Neil Armstrong shot to world-wide fame as the first
person to step on the surface of the moon, a feat that marked a new era of
human exploration. For the rest of his life he largely shunned the limelight.
Mr. Armstrong
waved as he headed to the van that would take the crew to the rocket at Kennedy
Space Center on July 16, 1969.
Mr.
Armstrong's family released a statement Saturday confirming that he died from
complications "resulting from cardiovascular procedures" performed
Aug. 8, three days after his 82nd birthday.
As commander
of Apollo 11 in 1969, Mr. Armstrong punctuated his exploit with the memorable
phrase, "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind."
The mission transfixed people around the globe, including nearly one million
spectators who flocked to the Florida launch site.
He resisted
getting caught up in the hoopla, years later calling himself a "nerdy
engineer." Bucking intense pressure to use his celebrity status for
political purposes or personal gain, the self-effacing Midwesterner left it to
others to ponder the significance and broader meaning of his accomplishment.
Armstrong,
before he blasted off for the moon in 1969 with Michael Collins and Edwin
'Buzz' Aldrin.
The statement
from Mr. Armstrong's family referred to him as "a reluctant American hero
who always believed he was just doing his job."
Mr. Armstrong
was born in Wapakoneta, Ohio, on Aug. 5, 1930, and spent part of his teenage
years on a farm about 60 miles from where Orville and Wilbur Wright more than
25 years earlier experimented. He took his first airplane ride at 6 years old.
Mr. Armstrong
flew 78 missions as a Navy combat pilot in the Korean War and later gained
prominence as a civilian government test pilot.
During his
historic moon exploration on July 20, 1969, some of Mr. Armstrong's other
transmissions reflected his unflappable demeanor. Before returning to a
ticker-tape parade and a 28-city world tour, the aviator was understated in
describing his situation and surroundings some 240,000 miles above Earth. In
one of his first transmissions to controllers on the ground, he calmly told
them: "I tell you, we're going to be busy for a minute."
Later in the
mission, Mr. Armstrong, who earned his pilot's license as a teenager and
idolized Charles Lindbergh, epitomized the calm, assured tone astronauts
prized. "It's different, but it's very pretty out here," he
matter-of-factly told controllers. "I suppose they are going to make a big
deal of all this."
After the
voyage, Mr. Armstrong worked for a year as a high-level official at National
Aeronautics and Space Administration headquarters. In his authorized biography,
published in 2005, Mr. Armstrong fumed at the bureaucracy and the burden of
frequent "appearances on demand" by lawmakers on Capitol Hill. He
resigned and went on to teach at the University of Cincinnati.
Starting about
1980, he largely retreated from public view to enjoy the tranquillity of a
restored 19th-century farmhouse. He raised cattle and corn, served on corporate
boards and enjoyed his grandchildren. Always reluctant to talk to reporters,
Mr. Armstrong sometimes seemed uncomfortable even when he gave speeches or
attended events commemorating advances in aviation and space.
Before the
Apollo 11 launch, armies of reporters vainly tried to find out what personal
items the crew decided to carry with them. It wasn't until more than three
decades later that Mr. Armstrong revealed to his biographer, James Hansen, that
his personal memorabilia included some jewelry for his wife and mother, an old
fraternity pin from Purdue University and some Apollo 11 medallions. According
to the book, however, Mr. Armstrong was most proud of safely transporting a
piece of the historic Wright Brothers Flyer to and from the Moon.
Even at his
death, the family statement stressed his private side. "As much as Neil
cherished his privacy," it said, "he always appreciated the
expressions of good will from people around the world and from all walks of
life."
Mr.
Armstrong's biography quotes his first wife, Janet, saying that he "didn't
like being singled out or to feel that people were still wanting to touch him
or get his autograph." The two divorced in 1994, and Mr. Armstrong
remarried that year.
In January
1986, when the space shuttle Challenger exploded shortly after liftoff killing
all seven aboard, then-President Ronald Reagan personally asked Mr. Armstrong
to serve as vice chairman of the commission set up to investigate the accident.
In some of the group's public sessions, the former NASA loyalist turned out to
be tough and persistent in demanding answers from government officials and
contractors alike. Besides focusing on management lapses, at one point Mr.
Armstrong pointedly called the rocket and its external boosters "a tender
design."
In the late
1990s, Mr. Armstrong sold his personal plane but kept his pilot's license for
the occasional opportunity to fly an unusual or interesting aircraft.
The Armstrong
family's statement ends with the following request: "Honor his example of
service, accomplishment and modesty, and the next time you walk outside on a
clear night and see the moon smiling down at you, think of Neil Armstrong and
give him a wink."
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