Today in History
1959
Soviet Probe Reaches the Moon
A
Soviet rocket crashed into the moon’s surface, becoming the first
man-made object sent from earth to reach the lunar surface. The event
gave the Soviets a short-lived advantage in the “space race” and
prompted even greater effort by the United States to develop its own
space program.
In
1957, the Soviets shocked the United States by becoming the first
nation to launch a satellite into orbit around the earth. Sputnik, as it
was called, frightened many Americans, who believed that the Soviets
would soon develop an entire new class of weapons that could be fired
from space. U.S. officials were especially concerned, for the success of
Sputnik was a direct rebuke to American claims of technological and
scientific superiority over the communist regime in Russia. It was a
tremendous propaganda victory for the Soviets, and gave them an edge in
attracting less-developed nations into the Soviet orbit with promises of
technological aid and assistance.
The
United States responded by accelerating its own space program, and just
months after Sputnik, an American satellite went into orbit. In
September 1959, the Soviets upped the ante considerably with the
announcement that a rocket carrying the flag of the Soviet Union had
crashed onto the moon’s surface.
In
Washington, a muted congratulation was sent to the Soviet scientists
who managed the feat. At the same time, however, the United States
warned the Soviet Union that sending the Russian flag to the moon gave
the Soviets no territorial rights over the celestial body.
Vice
President Richard Nixon expressed some sour grapes by noting that it
took the Soviet four tries to hit the moon and reassured Americans that
“We are way ahead” in the space race.
Nixon’s
reassurances aside, the Soviet success in sending a rocket to the moon
provoked even greater effort by the United States to gain an advantage
in the space race.
In
1960, presidential candidate John F. Kennedy made it one of his
campaign themes. After winning the election, President Kennedy increased
spending for the space program and vowed that America would send a man
to the moon by the end of the decade.
In 1969, American astronaut Neil Armstrong became the first man to walk on the moon.
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