When Navy
Commander Christopher Orwoll began planning a trip for his family to the Kansas
Cosmosphere and Space Center in Hutchinson, he was intending to further his
hobby. Instead, Orwoll discovered a new profession.
The former
commanding officer of the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps and professor of
naval science at the University of Kansas, Orwoll was named the new president
and CEO of the Cosmosphere last month after his predecessor, Jeff Ollenburger
resigned in October. Ollenburger had held the position since 2002, replacing
Cosmosphere co-founder Max Ary.
Billed as
having a U.S. space artifact collection second only to the National Air and Space
Museum and the largest collection of Russian space artifacts outside of Moscow,
the Kansas Cosmosphere gained international attention for its restoration of
the Apollo 13 command module Odyssey and astronaut Gus Grissom's Liberty Bell 7
Mercury spacecraft. The latter was raised from the ocean floor where it had sat
for nearly 40 years as part of an expedition co-led by the museum. Both
spacecraft are now on display at the Cosmosphere.
Orwoll, who
previously served as the executive officer of the USS Dolphin, the world's
deepest diving submarine, spoke with collectSPACE.com recently, after his
first week at the Cosmosphere's helm.
collectSPACE (cS): What
led you to consider applying for the leadership of a space history museum?
Chris Orwoll (CO): Part
of that is easy, just the fact of where I grew up. I grew up in Downey,
obviously with the connection there with North American Aviation / North
American Rockwell. I can show you pictures of myself as a six year old shaking
hands with astronauts who were there for their tours following their missions.
So I have always kind of been a space nut, and have kind of done this as a
hobby, shall we say over the last -- however many years is that -- quite a few
while I have been serving in the Navy. When I happened to start planning a trip
for my family out to the Cosmosphere, I noted that the position here was open
and kind of looked at it and said, "What better opportunity here with my
background in the Navy, to maybe take a shot at working with the museum here
and heading it up, combining, shall we say, hobby and leadership
experience?"
cS: How was
your first week on the job? How have you found your transition?
CO: The workload is pretty heavy right
now because it's a lot of learning. I'm on a pretty steep learning curve right
now, as you can well imagine, with my lack of background in the museum
industry. That being said, a leadership position is a leadership position and
the staff here is fantastic, so that part of it has been really easy. The
volunteers here are a marvelous group of individuals and the paid staff is
amazingly dedicated. So it's been a really easy transition coming out of the
military thus far.
cS: Have
there been any surprises?
CO: Really no, because I expected to be
surprised every single morning. Like I said, its a learning curve. The joke,
there is a saying in the military that you are being 'fed by the fire hose'
right now. I am drinking from a fire hose as far as all the information I am
trying to take in regards to operation of the museum, artifact preservation,
collection, etc., and as these are areas I have not dealt with in the past. I'm
having to get up to speed very quickly.
cS: Have you inherited projects already
underway and/or what are you focusing on next?
CO: Some of the big projects that we
have on-going, probably the biggest we have, is the work we are doing for the
Evergreen Aviation Museum out in McMinnville, Oregon and that is proceeding at
pace. We're on schedule for what we are going to be providing for them, all the
exhibit structure for it. We're making little changes here and there, which are
all based on which artifacts we can get ahold of, which ones they want, etc. In
fact, we'll be going out to them for a meeting just in another couple of weeks
to kind of finalize virtually everything. We are building the stands for the
artifacts that we are going to be sending out there, simulators, etc. So, that
is kind of one big thing that's on-going.
In addition
to that, we just purchased some land across the street, just closed on it last
month. We used to have a small parking lot across the street. There used to be
a building next to it. We now own that land as well. That opens up, shall we
say, a whole plethora of possibilities. We are bandying about the ideas right
now of taking our camp/educational facilities, the Future Astronaut Training
Program and those sort of things and moving them all maybe across the street.
That would open a ton of space up here for artifacts and exhibits in the museum
that we haven't had available to us in the past.
Over the
next three to five months, we are going to be sitting down and really trying to
focus on a strategic plan that is going to take us in the next one to five and
10 years. What's our focus going to be? How are we going to do this? We've got
to start raising money if we are going to talk about building a building that
size across the street. Those are kind of the dreams being bandied about right
now, but nothing is set down on paper yet.
cS: The Cosmosphere made a name for
itself, in part due to its restoration services. Are there artifacts undergoing
restoration at the museum now?
CO: We've got a V-2 rocket right now that's
sitting in our warehouse over on the other side of town. It's for one of the
army bases we're restoring that. It's simple paint job for the most part; it's
not a full restoration, it's a cosmetic restoration. And they've got a couple
more rockets that they may want us to take a look at as well.
We're doing
some small restoration projects as well for the Evergreen museum, and that's
just a piece we have had in our collection, the Mercury 10 capsule, that we're
going to be sending out there.
Other than
that, nothing specific right now in our hands or that we're negotiating as we
speak, but I think that's just a matter of time.
Continue reading
collectSPACE.com's interview with Cmdr. Orwoll, including his comments
about the effects of the recent federal trial against one of his
predecessors.