Skip to main content

This auction has ended. View lot details

You may also be interested in

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

[Apollo 7] LAUNCH OF THE FIRST MANNED APOLLO MISSION NASA, 11 October 1968 image 1
[Apollo 7] LAUNCH OF THE FIRST MANNED APOLLO MISSION NASA, 11 October 1968 image 2
Lot 144

[Apollo 7] LAUNCH OF THE FIRST MANNED APOLLO MISSION
NASA, 11 October 1968

14 – 28 April 2025, 12:00 CEST
Paris, Avenue Hoche

Sold for €2,304 inc. premium

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

How to sell

Looking for a similar item?

Our Post-War and Contemporary Art specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.

Find your local specialist

Ask about this lot

[Apollo 7] LAUNCH OF THE FIRST MANNED APOLLO MISSION

NASA, 11 October 1968

Printed 1968.

Vintage chromogenic print on fibre-based Kodak paper [NASA image S-68-48787].
With "A Kodak Paper" watermark on the reverse (issued by NASA).

25.4 x 20.3 cm. (10 x 8 in.)

Historical context
This photograph symbolizes the resumption of manned U.S. space flights 21 months after the Apollo 1 tragedy. Apollo 7 marked Project Apollo's first crewed flight and a major step toward the Moon. The 11-day mission was designed to qualify the three-man Command Module for the demanding half-million-mile round trip to the Moon.
On October 11, 1968, at 11:03 a.m. EDT, Apollo 7 launched from Cape Kennedy's Launch Complex 34, atop a 224-foot-tall Saturn IB 205 rocket.

Footnotes

Generating 1.6 million pounds of thrust, the launch vehicle propelled the Command and Service Module 101 into Earth orbit (123 by 153 nautical miles), with splashdown planned after 164 orbits in the Atlantic Ocean, approximately 200 nautical miles southwest of Bermuda.

Tremendous pressure weighed on the crew of Apollo 7. This was the first crewed flight of the Block II Command Module and the first piloted test flight of the Saturn IB rocket, the precursor to the mighty Saturn V Moon rocket. NASA needed a commander who could execute a flawless mission—one that would prove the spacecraft's readiness and validate every critical system.
The man for the job: Walter Schirra, a 45-year-old veteran of Mercury and Gemini, renowned for his precision and discipline. Leading the longest first-piloted test flight of any spacecraft to date, Schirra and his crew would orbit Earth for 11 days, mirroring the duration of a lunar mission. Their task: push the Apollo spacecraft to its limits, ensuring it was ready for the journey to the Moon. (Reynolds, p. 72)

Additional information

Bid now on these items