Stories of daring, stories of technological feats, stories of prevailing against the odds ... these are the stories we tell at the National Air and Space Museum. Dive in to the stories below to discover, learn, and be inspired. 

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May 13, 2021 AirSpace Season 4, Ep. 7: Art Decade Story | AirSpace Podcast

Did you know the National Air and Space Museum has a huge art collection? Yeah, we keep that secret pretty well. It all STEMs (see what we did there?) from a program organized by NASA beginning in the 1960s where a small number of American artists got tons of access to launch sites, clean rooms, space suits, spacecraft—you name it, they painted it.

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May 05, 2021 First American In Space: The Flight of Alan B. Shepard Story | Air and Space Photos

On May 5, 1961, a Redstone rocket hurled Alan Shepard’s Mercury capsule, Freedom 7, 116 miles high and 302 miles downrange from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Freedom 7 parachuted into the Atlantic just 15 minutes and 22 seconds later, after attaining a maximum velocity of 5,180 mph. Shepard, a Navy test pilot and NASA astronaut, became the first American to fly in space.

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April 30, 2021 Light This Candle: What You Need to Know About Alan Shepard's Historic Spaceflight Story

On May 5, 1961, Alan Shepard became the first American to travel to space.

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April 28, 2021 Remembering Michael Collins Story

We look back at the extraordinary life of pilot, astronaut, and statesman Michael Collins, who has died at the age of 90.

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April 22, 2021 AirSpace Season 4, Ep. 6: Homesick at Space Camp Story | AirSpace Podcast

Any child of the 80s or 90s knows about Space Camp. But, what’s its origin story? And how did it become such a part of the millennial zeitgeist? (Even Mary Kate and Ashley solved a Space Camp mystery—spoiler alert: it was woodpeckers). Emily, Matt, and Nick break it down.

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April 12, 2021 Gagarin’s March: 60th Anniversary of the First Human in Space Story

Every year in Russia during the week of April 12, the anniversary of Yuri Gagarin’s flight in space, also known as Cosmonautics Day, one hears Gagarin’s March replayed on radio and websites. The musical piece paints a picture of a bright and enthusiastic trek into the Soviet future with Gagarin at the lead.

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April 12, 2021 The First Space Shuttle: 40 Years Since STS-1 Story

The legacy of the Space Shuttle program was to some degree built around the results of its very first mission. The reusable spaceplane, the Space Shuttle, ushered in a new era of human spaceflight 40 years ago this week with the launch of STS-1 on April 12, 1981.

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April 09, 2021 The Wright Moment: Ingenuity Prepares for Flight Story | Air and Space Photos

Ingenuity, the small, four-pound autonomous aircraft, will attempt the biggest of feats. The Wright brothers lifted their 1903 Flyer off the ground over a century ago and now the Mars Helicopter will attempt the same. Ginny is set to take off from the surface of the Red Planet no earlier than April 14.

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April 08, 2021 AirSpace Season 4, Ep. 5: Say My Name Story | AirSpace Podcast

Have you ever wondered how the stuff in space gets named? These days, there’s one organization that approves and keeps track of ALL of the official names from stars and asteroids to mountains on Mars and geysers on Enceladus. We break down the naming process and some of our favorites on today’s episode!

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April 03, 2021 I’ll have the Veal! Preservation with a Can-Do Attitude Story | Inside the Conservation Lab

Our conservators and curators recently faced an interesting question: Is it practical to retain perishable material and what long-range obligations are required? To find the answers, a collaborative effort was required, allowing for preservation of our collection of space food.

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