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The history of the Apollo program

by Kristi Walker

Created on: July 29, 2007

The History of the Apollo Program: A Giant Leap for Mankind!

The history of the Apollo program is a shining moment in what man can accomplish. In October of 1958 the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) was formed in the United States of America. What would flow out of this organization would impact Americans and the world.

To understand the history and purpose of the Apollo space program, you must understand what came before Apollo and the goals that the Apollo program wanted to accomplish. There were three primary space programs in the U.S. from 1958 through 1972. They were Mercury, Gemini and Apollo. Each contributed greatly, but it was Apollo that would produce the most manned space missions and provide the clearest goals for a NASA program.

President John F. Kennedy challenged the nation to risk this incredible journey. He was interested in civil space activity. He would, in fact, demand that the program be implemented and accepted. His reasoning was sound but cloaked his true desires for the space program.

Apollo was a reflection of the Cold War and the Bay of Pigs. The nation needed to establish itself as preeminent in science and space exploration. While the Apollo space program may not have originated for true scientific reasons, it certainly became that and more. It was the victory card for the U.S. in the space race between the Soviet Union and the United States.



Apollo's primary goals were:

* To establish technology to meet other national interests in space.

* To achieve preeminence in space for the U.S.

* To carry out a program of manned flight for exploration of the moon.

* Develop man's capability to work in the lunar environment.



Having implemented his vision, President Kennedy would now be forced to wait. At the appropriately named, Kennedy Space Center, Apollo I would be an abysmal failure. On January 27, 1967 Apollo I would catch fire, due to electrical wiring, and kill all 3 astronauts aboard. NASA would not allow this tragedy to stop them. There would be many Apollo flights. Eleven of those would be fully manned space explorations.

Some of the most famous Apollo flights were these:

* Apollo 8 would take the first photos of the earth from space. Many high school science text books still use these photos to illustrate the success of the Apollo 8 mission.

* Apollo 11 would have the entire nation watching as Neil Armstrong first set foot on the moon. It was this space flight the provided these famous words: That's one small step for

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