Science History - Daily
# The Cosmic Wake-Up Call: Alan Shepard Becomes America's First Man in Space On May 5, 1961, exactly 65 years ago today, Navy Commander Alan B. Shepard Jr. squeezed himself into a Mercury capsule he affectionately nicknamed "Freedom 7" and became the first American to journey into space. This fifteen-minute suborbital flight may have been brief, but it represented a monumental leap for American science, technology, and national pride during one of the most intense periods of the Cold War. The morning didn't start smoothly. Shepard had been awake since 1:10 AM, endured a medical examination, ate a breakfast of steak and eggs (which would become a pre-flight tradition), and was suited up by 3:55 AM. Then came the delays. Weather issues, technical problems with computers, and a troublesome power inverter pushed the launch back hour after hour. Shepard spent over four hours lying on his back in the tiny capsule, waiting. During this time, he uttered what would become one of NASA's most famous quotes—though a sanitized version. Frustrated by the delays, he's reported to have said, "Why don't you fix your little problem and light this candle?" Finally, at 9:34 AM Eastern Time, the Redstone rocket ignited. Shepard's heart rate jumped to 126 beats per minute as he felt the rocket shake and heard the roar below him. "Roger, liftoff and the clock is started," he reported calmly, though he later admitted he was thinking, "Don't screw up, Shepard." The flight itself lasted just 15 minutes and 22 seconds. Freedom 7 reached an altitude of 116 miles and a maximum speed of 5,180 mph. Unlike the Soviets' Yuri Gagarin, who had orbited Earth just 23 days earlier, Shepard's flight was suborbital—a giant arc through space before splashing down in the Atlantic Ocean 302 miles from the launch site. But what Shepard lacked in orbital achievement, he made up for in control. Unlike Gagarin, who was essentially a passenger in a fully automated spacecraft, Shepard manually controlled Freedom 7's orientation, testing whether humans could actually function and pilot a spacecraft in the weightless environment. He proved they could, reporting observations, operating controls, and even taking time to peer out his window at Earth's curve and the black void of space above. The mission was a spectacular success. Shepard splashed down safely, the capsule was recovered by helicopter within minutes, and he was plucked from the ocean to the deck of the aircraft carrier USS Lake Champlain. An estimated 45 million Americans had watched on television—NASA had decided to broadcast the event live, a stark contrast to Soviet secrecy. The impact was immediate and profound. President Kennedy, who had been in office less than four months, called to congratulate Shepard. Just twenty days later, emboldened by this success, Kennedy would make his famous pledge to put a man on the Moon before the decade's end. Shepard's flight transformed him into an instant national hero and proved that Am This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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