ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 7月18日 23時34分


That’s one small step for man, and one giant crick for the neck. Visitors at the American Museum of Natural History in New York watched the Apollo 11 splashdown projected live and in color on the Hayden Planetarium dome on July 24, 1969. Humans had been drawing the moon for centuries, @adrian.matejka writes, “but it wasn’t until 1840 that the first photograph of it was taken, by John W. Draper. All we knew about the moon had been imagined or learned from a distance. And yet why we wanted to go there — to put human feet on this distant, distrustful land — is as human as any want can be.” Our photographer Neal Boenzi took this photo. Click the link in our bio for a look back on a nation transfixed as it watched the Apollo 11 mission. And make sure to follow @nytarchives for more photos from our archives.


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