Apollo 11: The Space Race

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Apollo 11
Imagine you’re in a rocket flying through space. Nothing but pure blackness for days on end. Then...in front of you...a bright light. You’re getting closer and closer to the giant ball of light until finally you’ve made contact. You make your way to the front of the ship and open the door. A vastly endless white landscape is laid out before you. It’s the moon. You climb down the ladder and step into the dust, knowing that the whole world is watching you right now. Exhilarating right? Well, this actually happened back in 1969, and it was the beginning of a new era of space exploration, which is part of why we know so much about outer space today! At that time, there was a large amount of competition between the U.S. and the Soviet Union. Both countries were having an unofficial race called the space race. The space was a race to land a man on the moon. The emotional stakes were …show more content…

Different parts of the world all wanted to have a man on the moon. “In 1957, the Soviet Union had ignited the space race with its launch of the Sputnik 1, the world’s first Satellite” (Bodden 13). “The U.S. rushed to keep up with the space technology of the Soviet Union, launching the Explorer 1, its own small satellite. That same year, the U.S. formed a special space program which they named NASA” (Bodden 12). An amazing amount of preparation was put into not only the Apollo 11 mission, but also many other NASA Apollo missions as well, for the stakes were high. In 1961, President John F. Kennedy proposed a national goal of landing on the moon by the end of the 1960’s. It took NASA eight years to fulfill this intention (Apollo 11). The announcement by the President was a step in creating the full-fledged race. Multiple test flights then took place for America, including the one in March 1969 using the spacecraft that would actually go to the moon. That was just the start of the great American victory to

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