Enhanced Apollo/Saturn V Center Takes Visitors Back to 1969
By Bob Granath
It was the year of the Miracle Mets. The Beatles had another No. 1 hit with “Get Back.” “True Grit” was showing in movie theaters. Nearly 400,000 people showed up for Woodstock. But on a day in July 1969, an estimated 600 million people around the world stopped to watch as, for the first time, men from planet Earth walked on the Moon.
The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex captures the excitement of the historic lunar landing in their revamped Apollo/Saturn V Center. This feature will focus on the new exhibits at that facility that includes a 1969 period living room recreating what life was like a half-century ago.
Just in time for the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission, the enhancements were unveiled in advance of the arrival of thousands who flocked to the Florida spaceport for the anniversary celebrations.
Additions included a sculpture by George Lundeen depicting Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong, Mike Collins and Buzz Aldrin. Titled “The Eagle has Landed,” the statue is a gift to the visitor complex from Rocket Mortgage by Quicken Loans. Stunning in detail, the trio are posed in space suits appearing to watch the latest rocket launch from NASA’s space center or Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
“We presented this statue to the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex to honor the courage and importance of the Apollo 11 crew, who achieved the impossible by landing man on the Moon and into the annals of history,” said Casey Hurbis, chief marketing officer of Rocket Mortgage, during a ceremony on July 12, 2019.
Additionally, 12 trees provided by the Moon Tree Foundation surrounds the statue on the grounds at the Apollo/Saturn V Center. The Moon Tree Garden includes saplings grown from seeds that orbited the Moon on Apollo 14 in February 1971. The mission’s command module pilot, Stuart Roosa, took along the unusual tree seeds payload. Seeds chosen were from five different types: Loblolly Pine, Sycamore, Sweetgum, Redwood and Douglas Fir.
In the early 1950’s, Roosa worked for the U.S. Forest Service as a smoke jumper helping fight fires. He later joined the U.S. Air Force, becoming a test pilot. In 1966, Roosa was one of 19 selected as NASA astronauts.
Roosa’s daughter, Rosemary Roosa, president and chief executive officer of the Moon Tree Foundation, explained that the organization continues to fulfill its mission by planting second-generation “Moon Trees” all over the world. The 12 trees in the Moon Tree Garden represent each piloted Apollo mission. In addition to the 11 flights, the crew who perished in the flash fire aboard Apollo 1 also are honored.
“The garden and the life-size sculpture of the Apollo 11 crew are tributes to the outstanding accomplishments of the Apollo Program,” said Therrin Protze, chief operating officer of Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex
The centerpiece of the Apollo/Saturn V Center remains an actual 363-foot Saturn V rocket. Plans originally called for three more lunar landings, Apollos 18, 19 and 20. All were cancelled due to NASA budget cuts. This left the unused launch vehicles that now are on display at Kennedy, the Johnson Space Center in Houston and the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
New exhibits at the Apollo/Saturn V Center provides an opportunity to get a closer look at an authentic Apollo command module. CM 119 has steps allowing guests to peer into the tunnel used by astronauts to move between the CM and lunar module.
Lunar module 9 now is on ground level with simulated space-suited astronauts working nearby. This too is a lunar module that could have been used had the additional three missions not been cancelled.
The Treasures of Apollo Gallery includes many artifacts from that era including the Apollo 14 command module flown by Roosa, Alan Shepard and Ed Mitchell.
Since the Apollo/Saturn V Center opened in December 1996, visitors enter and watch a re-creation of the launch of Apollo 8 in the reconstructed Apollo era Launch Control Center Firing Room. At the other end of the center, a theater plays out the drama of the first Moon landing.
The Kennedy visitor complex is worth dedicating a day for a visit. The complex also includes more than just the Apollo/Saturn V Center. The Heroes & Legends attraction features the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame. Inside are the Mercury capsule flown by astronaut Wally Schirra in 1962 and the Gemini IX spacecraft flown by Tom Stafford and Gene Cernan in 1966.
Inside the Space Shuttle Atlantis attraction, the orbiter is displayed with payload bay doors opened and the robotic remote manipulator system arm extended.
The bus tour of the Kennedy Space Center is included with admission and includes the stop at the Apollo/Saturn V Center.
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex is open daily from 9 a.m. to closing times that vary by season.
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this post are my own. I did not receive compensation for this post.
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