The Delaware Gazette

Armstrong’s small step a giant leap for humanity

This undated file photo pro­vided by NASA shows astro­naut Neil Arm­strong. The fam­ily of Neil Arm­strong, the first man to walk on the moon, said he died Sat­ur­day, Aug. 25, at age 82. Arm­strong com­manded the Apollo 11 space­craft that landed on the moon July 20, 1969. He radioed back to Earth the his­toric news of “one giant leap for mankind.” (AP Photo/NASA, File)

SETH BORENSTEIN

AP Sci­ence Writer

WASHINGTON — When man first har­nessed fire, no one recorded it. When the Wright Broth­ers showed man could fly, only a hand­ful of peo­ple wit­nessed it. But when Neil Arm­strong took that first small step on the moon in July 1969, an entire globe watched in grainy black-and-white from a quar­ter mil­lion miles away.

We saw it. We were part of it. He took that “giant leap for mankind” for us.

Although more than half of the world’s pop­u­la­tion wasn’t alive then, it was an event that changed and expanded the globe.

“It’s a human achieve­ment that will be remem­bered for­ever,” said John Logs­don, pro­fes­sor emer­i­tus of space pol­icy at George Wash­ing­ton Uni­ver­sity. Those first steps were beamed to nearly every coun­try around the world, thanks to a recently launched satel­lite. It was truly the first global mass media event, Logs­don said. An esti­mated 600 mil­lion peo­ple — 1 out of every 5 on the planet — watched.

The two his­tor­i­cal events likely to be long remem­bered from the 20th Cen­tury are the moon land­ing and the first atomic bomb, said Smith­son­ian Insti­tu­tion space cura­tor Roger Launius.

“There is no way to over­es­ti­mate that sig­nif­i­cance in human his­tory and he is for­ever linked to that,” Lau­nius said of Arm­strong, who died Sat­ur­day at age 82.

Just as the voy­age of Christo­pher Colum­bus split his­toric eras 500 years ago, so will Neil Arm­strong and Apollo 11, said Rice Uni­ver­sity his­to­rian Dou­glas Brink­ley, a spe­cial­ist in 20th Cen­tury history.

“We may be liv­ing in the age of Arm­strong,” said Brink­ley, who con­ducted oral his­to­ries for NASA, includ­ing ses­sions with Armstrong.

The late sci­ence fic­tion author Arthur C. Clarke wrote that the Apollo 11 moon land­ing was “one of the great divides in human his­tory; we are sun­dered from it for­ever by the moment when Neil Arm­strong and Buzz Aldrin stepped out on to the Sea of Tran­quil­ity. Now his­tory and fic­tion have become inex­orably intertwined.”

Since that day, there’s been a com­mon phrase: “If we can send a man to the moon, why can’t we … ?” with the blank filled with a task that seems far less difficult.

Armstrong’s small step was that leap in con­fi­dence telling the world “if we can do this, we can do any­thing,” said Howard McCurdy, a pro­fes­sor of space and pub­lic pol­icy at Amer­i­can Uni­ver­sity and author of the book “Space and the Amer­i­can Imagination.”

“He took some­thing that 20 years ear­lier was pure fan­tasy and turned it into real­ity and if we could do that for space we could do it for any­thing,” McCurdy said Saturday.

The Apollo 11 moon land­ing was the fin­ish line in a decade-long space race started by the Soviet Union. And so the first steps on the moon com­ing from an Amer­i­can civil­ian had many mean­ings. Get­ting there first showed Amer­i­can tech­no­log­i­cal supe­ri­or­ity, but Arm­strong men­tioned mankind — not Amer­i­cans — demon­strat­ing that this was a moment for the peo­ple of Earth, McCurdy said.

Arm­strong and Aldrin left a plaque on the moon that read: “Here men from the planet Earth first set foot upon the moon. July 1969 A.D. We came in peace for all mankind.”

For all mankind. And that’s how the world took it.

“The suc­cess for Amer­ica (is a) suc­cess for every liv­ing man” reported the Swahili-language news­pa­per Nguromo of Dar.

And if that wasn’t enough, Arm­strong and Aldrin also left a patch to com­mem­o­rate NASA astro­nauts and Soviet cos­mo­nauts who had died in pur­suit of space.

“It was spe­cial and mem­o­rable but it was only instan­ta­neous because there was work to do,” Arm­strong told an Aus­tralian tele­vi­sion inter­viewer this year.

The Cold War may have slightly muted the sig­nif­i­cance of the event at the time, but over the years the impor­tance of the moon land­ing has only grown, Logs­don said.

It’s per­me­ated into cul­ture. The moon land­ing is in movies, tele­vi­sion, books, songs and it was even Michael Jackson’s sig­na­ture dance step. That’s prob­a­bly because in some ways that moon­walk touched some­thing that has been hard-wired into human­ity: the need to explore. For 25,000 years, humans have been migrat­ing and push­ing into new places. Arm­strong took it to new heights.

John Glenn, the first Amer­i­can to orbit the Earth, noted it was “the first time any human being set foot on a place other than Earth, and that’s a pretty big step.”

AP News Posted by on Aug 26 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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