54 Years ago today (July 20, 1969) the United States landed
on the Moon for the first time and Neil
Armstrong became the first American and the first Human on the Moon. Buzz
Aldrin became the 2nd and Michael Collins stayed on the ship.
1 Million People watched the launch of Apollo 11 on July 16,
1969 in Florida.
Dignitaries included the Chief of Staff of the United States
Army, General William Westmoreland, four Cabinet Members, 19 State Governors,
40 Mayors, 60 Ambassadors and 200 Congressmen. Vice President Spiro Agnew and Former
President Lyndon B. Johnson and his Wife Lady Bird Johnson.
3,500 Media Representatives were present. 2/3 of them were
from the US and the rest from 55 Countries.
25 Million Americans watched the launch of Apollo 11 on
Television.
93% of every American watched the Moon Landing on July 20, 1969
on Television as it happened (the vast majority of Americans who didn’t watch were
Soldiers fighting in Vietnam.)
650 Million People across the World watched the Moon Landing
on July 20, 1969 on Television. It was the first Worldwide Live Television
Event.
President Richard Nixon spoke to Neil Armstrong and Buzz
Aldrin through a Telephone-Radio Transmission, which Nixon called "The
most historic phone call ever made from the White House."
On August 13, 1969 the Astronauts rode in Ticker-Tape Parades
in their honor in New York and Chicago, with an estimated 6 million Attendees.
On the same evening in Los Angeles there was an official
state dinner to celebrate the flight, attended by members of Congress, 44 Governors,
Chief Justice of the United States Warren E. Burger and his Predecessor, Earl
Warren, and Ambassadors from 83 Nations at the Century Plaza Hotel. Nixon and
Agnew honored each Astronaut with a presentation of the Presidential Medal of
Freedom.
The Astronauts spoke before a Joint Session of Congress on
September 16, 1969. They presented two US Flags, one to the House of
Representatives and the other to the Senate, that they had carried with them to
the surface of the Moon.
The Astronauts then went on a 38 Day World Tour to 22
Countries.
The United States had won the Space Race against the Soviet
Union (and 22 years later the United States also won the Cold War when the
Soviet Union collapsed.)
Neil Armstrong died in 2012 at 82.
Michael Collins died in 2021 at 90.
Buzz Aldrin is still alive at 93.
Note: My Mom told me that she was Camping with her Family in Prince Edward
Island, Canada when the Moon Landing Happened. They were the only Campers with
a Television (that they brought with them just for the Landing) and so everyone
came around their TV and watched the Landing Live. Afterwards, my Mom and her Parents
and Siblings were treated as Heroes by the Canadian Campers – because they were
Americans.
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