The Space Race - The 19
60's

A Scout launch in 1965.
August 1960 -- Corona Spy Satellite
Fearing a surprise nuclear
attack from the Soviet Union, President Eisenhower authorized a top-secret spy
satellite called "Corona." To disguise its purpose, it was given the
name "Discoverer" and was said to be a scientific research satellite.
After several attempts, Discoverer 14 successfully carried a camera into orbit
and returned with pictures taken more than 100 miles above Soviet territory.

A 3-D model of the Vostok vehicle.
March 1961 -- Mannequin Test Flight
Ivan Ivanovich -- the
Russian equivalent of John Doe -- was the name given a mannequin launched in a
Vostok spacecraft wearing a SK-1 pressure suit. After re-entering the
atmosphere, Ivan was ejected from the capsule and parachuted to the ground near
the Ural Mountains city of Izevsk. This sort of ejection-and-parachute system
was used later by Vostok cosmonauts.

Yuri Gagarin
April 1961 -- First Man In Space
A month before U.S.
astronaut Alan Shepard's suborbital flight, Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin orbited the
Earth once in his Vostok spacecraft and returned safely to the ground.
Alan Shepard, America's first astronaut, stands in front of the Freedom 7 spacecraft shortly after completing his 15 minute suborbital flight.
May 5, 1961 -- Shepard's Suborbital
Flight
The first American was sent
briefly into space aboard Freedom 7. Soaring to an altitude of 116 miles, Alan
Shepard spent 15 minutes in suborbital space but did not orbit the Earth. The
flight demonstrated that a man could control a craft during weightlessness and
high G-force stress.

Shortly after the Soviets sent the first man into space, President Kennedy wanted to know how the U.S. could better the Soviets. Vice President Lyndon Johnson spoke with top NASA officials, as well as U.S. military and industrial leaders, about the nation's chances of beating the Soviets to the moon. At that time, neither country had a rocket powerful enough for such a mission.
In a bold declaration on May 25, 1961, Kennedy stated, "I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the Earth."

Astronaut John Glenn climbs into Friendship 7 during prelaunch checkout procedures.
February 1962 -- Glenn Into Orbit
John Glenn became the first
U.S. astronaut to circle the Earth when he spent five hours aboard the
Friendship 7 capsule. Parts of the last two of three orbits had to be controlled
manually after failure of the autopilot.
April 1962 -- Zenit Spy Satellite
A converted Vostok spacecraft carrying a camera instead of a cosmonaut was
successfully launched, and it returned with photos taken above the United
States. The Soviets claimed the true mission of the craft was science-related
and gave it the name "Kosmos," much like the Americans had disguised
their own Corona spy satellite months earlier.

A 3-D rendering of an underground silo with missile inside.
1962 -- Minuteman Deployed
The United States deployed
this silo-based ICMB in fields throughout the Western and Midwestern United
States. Each missile carried a single nuclear warhead and was capable of instant
response. Improved versions of the Minuteman later replaced the original.
June 1963 -- Long-Duration Orbit
The first long-duration mission was Vostok 5, which spent five days in orbit.

Aleksei Leonov
March 1965 -- First Spacewalk
Secured by an umbilical cord attached to Voskhod 2's life support systems,
Aleksei Leonov became the first person to leave a spacecraft in orbit. After
spending 20 minutes in the vacuum of space, he nearly didn't make it back inside
the craft. His spacesuit had expanded more than predicted. To re-enter the
spacecraft, Leonov was forced to release some of the air from inside his suit.
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Astronaut Edward White listens in Mercury Control Center.

A model of the Soyuz craft.
April 1967 -- Soyuz
The first Soyuz
("Union") spacecraft carried a man into space, setting a precedent for
scores of subsequent Soyuz flights. Several modifications were made to the
original Soyuz design to refine its use as a transport vehicle, upgrade its
electronic and navigation systems, and later adjust it for docking with the Mir
space station. Since 1967, Soyuz spacecraft have flown more than 100 cosmonauts
on various missions to space.

A full-scale Saturn V rocket sits on display to the right of a space shuttle.
November 1967 - Saturn V Moon Rocket
A key component in the race to the moon for both sides was the construction of a rocket powerful enough to reach the lunar surface. Soviets built the N-1 rocket, while the American answer was the Saturn V. The first launch of the rocket in November 1967 led to successful testing of the compatibility between the launch vehicle and the spacecraft. It was tested twice before carrying a manned module. The Saturn V rocket saw a total of 32 launches -- not one failed.
September 1968 -- Moon Orbital
Though never announcing the
intent of sending a cosmonaut to the moon, the Soviet Union sent many unmanned
spacecraft to orbit, land on and explore the lunar surface. Zond 5 became the
first craft to successfully orbit the moon and return to Earth. Multiple Zond
missions through 1970 were used to test the logistics for a manned mission to
the moon.

Apollo 7 astronauts
October 1968 - Apollo 7 Tests
Manned test flight of the
Apollo command and service modules in Earth's orbit was conducted. This was the
first manned Apollo flight and the first U.S. manned spaceflight in nearly two
years, following a January 1967 launch pad fire in the Apollo 1 spacecraft that
killed astronauts Virgil "Gus" Grissom, Edward White, and Roger
Chaffee. A Saturn IV rocket sent Apollo 7 into orbit.

Apollo 8 reentry
December 1968 - Apollo 8 Manned Moon Orbit
The first manned Saturn V
sent Apollo 8 astronauts into orbit around the moon and set the stage for the
first manned lunar landing. The crew carried along a camera and for the first
time broadcast images of Earth back to the people inhabiting it.
February 1969 -- N-1 Moon Rocket Test
A key component in the race
to the moon for both sides was the construction of a rocket powerful enough to
send a manned spacecraft to the lunar surface. Americans built the Saturn V
rocket; the Soviet answer was the N-1. Its first launch attempt ended in
failure. An engine fire caused the rocket to shut down and crash a minute after
liftoff.
July 1969 -- 2nd N-1 Failure
The second test of the N-1
rocket also ended in disaster. Seconds after liftoff the rocket fell onto the
launch pad and exploded. Three weeks later, Americans landed the crew of Apollo
11 on the moon. Failure of the N-1 rocket ended the Soviet Union's chances of
beating the Americans to the moon.

Neil Armstrong photographs Buzz Aldrin as he descends from the lunar lander. Earlier, Neil Armstrong descended for man's first walk on the Moon.
The race to the moon ended when Americans successfully landed men on the moon and returned them safely to Earth. The Apollo 11 lunar module set astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin onto the lunar surface, where they collected 46 pounds of soil and core samples and deployed scientific experiments. Approximately two and a quarter hours later, the astronauts began returning to the lander, where they rested before ascending back to the Apollo command module the next day.
Six more missions to the lunar surface followed; all of them were successful except Apollo 13, which was aborted en route to the moon following an on-board fire.