
On Sept. 12, 1962, fifty years ago today, President John Kennedy challenged us to go to the moon within the decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.
Fifty years ago Wednesday, President John F. Kennedy whipped up support for NASA’s fledgling Apollo program in a speech that contains perhaps the most famous words he ever uttered about space exploration.
Kennedy’s stirring, soaring “moon speech,” delivered at Rice University in Houston, laid out why the president believed sending astronauts to Earth’s nearest neighbor by the end of the 1960s was so important. Kennedy had first aired that ambitious goal in May 1961, just six weeks after the Soviet Union’s Yuri Gagarin became the first human to reach space.
Kennedy’s vision came true, of course. On July 20, 1969, late astronaut Neil Armstrong stepped onto the lunar surface. Four days later, he and his two Apollo 11 crewmates splashed down safely in the Pacific Ocean, wrapping up a huge victory for the United States over the Soviets in the Cold War space race.
‘We choose to go to the moon’
Kennedy made the Rice speech during a tour that also stopped at Houston’s Manned Spacecraft Center (now known as Johnson Space Center), the Launch Operations Center in Florida and Alabama’s Marshall Space Flight Center — NASA sites that would be key to making Apollo a success.
“For the eyes of the world now look into space, to the moon and to the planets beyond, and we have vowed that we shall not see it governed by a hostile flag of conquest, but by a banner of freedom and peace,” the president told 40,000 people in Rice’s football stadium that day. “We have vowed that we shall not see space filled with weapons of mass destruction, but with instruments of knowledge and understanding.”
Kennedy viewed winning the space race as key to keeping the United States ahead of the Soviet Union technologically and militarily, as his next words make clear.
“Yet the vows of this nation can only be fulfilled if we in this nation are first, and, therefore, we intend to be first,” he said. “In short, our leadership in science and in industry, our hopes for peace and security, our obligations to ourselves as well as others, all require us to make this effort, to solve these mysteries, to solve them for the good of all men, and to become the world’s leading space-faring nation.”
In perhaps the speech’s most famous passage, Kennedy acknowledged the difficulty of Apollo’s quest but argued that a challenge brings out the best in the United States.“We choose to go to the moon,” the president said. “We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too.”