You are on page 1of 3

NEWS

News, features & press releases

MISSIONS
Current, future, past missions & launch dates

MULTIMEDIA
Images, videos, NASA TV & more

CONNECT
Social media channels & NASA apps

ABOUT NASA
Leadership, organization, budget, careers & more

Search

For Public

For Educators

For Students |

For Media

Send

Share

NASA Education
About NASA Education For Educators For Students NASA Kids' Club

Text Size

249
August 28, 2012

Who Was Neil Armstrong?

Neil Armstrong was the first person to walk on the moon. He was an astronaut. He flew on two space missions. One was Apollo 11. That mission landed on the moon. He was also an engineer, a pilot and a college professor.

What Was Neil Armstrong's Life Like Growing Up? Neil Armstrong was born on Aug. 5, 1930. He was born in Ohio. He had a brother and a sister. He was in the Boy Scouts of America. Armstrong flew in an airplane when he was 6. That flight made him love airplanes. He attended Blume High School in Ohio.

Armstrong went to college at Purdue University. While he was in college, he left to serve in the U.S. Navy. He flew planes during the Korean War. Then he came back to college and finished the degree he had started. He later earned a master's degree too.
Neil Armstrong was the first man to walk on the moon. Image Credit: NASA

What Did Neil Armstrong Do Before He Became an Astronaut? Before he was an astronaut, Armstrong worked for a group that studied airplanes. That group later became part of NASA. He flew several planes for

View Larger Image

them. He also helped design planes. One of the aircraft he flew was the X-15 rocket plane. This plane flew very high and very fast. It set records. Do you need professional PDFs? Try PDFmyURL!

What Did Neil Armstrong Do as an Astronaut? Armstrong became an astronaut in 1962. He was in the second group of astronauts ever chosen. He was the commander of Gemini 8 in 1966. He flew on that mission with David Scott. They were the first astronauts to dock, or connect, two vehicles in space.

What Happened On the Apollo 11 Mission? Armstrong's second flight was Apollo 11 in 1969. He was the mission commander. He flew with Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins. Armstrong and Aldrin landed on the moon in a lander named "Eagle." They were the first people to land on the moon. Collins did not land. He circled the moon in the Apollo capsule. After they landed, Armstrong and Aldrin walked on the moon. Armstrong took the first step on the moon. He said, "That's one small step for (a) man; one giant leap for mankind."
Armstrong took this picture of Aldrin on the moon during the Apollo 11 mission. Image Credit: NASA

Armstrong and Aldrin spent more than two hours outside their spacecraft on the moon. They studied the surface. They collected rocks. After almost a day, they blasted off. They docked with Collins in orbit around the moon. All three then flew back to Earth.

What Did Neil Armstrong Do After Apollo 11? Neil Armstrong retired from NASA after Apollo 11. In 1971, Armstrong became a college professor. He taught until 1979. Later, he became a businessman. He stayed active in groups that studied space and aeronautics.

An American Hero and Explorer Neil Armstrong died on August 25, 2012. He was 82.

More About Neil Armstrong: Apollo 11 - First Footprint on the Moon What Was the Apollo Program?
The first footprints on the moon could be there for a million years. The moon has no wind to blow them away.

Read Who Was Neil Armstrong? Grades 5-8 Return to Homework Topics Grades K-4 Do you need professional PDFs? Try PDFmyURL!

Image Credit: NASA View Larger Image

David Hitt/NASA Educational Technology Services Back To Top > NASA Information on the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 > Budgets, Strategic Plans and Accountability Reports > Equal Employment Opportunity Data Posted Pursuant to the No Fear Act > Information-Dissemination Policies and Inventories > Freedom of Information Act > Privacy Policy & Important Notices > NASA Advisory Council > Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel > Inspector General Hotline > Office of the Inspector General > NASA Communications Policy > Contact NASA > Site Map > BusinessUSA > USA.gov > Open Government at NASA > Help and Preferences

Page Last Updated: September 4th, 2013 Page Editor: NASA Administrator NASA Official: Brian Dunbar

Do you need professional PDFs? Try PDFmyURL!

You might also like