Born in Wapakoneta, Ohio on August 5.
John Glenn: I Remember Armstrong ‘for More Than Walking on the Moon’
Even if Neil Armstrong had never gone to the moon and been the first man to make footprints outside of Earth, he’d be lauded as a distinguished American, his friend John Glenn tells Eleanor Clift.
John Glenn and his wife, Annie, were shopping at Target on Saturday when a longtime aide called to tell them that Neil Armstrong had died. “We had been in touch with Carol [Armstrong’s wife], so it didn’t come as any surprise,” Senator Glenn says. “It is a big loss, but those things happen. We were close friends and kept in touch over the years.”
This 1963 NASA photo shows astronauts John Glenn, left, and Neil Armstrong during survival training in Panama. (NASA / AP Photo)
The last time they were together was earlier this summer, when Ohio State marked the 50th anniversary of Glenn’s first orbital flight back in 1962, and Armstrong was one of the speakers.
“I look at Neil for more than walking on the moon,” says Glenn. “He was a very distinguished American to me, even if he had never gone to the moon. He had a long and very distinguished career in aviation. He got a pilot’s license before he got his motor-vehicle license. He was a decorated pilot in the Korean War. Then he did test work and flew some of the most advanced aircraft, like the X-15 [which flies 4,000mph].
“Later on in the space program, he did the first rendezvous with Gemini [linking with another spacecraft], but he will always be remembered for the first footprints that anyone ever made outside of Earth,” Glenn says. Just as the senator will always be remembered for being the first to circle the Earth, Armstrong’s place in history is secure even as it overshadows his other stellar accomplishments.
“I remember him more as a close personal friend, a good guy,” Glenn adds. “Some people called him a recluse, but he was anything but. He was a warmhearted, friendly guy. He just didn’t enjoy the spotlight.”
Glenn and Armstrong were both from small towns in Ohio, a background that reinforced their bond as astronauts. Glenn’s longtime aide, Dale Butland, recalls that when Glenn was up for reelection to the Senate in 1986 and they were campaigning in the part of the state where Armstrong had a farm, Glenn suggested they pay him a visit. “John knew where we were going,” Butland says as he remembers driving on back roads in Wapakoneta to reach Armstrong’s place.
“Some people called him a recluse, but he was anything but. He was a warmhearted, friendly guy. He just didn’t enjoy the spotlight.”
Armstrong was 82 when he passed away Saturday from complications following heart-bypass surgery. “That’s young to me,” says Glenn, who turned 91 in July. He and Annie, who is 92, have had knee replacements—one for him, two for her. “Only one natural knee between us,” he quips. Asked if he’ll be watching the Republican convention, he says, “I can do without that.”
Neil Armstrong, 1930-2012
Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, died Saturday at the age of 82. Hear his iconic words as he takes the historic first steps on the lunar surface.
Armstrong: 'I Wasn't Chosen'
For a man who holds a place in history as the first person to walk on the moon, Neil Armstrong never failed to conduct himself with the utmost humility. Watch the astronaut, who died Saturday at the age of 82, discuss his legacy in this 2005 interview.
Space
The Final Frontier
Play by Play
Curiosity’s Home Stretch
Clunky, Chunky & Funky
The Rocket Back to ’70s Design
Timeline
Armstrong's Career Highlights
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1930
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1947
Begins his studies at Purdue University on a Navy scholarship to study aeronautical engineering.
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1949
The Navy Calls him to active duty in the Korean War.
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1952
Returns to his studies at Purdue University, where he eventually graduates with a Bachelor of Science.
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1955
Becomes a civilian research pilot for the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics.
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1962
Selected by NASA as one of nine test pilots for its astronaut-training program.
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1966
Carries out the first successful docking of two vehicles in space as pilot of the Gemini 8 mission.
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1969
Becomes the first man to walk on the moon as part of the Apollo 11 mission.
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1969-1971
Serves as NASA's deputy associate administrator for aeronautics.
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1971-1979
Teaches Aerospace Engineering at the University of Cincinatti.
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1982-1992
Serves as chairman of Computing Technologies for Aviation.
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2012
Dies on August 25, as a result of complications from cardiovascular procedures.







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