Home History Rest In Peace, One Of Our World’s Greatest Ever Explorers

Rest In Peace, One Of Our World’s Greatest Ever Explorers

Rest In Peace, One Our World’s Greatest Explorer Ever

Forget James Cook, Christopher Columbus, or Able Tasman, one of the greatest explores of our time passed from us today: may he rest in peace.

Michael Collins (October 31, 1930 – April 28, 2021) was an American astronaut who flew Apollo 11’s command module Columbia, around the Moon in 1969 while his crew-mates, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin made the first crewed landing on its surface. He was also a test pilot and Major General in the United States Air Forces Reserves.

Collins graduated from the United States Military Academy with the Class of 1952. He joined the United States Air Force, and flew F-86 Sabre fighters at Chambley-Bussières in France.

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He was accepted into the US Air Force Experimental Flight Test Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base in 1960, also graduating from the Aerospace Research Pilot School.

Selected as part of NASA’s third group of 14 astronauts in 1963, Collins flew in space twice. His first spaceflight was on Gemini 10 in 1966, in which he and Command Pilot John Young performed a rendezvous orbital exercise with two spacecraft and undertook two extravehicular activities (EVAs, also known as spacewalks). On the 1969 Apollo 11 mission he became one of 24 people to fly to the Moon, which he orbited thirty times. He was the fourth person (and third American) to perform a space walk, the first person to have performed more than one spacewalk, and, after Young, who flew the command module on Apollo 10, the second person to orbit the Moon alone.

As a young man living in Papua New Guinea, I remember fondly the landing of the Eagle part of the Apollo 11 venture, landing on the surface of the Moon. The extraordinary pictures were rushed from Australia to Rabaul in PNG and projected on an outdoor screen at the Rabaul Yacht Club. It was there I first saw Neil Armstrong descending the Eagle landing module ladder. It is difficult today given the extraordinary leaps in technology we have seen in recent years to imagine what an amazing achievement that NASA had achieved.

The American astronaut Michael Collins, who was part of the Apollo 11 original moon landing crew and kept the command module flying while Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to walk on the moon, has died at the age of 90, his family said on Wednesday.

He was sometimes known as the “forgotten astronaut” because he didn’t get to land on the moon, while Armstrong and Aldrin became household names. But his role in the three-man mission in 1969 was just as crucial, and his task to keep the module circling and piloting it as his teammates departed from the module in the Eagle lander and then returned safely, was just as crucial, nerve-racking, and exciting for the mission as a whole.

Armstrong

21 July 1969: Man walks on the moon

“Not since Adam has any human known such solitude as Mike Collins,” the mission log said, referring to the biblical figure.

A statement released by Collins’s family on Wednesday, including a tweet, said: “We regret to share that out beloved father and grandfather passed away today, after a valiant battle with cancer. He spent his final days peacefully.”

It adds that the family hopes people will celebrate his joy, sharp wit and “his quiet sense of purpose, and his wise perspective, gained both from looking back at Earth from the vantage of space and gazing across calm waters from the deck of his fishing boat”.

President Joe Biden said his prayers were with the Collins family.

“From his vantage point, high above the Earth, he reminded us of the fragility of our own planet, and called on us to care for it like the treasure it is,” Biden said in a statement. “Godspeed, Mike.”

Writing on Twitter, Aldrin paid tribute to Collins, saying: “Dear Mike, Wherever you have been or will be, you will always have the Fire to Carry us deftly to new heights and to the future.”

A statement from the acting NASA administrator, Steve Jurczyk, read: “Today the nation lost a true pioneer and lifelong advocate for exploration in astronaut Michael Collins. As pilot of the Apollo 11 command module – some called him ‘the loneliest man in history’ – while his colleagues walked on the Moon for the first time, he helped our nation achieve a defining milestone. He also distinguished himself in the Gemini Program and as an Air Force pilot”. Armstrong was 82 when he died in 2012. Aldrin is still alive and lives in New Jersey, at 91.

The world held its breath as Armstrong first stepped on the moon in July, 1969. All the while, Collins was in orbit, 60 miles above, extremely busy piloting the command module, and told Nasa back in Houston that the successful moon landing was “fantastic”.

Post-mission he said: “The thing I remember most is the view of planet Earth from a great distance. Tiny. Very shiny. Blue and white. Bright. Beautiful. Serene and fragile.”

At the time he was orbiting, he was always cut off from communications every time the Apollo 11 command module passed around the back side of the moon.

It was because of this part of the mission that some dubbed him the loneliest man in humanity, NPR reported. And as he recalled in a 2016 NPR interview, he didn’t think of it that way. He said, “The fact that I was … out of communications, rather than that being a fear, that was a joy because I got Mission Control to shut up for a little while. Every once in a while.”

“It’s a shame that when people are asked, ‘Can you name the Apollo 11 crew.’ Mike Collins is normally the name that doesn’t come to mind,” Francis French, of the San Diego Air and Space Museum and author of many books on the space program, told the radio network.