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Author
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Topic: Jan 31, 1961: Remembering MR-2 and Ham
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Robert Pearlman Editor Posts: 43576 From: Houston, TX Registered: Nov 1999
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posted 01-31-2011 01:54 PM
Montgomery Advertiser AstroChimp: Local man trained US space pioneer Fifty years ago, there was a space race -- a race the United States was losing to the communists.Enter a hero, named Ham. The chimp would become the first hominid launched into outer space. And Ham wasn't just a passenger. He was taught to push a button once the light for re-entry came on. His mission set the stage for the one Alan Shepard would make May 5, 1961, aboard Freedom 7. Monday is the 50th anniversary of when Ham the "astrochimp" launched into suborbital space inside a Mercury capsule. The Guardian The chimp that took America into space Fifty years ago [today] an African-born astronaut made it into space ahead of Soviet pioneer Yuri Gagarin. His name was Ham, a chimpanzee born in July 1957 in the rainforests of what was then the French Cameroons. He was bought by the US Air Force to be used in early space flight experiments for $457 -- not a bad investment as it turned out. Related: Space Explorers & Workers: MR-2's Ham and his fellow astro-chimps |
Robert Pearlman Editor Posts: 43576 From: Houston, TX Registered: Nov 1999
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posted 01-31-2011 03:27 PM
LIFE Classic Gallery: In Praise of Ham the Astrochimp On the morning of January 31, 1961, a 5-year-old chimpanzee named "Ham" ate a breakfast of baby cereal, condensed milk, vitamins, and half an egg. Then the playful 37-pound primate went out into the Cape Canaveral light and made aeronautic history: Aboard a NASA space capsule -- and traveling almost 160 miles above the Earth -- he became the first chimp in space. The launch's success helped ratchet up even further the already-frantic contest for scientific supremacy between the U.S. and the Soviet Union -- and briefly made Ham something of a star. Here, on the 50th anniversary of that momentous, 16-minute "headlong trip through outer space's underbelly" (as Time magazine called the flight), LIFE.com presents rare and previous unpublished photographs taken before, during, and after Ham's wild ride -- pictures that capture an era when technology, politics, ideology, and propaganda converged in an era-defining struggle known as the Space Race. |
AJ Member Posts: 511 From: Plattsburgh, NY, United States Registered: Feb 2009
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posted 01-31-2011 03:41 PM
I love Ham. I even gave my parents a Ham Christmas ornament for their tree. Cheers to a pioneer chimp!  |
micropooz Member Posts: 1532 From: Washington, DC, USA Registered: Apr 2003
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posted 01-31-2011 07:08 PM
And hence, the 50th anniversary of the first recovery ship cover! |
dtemple Member Posts: 730 From: Longview, Texas, USA Registered: Apr 2000
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posted 01-31-2011 07:38 PM
I hadn't realized there were two major spaceflight anniversaries today - Explorer 1 and MR-2. |
Robert Pearlman Editor Posts: 43576 From: Houston, TX Registered: Nov 1999
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posted 01-31-2011 09:48 PM
Make that three: Apollo 14 was launched on Jan. 31, 1971. |
moorouge Member Posts: 2458 From: U.K. Registered: Jul 2009
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posted 02-01-2011 02:25 AM
At the back of my mind I have a recollection that Ham took an immediate dislike of all things astronautical after his flight. Is this correct? Or was it Enos?As a side issue - even in these days NASA had a preference for male pilots, the one female in the programme, Minnie, being relegated to a breeding programme. |
garymilgrom Member Posts: 1966 From: Atlanta, GA Registered: Feb 2007
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posted 02-01-2011 05:15 AM
Enos the p*nis had a poor, sometimes nasty temperament. His escapades are documented in the book Packing for Mars.Hooray for these chimps' contributions! | |
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Ultimate Bulletin Board 5.47a
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