
Dominique Ciccolella
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![[Apollo 9] THE FIRST DOCKING OF TWO MANNED U.S. SPACECRAFT (diptych) David Scott, Russell Schweickart and James McDivitt, 3-13 March 1969 image 1](/_next/image.jpg?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg1.bonhams.com%2Fimage%3Fsrc%3DImages%2Flive%2F2025-03%2F24%2F25639331-180-1.jpg&w=2400&q=75)
![[Apollo 9] THE FIRST DOCKING OF TWO MANNED U.S. SPACECRAFT (diptych) David Scott, Russell Schweickart and James McDivitt, 3-13 March 1969 image 2](/_next/image.jpg?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg1.bonhams.com%2Fimage%3Fsrc%3DImages%2Flive%2F2025-03%2F24%2F25639331-180-6.jpg&w=2400&q=75)
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Sold for €281.60 inc. premium
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In the first image, LM Spider's ascent stage, with David Scott aboard, is seen from CSM Gumdrop, where Russell Schweickart and James McDivitt monitored the approach. After an independent four-hour flight, Spider had successfully tested both its descent and ascent stages, proving its manoeuvrability and stability in space. Now, the final challenge remained: docking back with Gumdrop. Despite its fragile, ungainly appearance, the Lunar Module had demonstrated its capability, prompting McDivitt and Schweickart to describe it as a "great flying machine...like a fighter plane or a sports car."
The second photograph reverses the perspective, showing CSM Gumdrop from LM Spider during the first-ever Apollo rendezvous. Against the backdrop of Arizona and southern California, the Command Module, with its propeller-like high-gain antenna and docking probe prominently visible, prepared for the final approach. Over a six-hour period, Scott piloted Gumdrop solo, manoeuvring it for docking while the two spacecraft drifted up to 100 miles apart before closing in again.
From the mission transcript when the photographs were taken:
098:21:45 Scott (Gumdrop): Oh, I see you out there coming in the sunlight.
098:21:48 Schweickart (Spider): Great.
098:21:51 Scott (Gumdrop): You're the biggest, friendliest, funniest looking spider I've ever seen. [...]
098:33:50 McDivitt (Spider): Okay, Davey. It says 100 feet on the radar tape. It looks a little closer to that to me, but what do you say we stop here?
098:33:58 Scott (Gumdrop): Okay. That's a good idea.
098:34:04 McDivitt (Spider): Okay. I'll get a STOP and STABILIZE and then give it to you.
098:34:28 Scott (Gumdrop): Okay. That looks pretty good to me.
098:34:30 McDivitt (Spider): Okay, good.
098:34:34 McDivitt (Spider): Let me take a couple of pictures of your nose; then I'll start pitching around.
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CLICK HERE: APOLLO 9 THREE TO MAKE IT READY (1969) 13272