The family of Neil Armstrong will auction the collection of the first Austronaut who set foot on the moon – 21/07/2018



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Neil Armstrong's family will auction at Heritage Auctions the personal collection of the astronaut, the first to set foot on the moon 49 years ago with the Apollo 11 mission.

According to Heritage Auctions, based in Dallas, Texas, a collection of more than 2,000 items will be sold in three stages : November 1 and 2, May 9 and 10, 2019, and November next year.

  Neil Armstrong, greeting the front on July 16, 1969, for the truck that will bring the team to the rocket for its launch to the Moon at the Kennedy Space Center in Merritt Island, Florida. (AP)

Neil Armstrong, greeting the front on July 16, 1969, for the truck that will bring the team to the rocket for its launch to the Moon at the Kennedy Space Center in Merritt Island, Florida. (AP)

Among the artifacts, there are silver medallions (one of them "extremely rare") of NASA commemorating the Apollo 11 mission and flying in the spaceship with Armstrong, Edwin Aldrin and Michael Collins.

  An Apollo 11 Robbins medallion that was also used during the mission landing on the Moon in July 1969, will be part of the auction. (AP)

A Apollo 11 Robbins medallion that was also used during the mission landing on the Moon in July 1969, will be part of the auction. (AP)

Also a centennial flag of Indiana Purdue University (1869-1969), Armstrong's alma mater, which the astronaut took with him on the moon.

  The American flag that traveled to the moon with Apollo 11, one of the items that will be auctioned. (AP)

The American flag that traveled on the moon with Apollo 11, one of the items that will be auctioned. (AP)

In addition, parts of the propeller and wing of the aircraft of the Wright brothers, the first powered aircraft to fly in 1903, that Armstrong was carrying also in Apollo 11.

Also, in the lots a gold pin that Armstrong brought on the Gemini 8 mission in 1966, his first flight in space, and a Boy Scout hat since his childhood

Heritage Auctions also highlighted the correspondence that includes a document that reveals NASA's plan to arrive on the moon . [19659002] "There will be objects that have stolen (in ships), other autographed, of historical significance, there will be objects that will make you think, laugh and even scratch your head" considered Mark, one of the children of the astronaut.

"I think (Armstrong) would be happy to To be remembered as part of a program that has shown that incredible things can be accomplished when people come together with a common goal, "said Eric, another of his children. 19659018] NASA would cease to be the owner of all lunar sand on Earth "src =" https://images.clarin.com/collections/static/lazy_square.svg "data-big =" https: // images.clarin.com/2018/06/17/ryjDJLrbm_290x290__1.jpg "data-small =" https://images.clarin.com/2018/06/17/ryjDJLrbm_110x110__1.jpg” observer=”” data-observer-function=”loadLazyImg”/>

Armstrong, which is death In 2012, at the age of 82, he made history as the first human being on the road on the lunar surface on July 20, 1969 and we remember the famous phrase that he pronounced at that time

"It's a small step for a man, but a big step for humanity," says the astronaut.

Source: EFE

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