"In Houston they ask, 'Oh, where is the fireman?' which is much more exciting than an astronaut, because everyone's parent works at NASA," he said.
At York's Village Elementary School, 315 kindergartners and first- and second-graders let out an audible gasp when Cassidy entered wearing a NASA jumpsuit.
He told them he remembered his own days in York schools, as the teachers and staff snapped away with their cameras.
"This is really exciting. He's a famous person," said the school nurse, Sherry Boyd.
Cassidy was on his first trip back to York since he spent more than two weeks aboard the International Space Station this summer. During that time, he made three spacewalks to do work on the space station. The ascent to orbit 200 miles above the Earth took only eight minutes.
On Friday, he talked to students at four schools in York, and to business groups, and spent the evening at the football game at York High School, where he was a quarterback on the football team before graduating in 1988.
Cassidy, 39, grew up in the Bath area before moving to York when he was in fifth grade.
Many parents of the Village Elementary School students grew up with Cassidy, and many of the second-graders who ate lunch before the assembly claimed connections to him.
"My dad went to college with him, and he came to our house when I was 2 years old," said Lauren Woodward, 7.
The gymnasium went silent as Cassidy described his experiences blasting into space, then hooking up to the space station. He said that as a boy in York, he never dreamed he would become an astronaut.
"Never in a million years did I imagine I would be standing in a blue spacesuit and talking to my hometown about space stuff," Cassidy said.
The children wanted to know whether space was fun.
"I had a smile on my face the whole mission," he said.
They wanted to know if he saw any extraterrestrials on his trip.
"No. No one in the history of the space program has seen one yet, but we keep looking," Cassidy said.


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