Those of us who have reached a certain age are likely to remember one thing about the eventful summer of 1969 above all others: Apollo 11.
I was nearly 17 that summer, and for the days (which seemed like months!) of the mission, I was completely consumed with it. There was no Internet back then, and the TV news only had an hour or so per day of actual content. My best source was the BBC News from London, which I picked up on a ham radio receiver. The BBC had a flock of reporters on the story, all over the world; they did an amazing job of in-depth reporting, making the American news look just plain amateur by comparison.
For me, the most tension-filled moment of the mission is the one captured in the image above: the Lunar Module's ascent and rendezvous with the Command Module in lunar orbit. Three men, a quarter million miles from home, meeting up in the unbelievable vastness of outer space. It seemed such an unlikely feat, and yet they not only pulled it off, they made it look easy.
By the way, there was a slide rule along on that mission – and it was used :-)
The Atlantic has a nice collection of Apollo 11 photos...
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