Willis Shapley

Willis Harlow Shapley (March 2, 1917 – October 24, 2005) was an American civil servant best known as the third-ranking administrator for NASA during the Apollo program.

[1] In that role, he reviewed federal funding, including that for the Manhattan Project, which developed the first nuclear weapons.

[5][6] Shapley's first involvement in the space program was in helping to craft the March 1958 memo that led to the creation of NASA.

[1] Later, after the Soviet Union successfully launched the first man into space, he was part of the committee that drafted a memo advocating for NASA's crewed space program, which served as the starting point for President John F. Kennedy's Special Message to the Congress on Urgent National Needs on May 25, 1961, calling for the U.S. to land a man on the Moon and return him safely to Earth.

[1] Shapley died October 24, 2005, at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington, D.C., from cellulitis, a bacterial infection.

Shapley (far left) at the Skylab rollout ceremony, with Caspar Weinberger , James C. Fletcher , Eberhard Rees , Walter Burke, and Dale D. Myers ; Huntington Beach, California, September 1972.