REUTERS
- Sunday, August 26, 2012
(Reuters) - U.S. astronaut Neil Armstrong, who took a giant leap for
mankind when he became the first person to walk on the moon, has died at
the age of 82, his family said on Saturday.
Armstrong died
following complications from heart-bypass surgery he underwent earlier
this month, the family said in a statement, just two days after his
birthday on August 5.
As commander of the Apollo 11 mission,
Armstrong became the first human to set foot on the moon on July 20,
1969. As he stepped on the dusty surface, Armstrong said: "That's one
small step for (a) man, one giant leap for mankind."
Those words endure as one of the best known quotes in the English language.
The
Apollo 11 astronauts' euphoric moonwalk provided Americans with a sense
of achievement in the space race with Cold War foe the Soviet Union and
while Washington was engaged in a bloody war with the communists in
Vietnam.
Neil Alden Armstrong was 38 years old at the time and
even though he had fulfilled one of mankind's age-old quests that placed
him at the pinnacle of human achievement, he did not revel in his
accomplishment. He even seemed frustrated by the acclaim it brought.
"I
guess we all like to be recognized not for one piece of fireworks but
for the ledger of our daily work," Armstrong said in an interview on
CBS's "60 Minutes" program in 2005.
He once was asked how he felt
knowing his footprints would likely stay on the moon's surface for
thousands of years. "I kind of hope that somebody goes up there one of
these days and cleans them up," he said.
A VERY PRIVATE MAN
James
Hansen, author of "First Man: The Life of Neil A. Armstrong," told CBS:
"All of the attention that ... the public put on stepping down that
ladder onto the surface itself, Neil never could really understand why
there was so much focus on that."
The Apollo 11 moon mission
turned out to be Armstrong's last space flight. The next year he was
appointed to a desk job, being named NASA's deputy associate
administrator for aeronautics in the office of advanced research and
technology.
Armstrong's post-NASA life was a very private one. He
took no major role in ceremonies marking the 25th anniversary of the
moon landing. "He's a recluse's recluse," said Dave Garrett, a former
NASA spokesman.
Hansen said stories of Armstrong dreaming of space
exploration as a boy were apocryphal, although he was long dedicated to
flight. "His life was about flying. His life was about piloting,"
Hansen said.
Born August 5, 1930, in Wapakoneta, Ohio, Armstrong
was the first of three children of Stephen and Viola Armstrong. He
married his college sweetheart, Janet Shearon, in 1956. They were
divorced in 1994, when he married Carol Knight.
Armstrong had his
first joyride in a plane at age 6. Growing up in Ohio, he began making
model planes and by his early teens had amassed an extensive aviation
library. With money earned from odd jobs, he took flying lessons and
obtained his pilot's license even before he got a car license.
In
high school he excelled in science and mathematics and won a U.S. Navy
scholarship to Purdue University in Indiana, enrolling in 1947. He left
after two years to become a Navy pilot, flying combat missions in the
Korean War and winning three medals.
FLYING TEST PLANES
After
the war he returned to Purdue and graduated in 1955 with an
aeronautical engineering degree. He joined the National Advisory
Committee on Aeronautics (NACA), which became NASA in 1958.
Armstrong
spent seven years at NACA's high-speed flight station at Edwards Air
Force Base in California, becoming one of the world's best test pilots.
He flew the X-15 rocket plane to the edge of space - 200,000 feet up
(61,000 meters) at 4,000 mph (6,435 kph).
In September 1962,
Armstrong was selected by NASA to be an astronaut. He was command pilot
for the Gemini 8 mission and backup command pilot for the Gemini 11
mission, both in 1966.
On the Gemini 8 mission, Armstrong and
fellow astronaut David Scott performed the first successful docking of a
manned spacecraft with another space vehicle.
Armstrong put his
piloting skills to good use on the moon landing, overriding the
automatic pilot so he and fellow astronaut Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin would not
have to land their module in a big rocky crater.
Yet the landing
was not without danger. The lander had only about 30 seconds of fuel
left when Armstrong put it down in an area known as the Sea of
Tranquility and calmly radioed back to Mission Control on Earth,
"Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed."
Aldrin,
who along with Armstrong and Michael Collins formed the Apollo 11 crew,
told BBC radio that he would remember Armstrong as "a very capable
commander and leader of an achievement that will be recognized until man
sets foot on the planet Mars."
Armstrong left the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) a year after Apollo 11 to
become a professor of engineering at the University of Cincinnati.
DECLINES OFFERS TO RUN FOR OFFICE
After
his aeronautical career, Armstrong was approached by political groups,
but unlike former astronauts John Glenn and Harrison Schmitt who became
U.S. senators, he declined all offers.
In 1986, he served on a
presidential commission that investigated the explosion that destroyed
the space shuttle Challenger, killing its crew of seven shortly after
launch from Cape Canaveral in January of that year.
Armstrong made
a rare public appearance several years ago when he testified to a
congressional hearing against President Barack Obama administration's
plans to buy rides from other countries and corporations to ferry U.S.
astronauts to and from the International Space Station.
Armstrong
also said that returning humans to the moon was not only desirable, but
necessary for future exploration -- even though NASA says it is no
longer a priority.
He lived in the Cincinnati area with his wife, Carol.
"We
are heartbroken to share the news that Neil Armstrong has passed away,"
the family said in their statement. "Neil was our loving husband,
father, grandfather, brother and friend."
His family expressed
hope that young people around the world would be inspired by Armstrong's
feat to push boundaries and serve a cause greater than themselves.
"The
next time you walk outside on a clear night and see the moon smiling
down at you, think of Neil Armstrong and give him a wink," the family
said.
Obama said that Armstrong "was among the greatest of American heroes - not just of his time, but of all time. ...
"Today,
Neil's spirit of discovery lives on in all the men and women who have
devoted their lives to exploring the unknown - including those who are
ensuring that we reach higher and go further in space. That legacy will
endure - sparked by a man who taught us the enormous power of one small
step."
Glenn, an original NASA astronaut with Armstrong, spoke of
his colleague's humble nature. "He was willing to dare greatly for his
country and he was proud to do that and yet remained the same humble
person he'd always been," he told CNN on Saturday.
The space
agency sent out a brief statement in the wake of the news, saying it
"offers its condolences on today's passing of Neil Armstrong, former
test pilot, astronaut and the first man on the moon."
Armstrong is survived by his two sons, a stepson and stepdaughter, 10 grandchildren, a brother and a sister, NASA said.
Some
controversy still surrounds his famous quote. The live broadcast did
not have the "a" in "one small step for a man ..." He and NASA insisted
static had obscured the "a," but after repeated playbacks, he admitted
he may have dropped the letter and expressed a preference that
quotations include the "a" in parentheses.
Asked to describe what it was like to stand on the moon, he told CBS:
"It's an interesting place to be. I recommend it."
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