*HTML is ON *UBB Code is ON Smilies Legend
Smilies Legend
[i]The incident was reported Wednesday night [July 15] at Space View Park, 8 Broad St., [Titusville, Florida] a public area that sits along the riverside about 15 miles west of the launch pads at Kennedy Space Center. Photos circulated on social media of what appeared to be white or silver writing along the statutes and stone slabs memorializing the Apollo Space program that launched the nation to the moon. Police arrived Wednesday evening and found an unnamed woman cleaning the writing off of the memorial. It was not immediately known when the vandalism took place.[/i]
If you have previously registered, but forgotten your password, click here.
T O P I C R E V I E WRobert PearlmanFrom Florida Today, the Space Walk of Fame's Apollo monument needs $200K: Soon, there will be one more monument to the historic space program's achievements.The U.S. Space Walk of Fame Foundation, which runs the space museum in downtown Titusville, is moving forward in its efforts to install a monument to the Apollo program near downtown, adjacent to Space View Park.The nonprofit foundation spent more than $400,000 on the project, which will be installed at the city's new stormwater detention pond between Washington and Indian River avenues. But it still needs $200,000 by the end of January to complete the monument, dedicated to those who worked on the last space program before the shuttle.The funds are needed to pay for the remaining bronze panel-and-a-half on the monument and eight more pylons, said Charlie Mars, president of the foundation. Robert PearlmanHow to help... If you want to donate to the U.S. Space Walk of Fame Foundation's Apollo monument project, you may write to the foundation at P.O. Box 6385, Titusville, FL 32782, call 264-0434 or e-mail spacemuseumsales@cfl.rr.com. Or you can stop by the foundation's museum at 4 Main St., Titusville.Robert PearlmanSpace Walk of Fame representatives, including president Charlie Mars, Warren Lackie and Sandy Storm, recently visited American Bronze to approve the art for the Apollo monument's Earth and Moon. The following pictures are courtesy the Space Walk of Fame Foundation: And here are several of the bronze plaques that will share the story of Apollo:Robert PearlmanThese diagrams show the placement and appearance of the Apollo monument: Robert PearlmanCourtesy collectSPACE member Tim Gagnon (KSCArtist), the first of a new series of construction photographs documenting the installation of the Space Walk of Fame's Apollo Monument. Robert PearlmanApollo Monument begins to take shapeThe bronze Earth and Moon (cast from the clay models pictured above) has arrived, as has the stainless steel 'A' and 'swoosh' that will form the monument's representation of the Apollo Program emblem. The following pictures are courtesy the Space Walk of Fame Foundation:Assembly was scheduled to begin today. "Raising of the A" is targeted for next week, after the launch of STS-118.Robert PearlmanRobert PearlmanRobert PearlmanPolice are attempting to find out who scrawled graffiti across the Space Walk of Fame's Project Apollo monument, reports Florida Today. The incident was reported Wednesday night [July 15] at Space View Park, 8 Broad St., [Titusville, Florida] a public area that sits along the riverside about 15 miles west of the launch pads at Kennedy Space Center.Photos circulated on social media of what appeared to be white or silver writing along the statutes and stone slabs memorializing the Apollo Space program that launched the nation to the moon.Police arrived Wednesday evening and found an unnamed woman cleaning the writing off of the memorial. It was not immediately known when the vandalism took place. Photos via the Talk of Titusville (via Facebook):
Soon, there will be one more monument to the historic space program's achievements.The U.S. Space Walk of Fame Foundation, which runs the space museum in downtown Titusville, is moving forward in its efforts to install a monument to the Apollo program near downtown, adjacent to Space View Park.The nonprofit foundation spent more than $400,000 on the project, which will be installed at the city's new stormwater detention pond between Washington and Indian River avenues. But it still needs $200,000 by the end of January to complete the monument, dedicated to those who worked on the last space program before the shuttle.The funds are needed to pay for the remaining bronze panel-and-a-half on the monument and eight more pylons, said Charlie Mars, president of the foundation.
The U.S. Space Walk of Fame Foundation, which runs the space museum in downtown Titusville, is moving forward in its efforts to install a monument to the Apollo program near downtown, adjacent to Space View Park.
The nonprofit foundation spent more than $400,000 on the project, which will be installed at the city's new stormwater detention pond between Washington and Indian River avenues. But it still needs $200,000 by the end of January to complete the monument, dedicated to those who worked on the last space program before the shuttle.
The funds are needed to pay for the remaining bronze panel-and-a-half on the monument and eight more pylons, said Charlie Mars, president of the foundation.
If you want to donate to the U.S. Space Walk of Fame Foundation's Apollo monument project, you may write to the foundation at P.O. Box 6385, Titusville, FL 32782, call 264-0434 or e-mail spacemuseumsales@cfl.rr.com. Or you can stop by the foundation's museum at 4 Main St., Titusville.
And here are several of the bronze plaques that will share the story of Apollo:
The bronze Earth and Moon (cast from the clay models pictured above) has arrived, as has the stainless steel 'A' and 'swoosh' that will form the monument's representation of the Apollo Program emblem. The following pictures are courtesy the Space Walk of Fame Foundation:
Assembly was scheduled to begin today. "Raising of the A" is targeted for next week, after the launch of STS-118.
The incident was reported Wednesday night [July 15] at Space View Park, 8 Broad St., [Titusville, Florida] a public area that sits along the riverside about 15 miles west of the launch pads at Kennedy Space Center.Photos circulated on social media of what appeared to be white or silver writing along the statutes and stone slabs memorializing the Apollo Space program that launched the nation to the moon.Police arrived Wednesday evening and found an unnamed woman cleaning the writing off of the memorial. It was not immediately known when the vandalism took place.
Photos circulated on social media of what appeared to be white or silver writing along the statutes and stone slabs memorializing the Apollo Space program that launched the nation to the moon.
Police arrived Wednesday evening and found an unnamed woman cleaning the writing off of the memorial. It was not immediately known when the vandalism took place.
Contact Us | The Source for Space History & Artifacts
Copyright 1999-2024 collectSPACE. All rights reserved.