Saturday, July 18, 2026

Moon Landing and Me: 52 Ancestors 2026 Prompt “Free Space”

 

Apollo 11 Crew Landed on the Moon on My Birthday

 

This week marks the 57th anniversary of the first moon landing by the crew of Apollo 11. That was a special day for me, as Neil Armstrong took his “one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind” on my tenth birthday.

I no longer remember how we celebrated my tenth birthday. I know we had a cake—my mom always baked an angel food cake for our birthdays, and my brother and I got to choose what color to tint the fluffy frosting, and how to decorate the central hole (I usually put a slender glass or small vase into the cake’s center, and put a little bouquet of flowers in it). I have no memory of what presents I received either.

But I do remember watching the moon landing. My mom was a big fan of Walter Cronkite, so we watched CBS’s coverage. I don’t think we had a color TV yet; in my memory, everything was black and white, and the photos from the moon were pretty fuzzy. But I was excited. Even at ten, I understood I was watching something amazing and world-changing.

Buzz Aldrin and the Apollo 11 Lunar Module, July 1969

Later, perhaps at Christmas, I received a bulletin board for my room that had a picture of the moon lander and the date stamped on the cork backing. I used the bulletin board straight through my college years, although most of the time I had so many papers and photos tacked up that the Apollo 11 lander was invisible.

Photo of a bulletin board like mine from an online sale post

The first time I visited NASA in Houston with my children, I proudly showed them the displays on Apollo 11, pointing out my birthdate on the signs. The event remains special to me, and I think about Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin every year on my birthday.

Sources:

Photo of Buzz Aldrin and Lunar Lander. Wikimedia Commons. https://images.nasa.gov/details/as11-40-5948 http://dayton.hq.nasa.gov/IMAGES/LARGE/GPN-2000-001102.jpg on the Wayback Machine at the Wayback Machine http://grin.hq.nasa.gov/ABSTRACTS/GPN-2000-001102.html on the Wayback Machine at the Wayback Machine