© Mark Ollig
Powell
F. Sams provided his expertise during the time of NASA’s Space Shuttle program.
I
was fortunate to speak with his son, Jon, who lives in Winsted and works at the
Howard Lake Waverly-Winsted high school.
Jon’s
family is originally from West Virginia, near the Ohio River. He was born in
Parkersburg, WV, and moved to Minnesota in 1958 when he was seven years old.
His
father served as a pilot during the Korean War. One of the things that greatly
bothered him was seeing soldiers suffering dysentery and other ailments caused
by eating ill-prepared and improperly stored foods.
Powell
wanted to improve how the government supplied the military with food. So not
long after returning from Korea, he moved to Minnesota and began working as a
nutritional research and development engineer at the Minneapolis-based
Pillsbury Company.
The
Pillsbury Company processed wheat grain into baking flour, packaged biscuit
dough, and produced other food-related products.
At
the start of the 1960s, Pillsbury Company wanted to diversify from the baking flour
market, and so the company spent a year producing a solid “space food cube” to
be used by NASA for their astronauts.
Jon
sometimes found himself the “guinea pig” for evaluating the taste and quality
of repackaged brownies, M&M’s, and other food items his father would bring
home from the lab.
He
filled out answers to specific questions about each packaged “space food” item
on a typed paper provided by his father, who would then check the answers in
the lab and make any needed quality adjustments.
On
May 24, 1962, Mercury-Atlas astronaut Scott Carpenter would become the 6th
human to fly in space. NASA included some of the Pillsbury Company’s space food
cubes in his Aurora 7 spacecraft.
While
working for the Pillsbury Company, Powell and two others filed for a US Patent on
July 15, 1971, for their newly-devised method for safely cooking food products
packaged inside a specially sealed flexible pouch.
Jon
told me his father's nickname for this creation is the “Pillsbury Pouch.”
Method
For Heat Processing Food Products Packaged in Flexible Containers is the name of
US Patent 3,769,028. Powell F. Sams is one of three names listed as inventors
on this patent granted on Oct. 30, 1973.
One
of the objectives written in the patent states the invention prevents the flexible
mylar polyester pouch from bursting during cooking or baking.
You
can view his US Patent at https://bit.ly/3lsBjMr.
Apollo
17 was launched from the NASA John F. Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Dec.
7, 1972, and would be the last mission of the NASA Apollo space program.
The
same year, NASA would select Rockwell North American (now Boeing) as the prime
contractor for their new Space Shuttle program.
Powell
learned the folks at NASA were experiencing problems with the Space Shuttle Food
Feeding System, so he traveled to work in the research laboratory at Boeing.
Looking
to ensure the absolute safety of prepackaged foods for spaceflight, NASA
partnered with the Pillsbury Company to create a new, systematic approach to
quality control.
Powell's
US Patent says his invention embodies a “retort and control system” which is
lightweight and flexible. The official NASA name for the Pillsbury Pouch is the
Retort Pouch.
The
Retort Pouch protects the MRE (Meal, Ready-to-Eat) contents from chemical,
physical, and biological hazards during space missions, thus protecting the
astronaut’s health, as well.
The
food safety standards NASA used are today known as Hazard Analysis and Critical
Control Points (HACCP), an industry-standard that benefits consumers worldwide
by keeping food free from a wide range of potential hazards.
Jon
spoke of his time at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, TX, where his father
worked on food nutritional research and development for the Space Shuttle astronauts.
Each astronaut had their unique dietary requirements, and Powell’s work more or
less redesigned the way astronauts ate when they were in outer space.
Today,
Jon has one of the largest personally autographed and framed Space Shuttle
photograph collections, along with other space memorabilia.
One
of the framed photographs to his father, signed by the STS-32 Space Shuttle
Columbia crew, says, “Thanks For Feeding Us All So Well At All Hours.”
Jon
told me how he and his father watched many “Star Trek” episodes during its
original series days back in the 1960s, which caught my attention. As my
readers know, I am a fan of Star Trek, so we spoke at length about it.
Jon
has hundreds of space-related articles, papers, and approximately 25 framed
photographs the astronauts and crew personally signed from many space shuttle
missions.
Of
the signed and framed photos, the following is a partial listing with the Space
Transportation System (STS) mission number, shuttle name, and launch date:
STS-26 Discovery, Sept. 29, 1988.
STS-27 Atlantis, Dec. 2, 1988.
STS-28 Columbia, Aug. 8, 1989.
STS-29 Discovery, March 13, 1989.
STS-31 Discovery, Apr. 24, 1990.
STS-32 Columbia, Jan. 9, 1990.
STS-33 Discovery, Nov 22, 1989.
STS-34 Atlantis, Oct. 18, 1989.
STS-35 Columbia, Dec. 2, 1990.
STS-36 Atlantis, Feb. 28, 1990.
STS-37 Atlantis, Apr. 5, 1991.
STS-39 Discovery, Apr. 28, 1991.
STS-41 Discovery, Oct. 6, 1990.
STS-42 Discovery, Jan. 22, 1992.
STS-43 Atlantis, Aug. 2, 1991.
STS-44 Atlantis, Nov. 24, 1991.
STS-48 Discovery, Sept. 12, 1991.
STS-49 Endeavour, May 7, 1992.
Jon
has also preserved under glass the slide rule his father used to complete
mathematical computations while working with NASA.
Besides
Jon's interest in the NASA space program, he is an avid bird watcher and cares
for his 20 bird feeders.
He
also enjoyed playing golf with his father.
Jon's
father is a member of 1988 Who's Who in America, a biographical dictionary of
notable men and women in the United States. He also wrote two books.
For
25 years, Powell Sams worked at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, TX,
retiring in 1991.
Powell
Frances Sams passed away in 2008 but left a rich history of memories, personal service,
and notable contributions to NASA’s Space Shuttle Program.
STS-27 Atlantis, Dec. 2, 1988.
STS-28 Columbia, Aug. 8, 1989.
STS-29 Discovery, March 13, 1989.
STS-31 Discovery, Apr. 24, 1990.
STS-32 Columbia, Jan. 9, 1990.
STS-33 Discovery, Nov 22, 1989.
STS-34 Atlantis, Oct. 18, 1989.
STS-35 Columbia, Dec. 2, 1990.
STS-36 Atlantis, Feb. 28, 1990.
STS-37 Atlantis, Apr. 5, 1991.
STS-39 Discovery, Apr. 28, 1991.
STS-41 Discovery, Oct. 6, 1990.
STS-42 Discovery, Jan. 22, 1992.
STS-43 Atlantis, Aug. 2, 1991.
STS-44 Atlantis, Nov. 24, 1991.
STS-48 Discovery, Sept. 12, 1991.
STS-49 Endeavour, May 7, 1992.
Between the first launch on April 12, 1981, and the final landing
on July 21, 2011, NASA's space shuttle fleet of Columbia,
Challenger, Discovery, Atlantis, and Endeavour flew 135 missions.