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DNA From Star Trek’s Original Doctor Will Ride to the Final Frontier

 A memorial spaceflight paying tribute to the cast and crew of the original  Star Trek TV show has just added another star to the passenger list. DeForest Kelley  who played Leonard  Bones McCoy the Starship Enterprises physician  will be represented by a thimble sized sample of DNA on next years  Enterprise Flight. Kelley passed away in 1999 at the age of 79 but the DNA was extracted from a hair sample that was preserved after his death.






The Enterprise Flight organized by Houston based Celestis will send capsules containing cremated remains and DNA from dozens of people into deep space late this year or early next year. Celestis payload is due to ride on the Centaur upper stage for the first launch of United Launch Alliances Vulcan rocket. Yes Spock fans   its a Vulcan. The prime directive for the Vulcan launch is to send Astrobotics Peregrine lander to the lunar surface for a NASA supported mission but after the Centaur has done its job it will go into a  graveyard orbit around the sun along with the capsules packed aboard the spacecraft.


In addition to Kelley, the Star Trek personages represented on the flight include Nichelle Nichols (who played Lieutenant Uhur James Doohan who played Scotty, the starship chief engineer Majel Barrett Roddenberry Nurse Chapel series creator Gene Roddenberry and visual effects wizard Douglas Trumbull. Nichols ashes and DNA were added to Celestis’ manifest just a couple of weeks ago.


Charles Chafer co founder and CEO of Celestis, took note of the fact that today is celebrated as Star Trek Day.  Its particularly notable that we announce DeForest Kelleys addition to our Enterprise Flight on Star Trek Day he said in a news release.  No mission to deep space would be complete without a ships doctor. When Kelley died all those years ago his wife Carolyn asked a family friend and caregiver named Kris M. Smith to cut off a couple of locks of the actors hair as keepsakes. Carolyn herself passed away in 2004 but Smith held onto the hair sample. This year as news of the Enterprise Flight spread Smith reached out via a mutual contact and offered to give the sample to Celestis for DNA extraction and inclusion on the flight.


 I donated the lock of hair so De could join his shipmates on their eternal journey into interstellar space. The mission just did not feel complete without Dr. McCoy aboard Smith said.  I think De would have loved to  go hopping galaxies again with his cast and crewmates. So   second star to the right and straight on  til morning De! Loving you was easier than anything we will ever do again. 

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