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  3. Where were you when humans first landed on the Moon?

Where were you when humans first landed on the Moon?

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  • G Gregory Gadow

    If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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    Antonio Di Meo
    wrote on last edited by
    #35

    I was almost six and I clearly remember I was watching this event on a HUGE (compared to me) B&W TV set. What was happening in those unclear himages was not very clear to me, but everyone in the room was very excited. To date I really appreciate the whole engineering efforts, as effectively depicted by the documentaries "Moon Machines" which can also be found on youtube. The Nav Computer and it's human interface is still amazing! Antonio

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    • G Gregory Gadow

      If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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      JDL EPM
      wrote on last edited by
      #36

      Newly married: too poor to have a TV, too "busy" to watch! ;)

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      • G Gregory Gadow

        If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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        DaveKeyes
        wrote on last edited by
        #37

        My Dad was stationed at Fort Polk, LA, we were living in New Llano, LA. I remember watching the entire viewing, I was in the 8th grade.

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        • G Gregory Gadow

          If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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          BrainiacV
          wrote on last edited by
          #38

          Sitting in the living room with my Dad watching it live on TV. I was 14 at the time and had grown up parked in front of the TV for each and every televised launch from Mercury to Gemini to Apollo. I remember staying up for over 24 hours for the first time so I could watch the specials the networks were broadcasting. It was the first time they did not shut down at midnight. Saw some really awesome soviet videos where they were planning on using linear accelerators to launch from the moon's surface (read Robert A. Heinlein's 'The Moon is a Harsh Mistress'). Haven't seen them since, they were really well done. Been a space geek since birth, first set of books I owned at age 5 were the Golden Book reprints of the Collier Magazine 'Man in Space' series. Made rockets out of clay for art show in first grade. Nowadays, I'm not so keen on manned spaceflight since everytime there is a death, they shut down everything for years. I'd rather see zillions of robots (for economy of scale in production) and telepresence via the Internet. That way everyone can get a vested interest in spaceflight instead of just a select few. I want the space colonies built and tested by machines before we send humans on a long trip that could be one-way and potentially fatal. A failed manned mission to Mars would shutdown interest and push back exploration for a century. After watching 2001: A Space Odyssey, I was really looking forward to spending my 45th birthday in orbit. Maybe 2101. :cool:

          Psychosis at 10 Film at 11

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          • G Gregory Gadow

            If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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            ErrolErrol
            wrote on last edited by
            #39

            On the day before the landing I was in the Spanish coastal village of Sitges, just south of Barcelona. I was on a 30 day leave and I began my trip back to our Fulda Gap site the following day. On that final day in that sunny heaven, I purchased a crude pencil drawing of our capsule, with a stick figure man beside it, from a small boy, who ran joyfully to his beaming mother. The mother and I shared a moment of eye contact that I cannot explain other than to say that she thanked me so much for making her little boy so happy in that moment. Tucked away somewhere, in the bottom of a box, at the back of my storage facility, someone one day will discover the first commercial work of Spain's most famous modern artist. I fantasize that from time to time. Perhaps I set his little feet upon the path that day. I hope. In the middle of that night, it seems to me that it was around 4 the following morning, I was at a gas station, across the river from Lyon, France. The city was dark as pitch. Suddenly, church bells began to ring, sirens blared, lights came on all over the city. I asked the attendant what was going on, what was happening? I had forgotten what was to come. He excitedly explained that “men have landed on the moon”. It struck me then, as it does now, what a grand and unifying occasion it was. I was proud that it was “my” guys that had done the deed, but I was, and am, equally proud of the species that accomplished the feat. I was a very serious young man in those days and cynical and hard from my work and experiences, but that moment sticks with me still and gives me some hope for us all. Men have landed on the moon! All that day, I drove through small towns where American flags hung from windows, and even though I had International plates, I also had the customary nationality sticker on the VW bus. People were joyful, it seemed to me. They waved and cheered as I edged through the traffic, down narrow streets. I had been cheered before, but never had it felt so good. Perhaps you can tell that I would give a fortune to return to that day or the day before....?

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            • R Roger Wright

              Hmmm. Considering the date, I was out of 8th grade, preparing to enter high school, and spending my summer vacation writing a report on space travel for a class I got caught ditching all year just before the end of the school year. I watched every minute of the coverage on a black & white RCA television (yes, with rabbit ears and foil), that had a fine tuning knob which had to be adjusted every two minutes to keep the channel in tune. Later that summer I rigged a series of strings and pulleys to allow me to twiddle the fine tuning without getting off the couch. :-D It was awesome to watch, and lots more interesting than that stupid report I was writing...

              "A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"

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              ckheisler
              wrote on last edited by
              #40

              My family was on a camping trip in the midwest. Another family had a hardsided camper and had hooked up a TV outside of the camper. The whole campground gathered around the TV and watched it. Since we were outside, we could look at the full moon in the sky and wonder at the fact that they were up there. :)

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              • G Gregory Gadow

                If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                z974647
                wrote on last edited by
                #41

                I was over at my best friend's house watching it on a black and white. I had just turned 15 and was somewhat distracted by my friend's attractive mom sitting next to me. At that age, 'distractions' happened a lot! ;P

                Forgetfulness is losing your car keys. Dementia is finding them and not knowing what you should do with them.

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                • G Gregory Gadow

                  If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                  Snowman58
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #42

                  If I recall correctly that was a Sunday in the USA. I was a married college kid working weekends in a grocery store to pay the rent. I was studying for a degree in Aeronautics and Astronautics. My interest was designing airplanes but most of my class mates hoped to go into the space program. I rigged up a tiny B&W TV in the office near the checkout counter. It was so small I really couldn't see it, just listened. I seemed to be the only one interested - the customers just wanted me to pay attention to my job and let them get on their way. Never in my worst nightmare would I have predicted that the USA would abandon the space program and end up paying the Russians for rides.:mad:

                  Melting Away www.deals-house.com www.innovative--concepts.com

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                  • G Gregory Gadow

                    If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                    Mark Puddephat
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #43

                    Sitting about a mile from where I am right now in Manchester, in front of a (then) 15yo 405-line VHF telly, watching washed out black and white pictures, having been woken up specially at 3am (UK time) by my parents to watch it as it happened. James Burke was the commentator, and I recall not wanting to stay up to watch the action replay 3 hours later! I was 8 years old in 1969. However, the TV aerial was on the roof, not sitting on top of the set. You young'uns will never know what you missed - aye!

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                    • G Gregory Gadow

                      If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                      CDMTJX
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #44

                      I remember getting up in the night to watch it, with my Snoopy doll in a astromaut's costume! Made scrapbooks from newspaper articals. Probably should've just kept the newspapers, they'd probalby be worth something now... ;P

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                      • G Gregory Gadow

                        If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                        fglenn
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #45

                        I was driving through the Nevada desert on the return trip from my honeymoon. My new wife and I heard the landing occur over the radio. We got home to Southern California just in time to witness the famous "One step for man..." on the TV.

                        Fletcher Glenn

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                        • C Christopher Duncan

                          11 years old and sitting in front of the living room television - a 14" black & white TV with rabbit ears (sporting the requisite strip of aluminum foil between them, of course).

                          Christopher Duncan
                          www.PracticalUSA.com
                          Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
                          Copywriting Services

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                          Gary Huck
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #46

                          I was 12 (guess I'm the oldest one reading this post); had pedaled my bike home quickly to see the event. "Outside" was like a ghost town.

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                          • G Gregory Gadow

                            If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                            Fabio Franco
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #47

                            I was on the void. Yes, I wasn't born yet, but I beleive I was somewhere looking for a good candidate to be my host egg. ;P

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                            • G Gregory Gadow

                              If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                              Earl Truss
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #48

                              This was the summer before my senior year in college. I had been interested in the space program since the beginning (I was eight or so when the first satellites were launched). I remember watching Telstar go over my parents' house as my first direct witness to it. I think I was in high school at that time. Anyway, the night of the Moon landing I was sitting in my parents' house watching on the little TV we had at the time. However my most clear memory of it was when my older sister came home from work that afternoon crying because she could not watch it because she had to work the next day. She watched it anyway. I was late to work the next day but she made it on time. I guess it was the realization that she thought it was important too that makes me remember it.

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                              • G Gregory Gadow

                                If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                                MattPenner
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #49

                                When was that? Like before WWI or something? OK, I'm moving along now. :)

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                                • G Gregory Gadow

                                  If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                                  James Lonero
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #50

                                  I was 12 years old at the time. I was so happy that the government declared it a holiday. No school, yeah. But all was in vain. It was summer vacation. No school anyway. What a downer. It sounds like what they say about retirement. You never get a vacation.

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                                  • G Gregory Gadow

                                    If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                                    KenHeer1
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #51

                                    Ha, my mother was 9... but I watched it on the History channel.

                                    Kenny

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                                    • G Gregory Gadow

                                      If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                                      Adar Wesley
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #52

                                      I grew up in Israel, and we were watching the television broadcast of the landing just the same. I was 7 at the time and remember the occasion, getting together to watch this historic event.

                                      --- Adar Wesley

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                                      • G Gregory Gadow

                                        If you weren't born yet, you can just move along ;P This question was prompted by something a couple of threads down. The Apollo 11[^] mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the Moon July 20, 1969, 20:17 UTC. The "one small step for man" took place about six and a half hours latter on July 21, 02:39 UTC; the ETV lasted two and a half hours. Less than a day after landing, the Lunar Module lifted off the Moon's surface on July 21, 17:54 UTC and landed again on Earth in the Pacific Ocean on July 24, 16:50:35 UTC. The mission launched just after my second birthday, and watching the television broadcasts are my earliest clear memories. Where were you?

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                                        Member 4194593
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #53

                                        In the "Gold Coin" in Kansas City, eating dinner, watched it on the bar TV. I was 30 then.

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