A
new era in space flight began on April 12, 1981, when Space Shuttle
Columbia, or STS-1, soared into orbit from NASA's Kennedy Space Center
in Florida.
Astronaut John Young, a veteran of four previous
spaceflights including a walk on the moon in 1972, commanded the
mission. Navy test pilot Bob Crippen piloted the mission and would go on
to command three future shuttle missions.
The shuttle was humankind's
first re-usable spacecraft. The orbiter would launch like a rocket and
land like a plane. The two solid rocket boosters that helped push them
into space would also be re-used, after being recovered in the ocean.
Only the massive external fuel tank would burn up as it fell back to
Earth. It was all known as the Space Transportation System.
Twenty years prior to the historic launch, on April 12, 1961, the era of
human spaceflight began when Russian Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the
first human to orbit the Earth in his Vostock I spacecraft. The flight
lasted 108 minutes.
Pictured here: a timed exposure of STS-1,
at Launch Pad A, Complex 39, turns the space vehicle and support
facilities into a night- time fantasy of light. Structures to the left
of the shuttle are the fixed and the rotating service structure.
Image Credit: NASA
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