# AC576 FDC - 9/9/1969, 7/20/1969 Dual Cancel, US Airmail, C76, 1371, C69 No Cachets
Own America’s First Jumbo-Sized Commemorative On Moon Landing Combination First Day Cover
This cover is packed with space history! It features:
• US #C76, America’s first jumbo-sized commemorative. Did you know the engraved master dies for this stamp traveled to the Moon with the Apollo 11 crew?
• US #1193 – the 1962 Project Mercury stamp, which honored the first American to orbit the Earth, John Glenn.
• US #C69 - the Robert H. Goddard stamp, picturing the "father of the modern rocket."
These stamps are tied to the cover by two cancels – one on July 20, 1969, celebrating the Moon landing, and the first day cancel, September 9, marking the first day of issue of #C76. This is important space and US history you’ll want in your collection – send for yours now.
More About the Moon Landing
After thousands of hours of work over eight years, NASA launched Apollo 11 on July 16, 1969. Four days later, on July 20, 1969, their Eagle lunar module approached the Moon. The landing module touched down in a place called “West Crater,” which was scattered with boulders. After the landing, Aldrin requested everyone “…to pause for a moment and contemplate the events of the past few hours and to give thanks in his or her own way.” After the landing was completed, the crew began preparations for the Moonwalk. They had originally planned a five-hour sleep period, but it was decided they would be too excited to sleep.
Then, at 10:56 p.m. EDT, Armstrong set his left foot down upon the surface of the Moon and called it, “…one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.” Fellow astronaut Buzz Aldrin joined Armstrong on the surface and described the scene as “magnificent desolation.” Back on Earth, the world watched through a live television feed.
The Moonwalk wasn’t just symbolic – Armstrong and Aldrin had several tasks to perform. One of them included planting the American flag. They took photographs, collected rock, and dust samples and set out equipment to transmit readings. After about two-and-a-half hours, they returned to the landing module. When taking off their spacesuits they noticed a strange smell in the air. Armstrong described it as wet ashes and Aldrin said it was like “the smell in the air after a firecracker has gone off.” It was the smell of the Moon dust. Armstrong and Aldrin then took a much-deserved rest.
Following their rest, Armstrong and Aldrin blasted off from the Moon’s surface – unfortunately toppling the American flag they had planted. In future lunar landings, the flag was placed no closer than 100 feet from the modules, so as not to repeat that mistake.
The Eagle docked with the Columbia, where fellow astronaut Michael Collins had been waiting. The Eagle was released into orbit around the Moon, and NASA scientists later assumed that it crashed to the surface after a few months.
On July 24, the command module separated and began its descent to Earth. The bottom of the module faced the surface and had special heat shields that would burn away during re-entry, to prevent the build-up of heat. The parachute opened after 195 hours and 13 minutes in space. The Apollo 11 crew splashed down in the Pacific Ocean, where Navy ship USS Hornet was nearby. They were finally home and America had effectively won the Space Race.
Own America’s First Jumbo-Sized Commemorative On Moon Landing Combination First Day Cover
This cover is packed with space history! It features:
• US #C76, America’s first jumbo-sized commemorative. Did you know the engraved master dies for this stamp traveled to the Moon with the Apollo 11 crew?
• US #1193 – the 1962 Project Mercury stamp, which honored the first American to orbit the Earth, John Glenn.
• US #C69 - the Robert H. Goddard stamp, picturing the "father of the modern rocket."
These stamps are tied to the cover by two cancels – one on July 20, 1969, celebrating the Moon landing, and the first day cancel, September 9, marking the first day of issue of #C76. This is important space and US history you’ll want in your collection – send for yours now.
More About the Moon Landing
After thousands of hours of work over eight years, NASA launched Apollo 11 on July 16, 1969. Four days later, on July 20, 1969, their Eagle lunar module approached the Moon. The landing module touched down in a place called “West Crater,” which was scattered with boulders. After the landing, Aldrin requested everyone “…to pause for a moment and contemplate the events of the past few hours and to give thanks in his or her own way.” After the landing was completed, the crew began preparations for the Moonwalk. They had originally planned a five-hour sleep period, but it was decided they would be too excited to sleep.
Then, at 10:56 p.m. EDT, Armstrong set his left foot down upon the surface of the Moon and called it, “…one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.” Fellow astronaut Buzz Aldrin joined Armstrong on the surface and described the scene as “magnificent desolation.” Back on Earth, the world watched through a live television feed.
The Moonwalk wasn’t just symbolic – Armstrong and Aldrin had several tasks to perform. One of them included planting the American flag. They took photographs, collected rock, and dust samples and set out equipment to transmit readings. After about two-and-a-half hours, they returned to the landing module. When taking off their spacesuits they noticed a strange smell in the air. Armstrong described it as wet ashes and Aldrin said it was like “the smell in the air after a firecracker has gone off.” It was the smell of the Moon dust. Armstrong and Aldrin then took a much-deserved rest.
Following their rest, Armstrong and Aldrin blasted off from the Moon’s surface – unfortunately toppling the American flag they had planted. In future lunar landings, the flag was placed no closer than 100 feet from the modules, so as not to repeat that mistake.
The Eagle docked with the Columbia, where fellow astronaut Michael Collins had been waiting. The Eagle was released into orbit around the Moon, and NASA scientists later assumed that it crashed to the surface after a few months.
On July 24, the command module separated and began its descent to Earth. The bottom of the module faced the surface and had special heat shields that would burn away during re-entry, to prevent the build-up of heat. The parachute opened after 195 hours and 13 minutes in space. The Apollo 11 crew splashed down in the Pacific Ocean, where Navy ship USS Hornet was nearby. They were finally home and America had effectively won the Space Race.