Remembering Those Who Lived the Apollo 11 Mission

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Neil Armstrong (1930-2012)

“Houston, Tranquillity Base here,” Mr. Armstrong radioed to mission control. “The Eagle has landed.” Some hours later, he stepped onto the surface of the moon, the first person to do so. He marked that fact with words that have become familiar: “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

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Wernher von Braun (1912-1977)

Von Braun designed the Saturn V rocket used in the Apollo 11 mission and eight other Apollo launches. His work gave him a central place in the pantheon of space exploration, but his legacy is ambiguous. He also designed the V-2 rocket for the Nazis.

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George M. Low (1926-1984)

Mr. Low was deputy director of the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in Houston when the Apollo spacecraft caught fire on Jan. 27, 1967, killing three astronauts. In a shake-up of Apollo management, Mr. Low was appointed to head the spacecraft program. For the next year and a half, he oversaw a redesign and testing, imposing more rigorous quality control and pressing to meet ambitious production schedules.

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Thomas J. Kelly (1929-2002)

Mr. Kelly rallied a team of engineers at what was then the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation of Bethpage, N.Y., to build a vehicle that would take a crew to the moon and bring them back to Earth. The Grumman team came up with the idea of a two-stage spacecraft that would carry two astronauts to the moon’s surface while a third crew member stayed in orbit around the moon. The result was the Lunar Excursion Module. Its nickname was Eagle.

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Archibald MacLeish (1892-1982)

Presence among us, / wanderer in our skies,

dazzle of silver in our leaves and on our / waters silver,

O / silver evasion in our farthest thought —

“the visiting moon” . . . “the glimpses of the moon” . . .

and we have touched you!

The New York Times felt that the magnitude of the moment required the voice of a bard, and it commissioned Mr. MacLeish to versify the news. The poem ran on the front page. Read it here. A.M. Rosenthal, a top editor at the time, described how the poem came about.

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Lt. Gen. Samuel C. Phillips (1921-1990)

“The men and equipment that are Apollo 11 have performed to perfection,” General Phillips told reporters after the astronauts lifted off from the moon to return home. “Perfection is not too strong a word.” The general had commanded the Apollo missions since 1964 and within months would leave the program.

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Eberhard Rees (1908-1998)

Mr. Rees was the longtime top deputy to von Braun. He served on a team assigned to solve the technical problems that had caused a fire aboard the Apollo 1 spacecraft, killing three astronauts in 1967.

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George Mueller (1918-2015)

Dr. Mueller (pronounced Miller) was deputy associate administrator for manned spaceflight at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. He revamped testing procedures and brought together control of three separate NASA centers to help beat the Soviet Union in the space race.

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CreditThe Mineralogical & Geological Museum at Harvard University

Clifford Frondel (1907-2002)

“It’s basalt! It’s igneous!” Dr. Frondel exclaimed. He was present in Houston when a box containing 48 pounds of moon rocks brought back by Apollo 11 was opened. NASA had recruited Dr. Frondel, a Harvard mineralogist, to study the material. Such was the uncertainty over lunar properties that he was quarantined for two weeks after being exposed to lunar dust.

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Additional reporting on the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing

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