"There have not been many years in American history to rival 1969"
That just about says it all.
As most of you who frequent these threads know, 1968 was a year that featured NASA "coming out of the ashes", as-it-were. It represented a recovery from a year that was tragic and tumultuous, in many ways.
For NASA, 18 months had passed since the fire. Three men had died in the Apollo effort, and a long period of "fixing" took place...straight through 1967, and well into 1968, while the country suffered mightily.
"Out Of the Ashes" came in October of 1968, with the stellar engineering test flight of the block 2 command and service modules on Wally Schirra's Apollo 7. Of course, that flight was plagued by a balky Commander and crew which almost sent Mission Control over the edge...but in the end, it man-rated the Apollo CSM.
And I had previously posted a commemoration of man's first voyage to the Moon in December of 1968, Apollo 8.
The bold step of taking the CSM all the way to lunar orbit and back again had been completed...the race to the Moon was won. But the mission hadn't yet been accomplished.
Christmas was good that year. It felt like we were finally out of the ashes in many ways.
But the mission itself would be left for 1969.
On JAN 3 1969, SA-504 quietly rolled out of the VAB and headed to pad 39A at the Cape Kennedy. It almost went un-noticed by the general public as another behemoth rolled along the gravel covered track to the massive launch pad...
On this day in 1969, this was the scene at 39A:

The year of Apollo was about to get underway--the most intense year of manned space flight activity ever, and the most dangerous.
The second Saturn V to carry men was on the pad...glowing in the lights of a Florida evening.
As with the prior flights, the year of Apollo featured firsts.
This Saturn V looked like 503, which left that very pad 2 months before. But it was indeed different.
This one wouldn't be going to the Moon, but in the adapter section, beneath the CSM, was stowed a Lunar Module, and this one would be the first flown by men.
On JAN 4 1969, the day after the Apollo 9 vehicle was rolled out, three men had a meeting with Deke Slayton to discuss their crew assignment. Neil Armstrong, Mike Collins, and Buzz Aldrin were informed that their mission, Apollo 11, would possibly be the landing attempt. Their training was underway for such a mission on this day 40 years past. However, that opportunity depended upon the success of the missions preceeding it--first up, the one on that pad on this day, designated Apollo 9.
Every flight was critical. And 1969 was the most critical, exhilarating, and frankly heart stopping year in the history of manned space flight.
That year, we saw 4 Saturn Vs launch from Cape Kennedy. 4 manned spaceflight missions.
Those 4 Saturn Vs carried 12 men into space. Those 12 men spent 40 days of that year in space aboard 8 different spacecraft.
9 of those men went to the Moon.
4 of those men landed on the Moon on 2 of those 4 flights.
By the end of 1969, a year after Apollo 8, almost three years after the fire, those 4 men would've logged 53 hours and 3 minutes on the Moon, would've accomplished 3 lunar EVAs, totalling 10 hours and 22 minutes of lunar surface time; the scientists at the Lunar Receiving Laboratory would have a gold mine that was only a dream in February--123 pounds of lunar soil and Moon rocks to study--and we would be looking at over 920 photos, in both black and white, and color, taken by men standing on the surface of the Moon...
It was a hell of a year.
But as of this day, 40 years past, the "Year of Apollo" was "up in the air".
Everything hinged on that mission poised out at pad 39A. The year, and indeed, the success of the program, hinged on Apollo 9, the most important piece of the pie to date.
______________________________________________________
We're at F minus 7 days...at this time, the prime crew of Apollo 9 was in final preparations for the first mission of the Year of Apollo.
Apollo 9 launched on MAR 3 1969.
My intention is to post information about the missions involved in the year of Apollo as they happened...
I'll be back in a week to continue...
This post has been edited by MID: 25 February 2009 - 02:37 AM
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