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Legacy to Horizon: Marshall 65

For 65 years, NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center has shaped or supported nearly every facet of the nation’s ongoing mission of space exploration and discovery, solving the most complex, technical flight challenges and contributing to science to improve life and protect resources around the world.

Take Part in Marshall's Milestone

As we honor the 65 years of Marshall's contribution to NASA and our community, we invite you to participate in our anniversary.

Visitors to NASA in the Park participate in a game of cornhole in front of a display featuring Artemis and NASA’s SLS (Space Launch System).

Marshall’s 65th Birthday Bash

The community is invited to help celebrate NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center’s 65th birthday on July 19 from noon until 5 p.m. at The Orion Amphitheater in Huntsville, Alabama! 

Want to get involved?

Marshall Space Flight Center is partnering with the community to help celebrate 65 years of innovation and exploration in Huntsville and North Alabama!  Interested in participating? Contact Taylor Goodwin for more information.

These images and videos show NASA rolling out a key piece of space flight hardware for the SLS (Space Launch System) rocket for the first crewed mission of NASA’s Artemis campaign from Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, on Wednesday, Aug. 21 for shipment to the agency’s spaceport in Florida. The cone-shaped launch vehicle stage adapter connects the rocket’s core stage to the upper stage and helps protect the upper stage’s engine that will help propel the Artemis II test flight around the Moon, slated for 2025. Manufactured by prime contractor Teledyne Brown Engineering and the Jacobs Space Exploration Group’s ESSCA (Engineering Services and Science Capability Augmentation) contract using NASA Marshall’s self-reacting friction-stir robotic and vertical weld tools. Crews moved the adapter out of NASA Marshall’s Building 4708 to the agency’s Pegasus barge Aug. 21. The barge will ferry the adapter first to NASA’s Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, where crews will pick up additional SLS hardware for future Artemis missions, before traveling to NASA Kennedy. Once in Florida, the adapter will join the recently delivered core stage. There, teams with NASA’s Exploration Ground Systems will prepare the adapter for stacking and launch.

Marshall 65 Media Gallery

View images and videos of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. With media requests, please contact Hannah Maginot, 256-932-1937, hannah.l.maginot@nasa.gov.

The Foundational 1960s

Missions and Milestones, Decade by Decade

From its auspicious start as NASA’s lead center for propulsion systems and launch vehicle development, Marshall has carved a 65-year legacy of ingenuity and dedicated service to the U.S. space program. Primarily devoted to safely and successfully launching rockets serving the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs, Marshall’s first decade saw the development, testing, and flights of the Mercury-Redstone rocket – which carried Alan Shepard, the first American astronaut, into space – and the Saturn I, Saturn IB, and Saturn V rockets, the last of which carried the first human explorers to the Moon.

Discover the 60s
President Dwight Eisenhower formally dedicates NASA’s George C. Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, as a new NASA field installation. On July 16, 1969, the Saturn V rocket launches on the Apollo 11 mission.
NASA
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NASA Marshall Reflects on 65 Years of Ingenuity, Teamwork 

NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, is celebrating its 65-year legacy of ingenuity and service to the U.S. space…

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