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NASA Apollo Missions: Astronauts Stories of Last Moon Men

Exploring the lives of Buzz Aldrin, Jim Lovell and more Apollo legends who shaped lunar history and inspired future missions beyond Earth's orbit.

Published By: Amreen Ahmad
Last Updated: September 14, 2025 14:35:57 IST

The inspirational stories of moon astronauts with their legacies, those from Apollo like hallowed Buzz Aldrin’s and Jim Lovell’s making such great past lunar missions climb beyond Earth’s horizon and step into the history pages of space exploration towards a future of lunar missions. The achievements and preserved legacies generated from human endeavor to the Moon are worth writing about in term of missions.

Who Is Buzz Aldrin (Apollo 11)

Buzz Aldrin, the second man in history to set foot on the lunar surface a few hours after Neil Armstrong, was on July 21, 1969, during the Apollo 11 mission. He was a fighter pilot and a veteran officer of the Air Force. As a Lunar Module Pilot, he had a prominent role in piloting the final descent and keeping the Eagle in a steady state.

It is recognized for its extremely precise calculations and sense of cool headedness under pressure Buzz’s steps have become a chapter in a significant history book of human destiny. After Apollo 11, he moved on to keep fighting for space travel, writing extensively on the subject and promoting creative human missions to Mars and beyond.

Who Is Commander Jim Lovell (Apollo 13)

Jim Lovell is the big commander of Apollo 13, which suffered from fate in 1970 and later became well known for demonstrating his competence in command leadership during a possible disaster. After a disaster, in fact devastation explosion in the service module, Lovell got the crew back safely to Earth by improvised means in collaboration with Mission Control.

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He had been an Apollo 8 member, the first manned mission to orbit the Moon, and had put in a lot of effort to be on the Moon. The Budget cuts and accident took that opportunity away from him. The Post NASA, he lived a life in business and public interaction, almost throwback to being a living legend for surviving such overwhelming adversity. 

Who Is Fred Haise (Apollo 13)

Fred Haise was Apollo 13’s Lunar Module Pilot. After the explosion in the oxygen tank, which effectively ended any chance of going to the moon, Haise was teamed up with James Lovell and Jack Swigert to cope with emergencies and keeping the crew alive.

Not really a moonwalker, but perhaps the most technically and engineering-advanced person capable of saving the moment at that time of crisis. It has not actually walked on the moon had planned to command Apollo 19, which was cancelled. Haise has since been commended for both his technical ability and his calmness in one of NASA’s most perilous space flights.

Who Is David Scott (Apollo 15)

David Scott was commander of Apollo 15, NASA’s first J Mission for long lunar surface stay and for science. In 1971, Scott and James Irwin drove the Lunar Roving Vehicle commonly referred to as the first Moon car, increasing the distance that astronauts could travel and the number of experiments they could conduct.

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Scott also performed geology experiments, established instruments, photographed and even did a known free-fall experiment demonstrating Galileo’s premise that two objects fall at the same rate in the absence of air resistance. His efforts contributed greatly to lunar geology. 

Who Is Charles Duke (Apollo 16)

Charles Charlie Duke still holds the record as the youngest person to walk on the Moon, doing so at age 36 during Apollo 16. Duke had a slew of assignments leading up to his moonwalk, including service as a Capsule Communicator (CapCom) during Apollo missions, communicating very important information between the crew on board and people here on the ground relative to the things taking place onboard during a mission.

Conducting thorough sampling and geological testing of the Moon in parts that had seen less exploration previously, he did the same on the Moon. Post NASA Duke would continue to speak publicly and be involved in advocating for space. 

Who is Harrison Schmitt (Apollo 17)

Harrison Jack Schmitt is the only Apollo astronaut who walked on the moon with credentials as a professional geologist. Selected in 1965 to be a scientist or astronaut, Schmitt underwent training in geology as well as astronautical systems. He was on Apollo 17, the last manned flight to the moon, in December 1972, which involved him spending time concentrating on collecting samples of lunar rocks, mapping terrain and discussing geological structures that had never been probed before.

Much of the science generated from this visit to the Moon has enriched understanding with regard to the history and composition of the Moon.

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The Daily Guardian is India’s fastest growing News channel and enjoy highest viewership and highest time spent amongst educated urban Indians.

© Copyright ITV Network Ltd 2025. All right reserved.