

On Monday, 160 people from across the world arrived in Brevard County to take part in a three-day memorial for their loved ones, leading up to the launch Wednesday afternoon.

Michael Dufton said his mother trained with NASA about 60 years ago as part of the first all-female Mercury Mission crew, which was eventually cancelled due to concerns over women in space.

“She was invited to participate in that, and that was one of her greatest regrets in life — that she never got to go to outer space,” Dufton said.

“At the end of 10 years, it will eventually return to the atmosphere as a shooting star along with all those on board.”

Carrying a framed picture of her son Travis, who passed away a year ago, Melissa Casey arrived from Ohio to share her son’s story with other families whose loved ones will orbit in space together.

“He wanted to be cremated and sent to space. It was a dream of his,” Casey said. “He is going to be so proud to be up there, hanging out with all these other families and watching over all of us.”

The company provides families with GPS data for the satellite, so they know when their loved one is passing in the sky above them.


About the Author
Troy Campbell headshot

Troy graduated from California State University Northridge with a Bachelor's Degree in Communication. He has reported on Mexican drug cartel violence on the El Paso/ Juarez border, nuclear testing facilities at the Idaho National Laboratory and severe Winter weather in Michigan.

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