All About History

GIANT LEAP THE BATTLE FOR SPACE

For millennia, mankind has gazed up at the stars in the hope that they might provide a greater understanding of our place in the world. Entire societies were built upon the natural clockwork of the Sun, Moon and stars. We literally worshipped them as gods. Key to the allure of the celestial bodies was the very fact that they were untouchable; twinkling back at us from afar, yet tantalisingly out of our grasp. But what if mankind could indeed reach out and touch them? Moreover, what if one superpower could conquer a celestial body, stick a flag in it, assert its superiority, and use the feat to pursue its own ends? Speaking in September 1962, President John F. Kennedy laid down a challenge to the American people to do just that. “We choose to go to the Moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard; because that goal will serve to organise and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win.” And while the space race was well under way, with this statement Kennedy had rung the bell of its most important final lap.

At 2.56am EDT on 21 July 1969, 600 million people eagerly watched their TVs worldwide as Neil Armstrong stepped down onto the Moon’s surface and uttered those immortal lines: “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.” It was a monumental technological achievement.

Meanwhile back on Earth, mankind was locked into an ideological battle for supremacy, fronted by two world superpowers. At the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from All About History

All About History8 min readInternational Relations
Operation Unthinkable Had Become Reality?
In 1945, with Nazi Germany defeated, Britain was already planning World War III. Well not exactly, but Prime Minister Winston Churchill had become disturbed by the Soviet Union’s occupation of much of Eastern Europe. On his orders a plan was drawn up
All About History15 min read
TERROR IN THE Tower of London
For more than 900 years, the Tower of London has guarded the north bank of the River Thames. At various times a royal palace, menagerie, public record office, mint, arsenal, bank vault and prison, it has played a central role in England’s history. In
All About History10 min read
Battle Of The Scheldt
The success of the 1944 Normandy Campaign had come at a heavy cost. Having sustained over 200,000 casualties, the battered and bruised Allies faced new logistical challenges as their advance took them further and further away from the beachhead secur

Related Books & Audiobooks