Fifty four years later, it is hard to miss Apollo 8’s seismic impact. It capped an incredible year of news which were not always great.
Tag: Moon Landings
The Road to the Moon Landings – Apollo 8 – The Telegraph Magazine
The first to produce Apollo 8 special issues in color were the major newspapers. The New York Times had Earthrise on its front page on December 30. The Daily Telegraph waited until its weekend magazine, published on January 10.
The Road to the Moon Landings – Apollo 8 – Time Magazine, 1969
A week afer Apollo 8 astronauts – Frank Borman, Jim Lovell, and Bill Anders – landed safely in the Pacific Ocean, they were TIME’s Men of the Year
The Road to the Moon Landings – Apollo 8 – The Times, 1969
Apollo 8 capped an incredible year of news which were not always great: two political assassinations in the US, the worsening situation in Vietnam, turmoil of college campuses and around the world, and the Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia.
The Road to the Moon Landings – Apollo 8 – National Geographic, 1969
The articles on Apollo 8 appeared in National Geographic several months after the missions but the magazine produced an in-depth story.
The Road to the Moon Landings – Lunar Orbiters – National Geographic, 1969
The Lunar Orbiters were five uncrewed missions launched between 1966 and 1967, to help select Apollo landing sites by mapping the Moon’s surface; 99.6 percent of the lunar surface was mapped.
The Road to the Moon Landings – Surveyor – National Geographic, 1966
From June 1966 through January 1968, NASA sent seven robotic spacecraft to the surface of the Moon as part of Surveyor Program. Its primary goal was to test soft landings on the Moon.
The Road to the Moon Landings – Apollo 8 – Look Magazine, 1969
Apollo 8 was the first crewed spacecraft to reach the Moon. The crew orbited the Moon ten times and the largest-ever TV audience looked on.
The Road to the Moon Landings – Apollo 1 – Life Magazine, 1967
On January 27, 1967, a fire broke out in the command module during a pre-flight test at Cape Kennedy. All three astronauts aboard perished.
The Road to the Moon Landings – Gemini X – Life Magazine, 1966
In July 18, 1966, Gemini X went up. Its purpose was to test out a few things for the future Lunar exploration: Extra-Vehicular Activities, Spacecraft Maneuvering and Docking with another spacecraft (Agena Target Vehicle, ATV), and using ATV’s engine to achieve a boost into a higher orbit.