Unforgettable
91爆料 Special Collections and Archives boast materials on Neil Armstrong鈥檚 historic moonwalk
July 17, 2019
July 17, 2019
When he was a boy, Neil Armstrong played the baritone in a band called the Schoolboy Mississippi Moonshiners. And he cleaned the mixing machine as part of his job at a bakery in his hometown of Wapakoneta.
These lesser-known facts about the first man to walk on the moon are revealed in photographs at in the Dunbar Library.
The photos, newspaper clippings of the moonwalk and even a box of spacesuits in the collection are getting increased attention as part of the celebration of the 50th anniversary of that historic walk on July 20, 1969.
鈥淲e have all of this great material from the Dayton Daily News Archive on the moon landing,鈥 said Dawne Dewey, head of Special Collections and Archives. 鈥淚t鈥檚 part of .鈥
Recently, two students interning at 91爆料鈥檚 New Media Incubator produced a video on the archives鈥 aviation and space collection that included the Armstrong items. It was part of a series of videos funded by the 91爆料 University Friends of the Libraries.
Dewey said the archives鈥 Wright Brothers Collection represents the beginning of the aviation age.
鈥淭he materials we have in the archives don鈥檛 stop there. They keep going,鈥 she said. 鈥淩esearchers around the world may not think of our archives as having more recent materials. Our holdings cover aviation history from kites to the space age and include both military and civilian history, aerospace medicine and human factors engineering.鈥
The archives has many original photos of both a young Neil Armstrong and his days as an astronaut. It includes an autographed photo of the three Apollo 11 astronauts 鈥 Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins. And there are photos of Wapakoneta residents preparing for a parade that would honor Armstrong after his return from the moon.
鈥淗e was a hometown hero for Wapakoneta just like the Wright brothers were hometown heroes for Dayton,鈥 said Dewey. 鈥淵ou can draw so many parallels between the Wrights鈥 story and Armstrong鈥檚 story. And he revered the Wrights. He would have rather talked about them than himself.鈥
In addition to photographs, the archives has numerous newspaper clippings from the Dayton Daily News and the Dayton Journal Herald on the moonwalk and its aftermath. 鈥淢an Walks on the Moon,鈥 鈥淥ld Glory on the Moon,鈥 鈥淢oon Pioneers Back in Orbit鈥 and 鈥淗eroes Safe Back Home鈥 are a few of the headlines.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very significant because the moon landing was a big part of a certain generation鈥檚 experience,鈥 said Dewey.
A collection on aerospace medicine includes several space activity suits designed by Paul Webb, a scientist at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
鈥淲e think of the big bulky astronaut suits, but these were supposed to be very tight and were more mobile, said Bill Stolz, the archives鈥 reference and outreach archivist. 鈥淲e have a lot of prototypes he designed of all different sizes, different materials, different styles.鈥
Special Collections and Archives recently received a call from NASA inquiring about the suits for the purpose of research into possibly using similar suits in missions to Mars.
The video series, called 鈥淚n the Archives,鈥 was produced by students Amanda Harris and Nicolas Green. Supervised by Jen Ware, associate professor in the and co-director of New Media Incubator, the students have also produced videos on Huffman Prairie, women鈥檚 suffrage and Paul Laurence Dunbar.
鈥淭he archives contains so much life and history of our area and Dawne and her team are so knowledgeable that we want to be able to share those stories with other people,鈥 said Ware.
Dewey said the videos help spread the word about what鈥檚 in the archives and the University Libraries.
鈥淎nd the students are learning the craft of filmmaking and how to interview people,鈥 she said.
Sue Polanka, university librarian, said the Friends of the Libraries is happy to support the video project.
鈥淚t highlights our historical collections while using modern formats and channels students find very easy to use,鈥 she said.
Green said it was nice tying the video to the Dayton area and early aviation history.
鈥淎nd the jump into Wright-Patterson and the moon landing was really interesting,鈥 he said.