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Posts Tagged ‘July 20’

20
Jul

One Giant Leap into History: The July 20, 1969 Moon Landing

   Posted by: Trish    in American History, Cultural History, Historical Events, History Blog, History Today, Modern History, Technology History, The Cold War, World History

The 1969 NASA Lunar Landing: Astronaut Buzz Aldrin, lunar module pilot of the first lunar landing mission, poses for a photograph beside the deployed United States flag during an Apollo 11 Extravehicular Activity (EVA) on the lunar surface. The Lunar Module (LM) is on the left, and the footprints of the astronauts are clearly visible in the soil of the Moon.There are few moments in American history when the whole world is watching. But on July 20, 1969 it would have been difficult to look away. All television and radios were tuned into the historic broadcast as the commentator for the NASA space program described the events leading up to the moment that Neil Armstrong became the first human being to stand on the moon. At minimum, 500 million tuned into history.

It would be over six hours from when Armstrong announced that they had landed on the surface until he spoke the words that will survive the ages.

“That is one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

The 1969 NASA Lunar Landing: Neil Armstrong works at the Lunar Module in the only photo taken of him on the moon from the surface.Fellow astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins would be mostly quiet during the broadcast and it is Armstrong that remains the most notable member of the shuttle crew. After the historic words were spoken, Aldrin and Armstrong collected rocks from the moon’s surface and Collins enjoyed the vastness of space from above. Four decades after that day, people still look to that day as a sign of human accomplishment and a symbol of humanity’s capability. But the moon landing represented other things as well: a dead president’s dream, a blow in the cold war and the victory of the space race.

President John F. Kennedy - July 11, 1963 White House Photograph in the Oval OfficeJohn F. Kennedy had remarked in 1961 that putting a man on the moon before the end of the decade was a real possibility. Unfortunately, it would be Richard Nixon who spoke with the astronauts as they floated in their tin can and not JFK. President Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963 in Dallas, Texas as his car drove down the street in front of a happy cheering crowd.

The Kennedy Space Center in Florida was named after the popular fallen leader. During JFK’s presidency, indeed, since the end of World War II, tension had been heating up between the communist Soviet Union and capitalist America. The two became bitter rivals, despite the Soviet Union’s gallant effort for the allies during the war, and what was to be later named The Cold War was the no shots fired war of ideology between two of the planets largest nations. America and the west feared the weight and presence of the Soviet Union, believing their ideology had a domino effect and would entice other nations to choose communism over the capitalist system. China, North Vietnam, North Korea and several other nations chose a form of communism or socialism making America feel responsible to battle for “democracy.”

John F. Kennedy Space CenterThe Soviet Union was determined to show its might and eagerness to progress actually becoming the first nation to put a man into space. Because of the tension between the two nations, The Soviet Union’s small victory became a mighty blow against America’s ambitions for the stars. The determination with which both countries pursued space flight became known as the space race. Armstrong’s footsteps on the moon’s surface represented America’s victory in the pursuit of progress. The Soviet Union’s space efforts after the moon landing were less than notable. Whereas in America, the desire to send both man and machine into the solar system continues.


History DVDs
Apollo Manned Moon Missions Film Series DVD Apollo Manned Moon Missions Film Series DVD
Apollo 8, 9 and 11 Documentaries And Apollo History Film Collection Apollo 8, 9 and 11 Documentaries And Apollo History Film Collection
NASA Apollo Press Release Collection NASA Apollo Press Release Collection
The History of NASA on 2 DVDS The History of NASA on 2 DVDS
Despite 40 years of progress, technological invention, conflicts, cover-ups and cultural change, the moon landing that took place in the famed summer of 1969 will forever be one of the world’s defining moments.

Tags: 1969, America, Apollo 11, Buzz ALdrin, Cold War, JFK, John F. Kennedy, July 20, Kennedy Assasination, Kennedy Space Center, Michael Collins, Moon Landing, NASA, Neil Armstrong, Nixon, Richard Nixon, Russia, Space Race, The Soviet Union, U.S.S.R., World War II

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