Space Shuttle Columbia STS-3 Landing — Original Kodak Photograph, White Sands View Watchlist >
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Lot # Nasa90
System ID # 29274990
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Space Shuttle Columbia STS-3 Landing — Original Kodak Color Photograph, White Sands, 1982
The wheels are already down. Dust trails the rear gear across the gypsum as Columbia rolls out on Northrup Strip, White Sands Missile Range — the only Space Shuttle landing ever made in New Mexico, and the only one ever made at White Sands, period. The fuselage carries the early-program markings in full: "Columbia" lettered forward of the cargo bay, the United States wordmark and American flag aft, the NASA worm logo near the OMS pods. Desert mountains rise behind the orbiter, pale and flat under a high-pressure sky. This is STS-3, March 30, 1982.
The print is an original color photograph on Kodak photographic paper — the verso carries the repeating "THIS PAPER MANUFACTURED BY KODAK" watermark characteristic of period prints. No NASA photo number, agency stamp, or press caption appears on the verso, which distinguishes this from the standard press-release photographs NASA distributed through its public affairs offices.
History
STS-3 launched from Kennedy Space Center on March 22, 1982, with Commander Jack R. Lousma and Pilot C. Gordon Fullerton aboard. Columbia had been expected to land at Edwards Air Force Base in California, but wet lakebed conditions there made that landing impossible. NASA activated White Sands as its alternate site — a contingency that had never been exercised with an actual orbiter. High winds at White Sands delayed the landing by a day, extending the mission to just over eight days. When Columbia finally touched down on Runway 17 at Northrup Strip on March 30, it rolled more than 13,000 feet across the gypsum before stopping. One week later, on April 6, 1982, the orbiter departed White Sands atop Shuttle Carrier Aircraft 905, a modified Boeing 747, kicking up a dramatic cloud of white gypsum dust on takeoff. No Space Shuttle ever landed at White Sands again. The strip was later renamed White Sands Space Harbor, and STS-3 remained its sole Shuttle landing.
Significance & Rarity
NASA press photographs from the Shuttle program are plentiful — the agency distributed thousands of prints through its public affairs network, each stamped with a photo number, mission identifier, and caption on the verso. This print carries none of those markings. Printed on Kodak paper with no agency attribution, it reads as an internal or on-site record rather than a distributed release photograph, placing its origin closer to the recovery operation itself than to the NASA press office. For collectors focused on the Shuttle program, New Mexico space history, or White Sands documentation, STS-3 material of this character — unmarked, non-press-release, showing the orbiter on the gypsum — represents a genuinely narrow category of surviving material. The White Sands landing was a one-time event; photographs of it that circulated outside the standard distribution system are correspondingly uncommon.
CONDITION
Good. The print shows a warm overall tonal shift consistent with age and a faint horizontal handling crease across the lower third. Minor edge toning and a small spot of foxing to the upper-right margin of the verso. Surface is intact with no major creasing or losses.
DIMENSIONS / SPECIFICATIONS
- 8 1/2" × 11"
- Medium: Color photograph on Kodak paper
- Subject: Space Shuttle Columbia, lakebed landing, White Sands Missile Range
- Verso: "THIS PAPER MANUFACTURED BY KODAK" repeating watermark; no NASA stamp, photo number, or caption present