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00000177-2120-db48-a97f-fb22304a0000South Carolina has a rich military history, beginning in the Colonial Era. Today, the state has a significant military presence. SC Public Radio and SCETV offers news coverage of South Carolina's active bases, military personnel and veterans, and the economic and cultural impact they have on communities throughout the state and across the nation, as well as stories and profiles exploring our state's military history.

For Astronaut Maj. Gen. Charles Bolden Jr., There’s No Place like Home

Students from three local Columbia high schools got a rare opportunity Monday—to see real life astronaut and former NASA Administrator Major General Charles F. Bolden Jr. speak about space, science, and the future. For Bolden, who hosted the talk at the University of South Carolina’s Thomas Cooper Library in honor of the gift of his personal archives to the university, it was also an opportunity—to share his journey with students of his own alma mater, C.A Johnson High School.

The students at C.A. Johnson already knew Bolden’s name well on account of Charles Bolden Stadium, where their football team plays. A student raised his hand and asks if the stadium was named for Gen. Bolden. The astronaut was quick to clarify that the stadium is named for his father, Charles Bolden, Sr., whom Gen. Bolden calls “the great one.”

“When I come back home, people say, ‘Oh, we saw your stadium,’ and I have to tell them, ‘No, you did not see my stadium. You saw my dad’s stadium.’”

It's not the size of the dog in the fight; it's the size of the fight in the dog.

Bolden doesn’t resent this confusion, but rather seems to welcome the opportunity to discuss his father’s legacy. He said that his father was an incredible motivator both on and off the field.

“He had a saying—it’s not the size of the dog in the fight; it’s the size of the fight in the dog,” Gen. Bolden shared. That saying became a touchstone throughout the younger Bolden’s life.

Back when Gen. Bolden was a student in the early 1960s (and a second-string quarterback on his father’s football team), C.A. Johnson was one of just two all-black schools in a segregated Columbia.

“Life was a little bit more challenging back then, but we managed to get through that,” said Bolden. “I think it was a big thing—my mom and dad telling us it didn’t make a difference what anybody said, or anybody told us we could or could not do.”

speaking_to_cola_kids.mp3
Gen. Bolden discusses what it means to share his story with kids from his hometown.

One of the dreams Bolden said his parents inspired him to shoot for was to attend U.S. Naval Academy. However, no one in South Carolina’s Congressional Delegation at the time would give him an appointment, so Bolden wrote to then-President Lyndon Johnson, who helped him to get an appointment from Chicago Congressman William Dawson—the third African-American congressman of the 20th century.

Maj. Gen. Charles F. Bolden Jr. during his time at NASA.
Credit NASA
Maj. Gen. Charles F. Bolden Jr. during his time at NASA.

That’s not the only obstacle Bolden faced on the road to higher education. Bolden said that when he took his Advanced Placement exams at USC, he wasn’t allowed to take the test with the other students. He was asked to take his exams, instead, in a janitorial closet.

“Yeah, I think it was a broom closet, because you know [I was] taking it here as opposed to taking it at C. A. Johnson or a black facility where I would have been able to take it with the rest of the class,” he said.

But, as Bolden wryly observed, the location “didn’t seem to make a difference” with his scores.

Despite Bolden’s complicated history with the university, he wasn’t deterred from donating his personal archive to USC’s South Caroliniana Library. He said he was impressed by the library’s handling of his mother’s personal archives. Bolden’s mother, the  educator and librarian Ethel Martin Bolden was a leader in the local African-American community, and her work as an educator was posthumously contributed to Caroliniana Library in 2002, in the same year that Bolden and long-time friend Ron McNair spoke at the university’s commencement and received honorary degrees.

“I’d like to think that my collection adds to her story and continues her work,” Bolden said in the university’s press release for his new collection.

Furthermore, Bolden said that he still considers Columbia his home, though the 71-year-old now resides with his family in Mt. Vernon, VA, and he wants his past to be remembered in his hometown.

“You just have to kind of keep your eye on where you want to go. That’s the message I give to kids,” he said. “We should never forget what we’ve been through, and should never forget the past, because it’s very important to help us know where we want to go.”