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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.

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