Image Credit: NASA
Sixty years ago, near the dawn of the space age, NASA controllers "lit the candle" and
sent Mercury astronaut Alan Shepard arcing into space atop a Redstone rocket.
His cramped space capsule was dubbed Freedom 7. Broadcast live to a
global television audience, the historic Mercury-Redstone
3 (MR-3) spacecraft was launched from Cape
Canaveral Florida at 9:34 a.m. Eastern Time on May 5, 1961. The flight of
Freedom 7, the first space flight by an American, followed less than a
month after the first human venture into space by Soviet Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin. The 15 minute sub-orbital flight achieved an
altitude of 116 miles and a maximum speed of 5,134 miles per hour. As Shepard
looked back near the peak of Freedom 7's trajectory, he could see
the outlines of the west coast of Florida, Lake Okeechobe in central Florida,
the Gulf of Mexico, and the Bahamas. Shepard would later view planet
Earth from a more distant perspective and walk on the Moon as
commander of the Apollo 14 mission.