Moonwalkers

Moonwalkers

Thirty-two astronauts were assigned to fly in the Apollo manned lunar landing program. Twenty-four of these left Earth’s orbit and flew around the Moon (Apollo 1 never launched and Apollo 7 and Apollo 9 were low Earth orbit spacecraft testing missions). In addition, nine astronauts flew Apollo spacecraft in the Apollo Applications Programs Skylab and Apollo–Soyuz Test Project.

Twelve of these astronauts walked on the Moon’s surface, and six of those drove a lunar rover on the Moon. While three astronauts flew to the Moon twice, none of them landed on the Moon more than once. The nine Apollo missions to the Moon occurred between December 1968 and December 1972.

Apart from these 24 people who visited the Moon, no human being has gone beyond low Earth orbit. They have, therefore, been farther from the Earth than anyone else. They are also the only people to have directly viewed the far side of the Moon. The twelve who walked on the Moon are the only people ever to have set foot on an astronomical object other than the Earth.

Of the 24 lunar astronauts taking part in the Moon missions, two went on to command a Skylab mission, one commanded Apollo–Soyuz, one flew as commander for shuttle approach and landing tests and two went on to command orbital shuttle missions. A total of 24 Apollo-era astronauts (as well as pre-Apollo astronaut John Glenn) flew on the space shuttle.

Read more about Moonwalkers:  Prime Crew Members, Other Astronauts Who Trained For Apollo But Did Not Fly, Apollo Astronauts Who Walked On The Moon, Apollo Astronauts Who Flew To The Moon Without Landing