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Learn
about the Viking 1 and 2 missions and Spacecraft |
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Soviet cosmonaut who in 1961 became the first man
to travel into space.
The son of a carpenter on a collective farm, Gagarin
graduated as a molder from a trade school near Moscow in 1951. He
continued his studies at the industrial college at Saratov and concurrently
took a course in flying. On completing this course he entered the
Soviet Air Force cadet school at Orenburg, from which he graduated
in 1957.
Gagarin's 4 3/4-ton Vostok 1 spacecraft was launched
at 9:07 Am Moscow time on April 12, 1961, orbited the Earth once
in 1 hour 29 minutes at a maximum altitude of 187 miles (301 kilometres),
and landed at 10:55 Am in the Soviet Union. His spaceflight brought
him immediate worldwide fame; he was awarded the Order of Lenin
and given the titles of Hero of the Soviet Union and Pilot Cosmonaut
of the Soviet Union. Monuments were raised to him and streets renamed
in his honour across the Soviet Union.
He never went into space again but took an active
part in training other cosmonauts. He made several tours to other
nations following his historic flight, and from 1962 he served as
a deputy to the Supreme Soviet. Gagarin was killed with another
pilot in the crash of a two-seat jet aircraft while on what was
described as a routine training flight. His ashes were placed in
a niche in the Kremlin wall. After his death in 1968 the town of
Gzhatsk was renamed Gagarin.
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