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Astronaut Walter Cunningham, the last survivor of Apollo 7, dies

The former astronaut of the POT Walter Cunningham, who piloted the Apollo 7 lunar module, the first crewed flight in the agency’s Apollo Program USdied in Houston (Texas) in the early hours of Tuesday, at the age of 90.

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As reported by NASA in a statement, “Walt Cunningham was a fighter pilot, physicist and businessman but, above all, he was an explorer.”

“On Apollo 7, the first manned Apollo mission launch, Walt and his companions made history, paving the way for the Artemis Generation we see today,” NASA chief Bill Nelson explained in the note.

Cunningham was born on March 16, 1932, in Creston, Iowa. He received a BA with honors in Humanities and Physics in 1960, and a Master of Arts with distinction in Physics in 1961 from the University of California, Los Angeles.

He joined the Navy in 1951 and served active duty with the US Marine Corps, retiring with the rank of colonel, having flown 54 missions as a night fighter pilot in Korea.

After working as a scientist in a private corporation, he was selected as an astronaut in 1963, as part of the third generation of NASA astronauts.

Cunningham is photographed while serving as a lunar module pilot on the Apollo 7 mission in 1968.

“On behalf of the NASA Johnson Space Center, we are indebted to Walt’s service to our nation and his dedication to advancing human space exploration,” said Vanessa Wyche, center director.

On October 11, 1968, Cunningham piloted the 11-day flight of Apollo 7, the first manned test of the Apollo space project.

With Walter M. Schirra, Jr. and Donn F. Eisele, he tested the maneuvers necessary for lunar orbit docking and rendezvous using the third stage of his Saturn IB launch vehicle. The crew successfully completed eight tests, NASA notes.

The 263-hour, 4.5 million-mile (about 7.2 million kilometers) flight splashed down on October 22, 1968, in the Atlantic Ocean.

Cunningham’s last assignment at NASA Johnson was head of the Skylab branch of the Flight Crew Directorate and retired from the space agency in 1971, where he would continue to direct multiple technical and financial assignments.

Source: Elcomercio

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