The following photos are of "The Lost Spacecraft" exhibition at the Strategic Air and Space Museum in Ashland, Nebraska. The display features Gus Grissom's Liberty Bell 7 space craft and the artifacts recovered in it. It was America's second manned space mission in 1961. It was the only NASA spacecraft lost and never recovered. It sat on the ocean floor for 38 years. Although its watery resting place was deeper than the Titanic's and it is only the size of a refrigerator, Liberty Bell 7 was located and recovered in 1999.

Replica of Gus Grissom's family's home in Indiana.

Replica of part of mission control.

Periscope filter and electrical relays.

Wiring harness.

Recovery flightsuit. Helicopter pilot Jim Lewis wore this suit and helment during his attempt to recover Liberty Bell 7 in 1961. The capsule sank after taking on too much water.

Explosive hatch detonator cap.

Apollo spacesuit. Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee, the crew of Apollo 1, were wearing space suits like the one displayed when a fire claimed their lives during a final test of the Apollo spacecraft in January 1967.