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[Project Mercury] NIGHT VIEW OF A PRECURSOR TO HUMAN SPACEFLIGHT: early Atlas missile (9B) on the launch stand at Cape Canaveral DeFillips / US Army, 17 November 1958 image 1
[Project Mercury] NIGHT VIEW OF A PRECURSOR TO HUMAN SPACEFLIGHT: early Atlas missile (9B) on the launch stand at Cape Canaveral DeFillips / US Army, 17 November 1958 image 2
Lot 30

[Project Mercury] NIGHT VIEW OF A PRECURSOR TO HUMAN SPACEFLIGHT: early Atlas missile (9B) on the launch stand at Cape Canaveral
DeFillips / US Army, 17 November 1958

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

Sold for €307.20 inc. premium

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[Project Mercury] NIGHT VIEW OF A PRECURSOR TO HUMAN SPACEFLIGHT: early Atlas missile (9B) on the launch stand at Cape Canaveral

DeFillips / US Army, 17 November 1958

Printed 1958.

Vintage gelatin silver print on fibre-based paper [NASA image PL-58-48084].
With USAF caption on the reverse numbered "PL-58-48084" (issued by US Air Force, Patrick Air Force Base, RCA photo laboratory).

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

Historical context
This striking night photograph captures the Atlas 9B missile standing tall on its launch stand at Cape Canaveral on November 17, 1968 bathed in artificial light against the darkness of the sky. The Atlas series, originally developed as an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), became a critical stepping stone in the early days of Project Mercury, the United States' first human spaceflight program.
This particular early Atlas missile, seen here in its pre-spaceflight era configuration, represents the technological foundation that would soon launch the first American astronauts into orbit. The Atlas rocket family evolved to carry John Glenn aboard Friendship 7 in 1962, making him the first American to orbit the Earth.

More than just an engineering marvel, this image symbolizes the dawn of human spaceflight, marking the transition from military missile technology to peaceful exploration of the cosmos. The Atlas rocket, once a weapon of war, became a vehicle for discovery, pushing humanity toward the stars.

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