Canon PowerShot S100
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When I saw Elon Musk tear up on 60 Minutes facing the verbal assault from one of his heroes — Apollo astronaut Gene Cernan — I knew what I had to do.

It has taken a bit of effort over the past months, but today I gave this to Elon and all of the SpaceX team, and it was very well received. =)

This is the last photo, with my colleague Mohanjit Jolly, just before we gift-wrapped it.

The Apollo astronauts composed and signed the following tributes:

“And now, a giant leap for commercial space! Buzz Aldrin, Apollo XI

“A real breakthrtough – much success on many flights to come! Fred Haise, Apollo 13 LMP”

“Congratulations! A big dream fulfilled! Charlie Duke, Apollo 16 LMP”

“We are so excited to see your great success in an endeavor that demands the very best from each member of the SpaceX team ☆ Alan Bean, Apollo 12 LMP”

“Congratuatlons on a job well done – now the challenge begins. Gene Cernan, Apollo 17 & Apollo X

“The first of the next giant leap… Dave Scott, Apollo 9 CMP”

“The beginning of an entirely new era! Edgar Mitchell, Apollo 14 LMP”

“Keep up the good work – Walt Cunningham, Apollo 7

“Congratulations on your success! Al Worden, Apollo 15

When I saw 60 Minutes, my first thought was to get Gene Cernan (the last man to walk on the moon) to visit SpaceX as Elon had implored. I have been buying space artifacts from Gene over the past year and knew how to reach him. I tried to encourage him to visit SpaceX, but to no avail. So I flew out to talk to him face to face. I waited until SpaceX became the first private company to bring a spacecraft back from orbit, and the first to bring cargo to the space station, and the first to bring science experiments back. I also gathered signatures and congratulatory sentiments from the other Apollo heroes first.

Some, like Charlie Duke and Al Bean, were effusive in their praise of SpaceX and the next generation of space explorers. Charlie Duke was excited about a future mission to Mars. Al Bean spent 20 minutes writing rough drafts and crafting each word of his message with the SpaceX team in mind.

Then I approached Gene Cernan, and held my breath. I figured it would be a bit more difficult to break from the social proof of his esteemed colleagues. And so he listened. As with every Apollo astronaut who signed this photo, I was able to talk about SpaceX and answer his questions. Gene was interested in who financed SpaceX — what big money interests got it going. I told him that Elon Musk personally financed the company for all of its first $100 million, when no one else would bet on the venture, and he saw it through thick and thin, including the first three launches of the Falcon 1, all of which failed spectacularly. As I told him these stories of heroic entrepreneurship, I could see his mind turning. He found a reconciliation: “I never read any of this in the news. Why doesn’t the press report on this?”

Cernan was the last hold out. Neil Armstrong wrote a strongly worded letter to 60 Minutes saying that he was taken out of context. The program editor agreed: “Armstrong wrote us to say we had not been complete in our description of his testimony. He’s right.

Armstrong is, arguably, the greatest explorer of the 20th Century. I suspect he has admiration for anyone in science or business who sees new possibilities. He may not be confident in a particular federal policy, but I imagine Neil Armstrong stands squarely on the side of those who dare to dream.”
— from the CBS Editors Blog

Well, it’s Nikola Tesla’s birthday today, and Elon Musk’s was a few days ago. It seems like a good time to raise a glass to those who think different.

46 responses to “The Apollo Astronauts Tribute to SpaceX”

  1. A glass of vine for the ones who dare dreaming about impossible…and make it happen! The beginning of a new era! "scarlet sails"… and "ordinary miracles"…

  2. When all the naysayers, Cassandras, and negative Nabobs, have been proved wrong by a spectacular display which was covered worldwide on TV for all to see…. Then how sweet it must be for the small scrappy battler who prevailed over the Sumo wrestlers.

    "Manger du Corneille" translates as "To eat crow"

  3. I have to admit I have some concerns about future manned missions…as all the capsule design and life support stuff is trickier.
    How is that next step going ?
    (back in the day,NASA more or less had an unlimited budget… (tax based funding)
    And even one failure and its going to be problematic…..
    But I admire your effort here !

  4. Nice to know there are still gentlemen abroad in this increasingly ugly world. This was a fantastic gesture. If I lived in the area I’d buy you a drink. Next time you’re in the UK, I owe you a drink – so few people do the decent thing nowadays, and this was a decent and very big thing.

  5. that is so sweet!
    🙂
    good on ya!!

  6. belated wishes to elon!

    and happy birthday nikola 🙂
    it’s nice that people still remember him.

  7. A great tribute and a great gift.

  8. This just made my day. Absolutely fantastic.

  9. A delightful and enlightening story. Thanks.

  10. As a still resentful victim of the sputnik fever-hysteria of the 50’s that trashed liberal arts, I would remind readers that most of the energy of putting a man on the moon was derived from the Cold War propaganda show. It was mostly about beating the Russians. Outer space became a "been there, done that" thing, once that victory had been achieved.

    Finally, it’s all about priorities. There are so many things that need fixing here on earth and only a limited amount of resources to fix them with.

  11. Aww, Steve, you totes rock!

  12. This is so great.

    Folks who decry SpaceX may need to read, or re-read, Heinlein’s classic "The Man Who Sold the Moon".

    Yep, the failure of political leadership to move NASA towards a Shuttle 2.0 program is one of the saddest wrong-turns I know of. But that is, for now, what it is.

    — stan krute

    Oh, and also: seatonset: You might want to exercise your liberal arts prowess to think a bit more deeply about the roots and fruits of the 60’s race to the moon, the Shuttle program, Hubble, the Martian missions, and all of NASA’s efforts. Looking forward to your non-resentful fact-based re-thinking of your silly whiney rant.

  13. Way to go Steve…that was extremely thoughtful!

  14. Indeed the best gift anyone could receive 🙂

  15. Thank you for being the voice of many of us who lived, and continue to live, space exploration vicariously – SpaceX is doing the United States proud and proving that despite what we hear daily in the news, we can still do things, do them right and do them well. $100M of Elon’s own money on a dream and it came true!!

  16. Jurvetson:

    That was cool.

    Kathy

  17. @ Seatonsnet – Elon Musk earned that $100M, it was HIS money not money from taxpayers, he elected to spend HIS $100M following his dream, in the process he employed hundreds of people, purchased many goods and services and will provide a much needed service at a good price to both the government and business – that is NOT a waste of resources, that is a courgeous investent of private capital in a successful enterprise. In the process he has brought pride and success that this country sorely needs right now. He has reason to be proud and rightfully celebrates his success with his team, and then all of them get back to work and create more wealth and more success for themselves and others. Have you noticed the "SpaceX is hiring" notices.. GO SPACEX!!

  18. Steve, thank YOU for making the effort to create such a terrific gift. Elon certainly deserves the support of the Apollo astronauts – and the rest of us. Thank you for righting an injustice.

  19. What a super, super cool tribute to your friend.

  20. What a wonderful story, so positive and inspiring.
    Unlike Mr. Seatonset who can only find gloom and doom.
    OK Seatonset, I’ll bite. Here is a sample of inventions from space technology that have directly helped to solve some important problems here on Earth, saved lives, and made our Earth a better and safer place to live in:

    Improvements in baby formula by including micro algae for better nutrition;
    scratch-resistant glass;
    UVL sunglasses;
    better weather forecasting;
    CT Scans and MRIs;
    microwave ovens;
    continuous seam welding;
    compact battery drills;
    better fire-resistant clothing for emergency workers;
    ear thermometers;
    better alloys for dental braces;
    laser surgery for eye operations and angioplasties;
    smoke detectors;
    recycling techniques for old rubber.

    Only a portion of the ways in which space has helped to improve our lives. And remember, too, that the money doesn’t "go into space." It stays right here on the ground and puts food on the tables of workers everywhere.

    I’m betting that at least once a day you use a product derived from space research without even knowing it. Don’t be a hypocrite.

  21. Thanks for the list, spotted reptile.

    Not to mention: Personal computers. And digital photography and image enhancement. And GPS.

  22. Amazing idea, gift and feedback Steve !

    I love to see Buzz Aldrin comments and writing on that one :
    And Now, a Giant Leap For Commercial Space ! Buzz Aldrin Apollo XI

  23. Excellent, and well done! Thank you for posting this, and God Speed, SpaceX!

  24. If you like Space-X you should check out Sol-X

  25. How utterly wonderful. Thank you so much, Mr. Jurvetson, for doing this.

    This liberal artist is looking to the stars. They seemed a little closer the day Dragon splashed back down.

  26. This is the single most awesome thing done in aerospace this year that did not directly involve large amounts of fuel and oxidizer. Well done. You have made it possible to build a bridge from our proud legacy to our glorious future, while saving face and dignity of the men who were either uninformed or manipulated by the press.

    My daughter and I were overcome with emotion for what you did. I have no way to thank you adequately. I just wish I could have seen Elon’s face. Tears are okay big guy… we were all crying.

  27. can’t wait to see this in our office in Hawthorne =)

  28. That is a great story. Nice work!

  29. Words fail me but I’ll try. Helping to re-build the bridge between the history of space flight and its logical evolution, the commercialization of space travel, is such a noble and pure thing to do. My compliments Steve and Mohanjit. Huge space-karma no doubt coming your way. 🙂 Thanks!

    Now …. can I order a poster of the signed picture? :)) Please say yes.

  30. Wow, it’s incredible to me to read all these comments. And glad to know I am one of many admirers.

    The SpaceX team posted a photo on fB of it on the receiving side, to the reception of thousands of likes and so many comments and reposts…

    [http://www.flickr.com/photos/vancouverdoug] – Here is a full size image.

  31. That link to the full size image gives me a "Permission denied"

  32. thanks for the heads up. I changed my link. Does it work now?

  33. We have lift-off – Yes – the link works now – Tx . (Seeing it big just exacerbates the lump in my throat)

  34. That is so very very cool of you, Steve. Thank you!

  35. Steve-
    Thank you so much for this awesome gift to SpaceX! It will be prominently displayed on the wall here where all employees and visitors can enjoy it.
    regards,
    Tom Mueller, VP of Propulsion, SpaceX

  36. Awesome!

    I am also delighted to see the 60 Minutes addendums, the first two in particular:

    Space News "Clarification, Congratulations Follow ’60 Minutes’ Segment on SpaceX"

    Space Frontier: "Jurvetson Gives a Truly Great Gift to SpaceX and it includes Gene Cernan"

    NewSpace Journal "Apollo astronauts give thanks to SpaceX"

    Space Politics: "Apollo astronauts, SpaceX, and a special photo"

  37. Alan Stern is speaking about this at LASP as I type this. Very optimistic mood about newspace in this room.

  38. To SJ: A very major step in changing people’s minds…interesting how one person can make a difference by communicating to the circles of influence. I would love to see space industry trajectory to be J-shaped!:)

  39. @Seatonsnet – The acceleration of technology that was spurned-on by "The Space Race" gave you the the technology you needed to have the capability to make the comment you posted here: the Integrated Circuit is a *direct* outgrowth from the development of the Guidance & Navigation computers used in both the Gemini & Apollo spacecraft. So, if you still feel such remorse for "The Space Race", disconnect from The Internet, toss your Computer & Electronics into an E-Recycling bin or give them to someone who can appreciate them more than you do, and do the rest of the world a favor and try to see a bit farther beyond your own nose. The world’s problems that need "fixing" could not be fixed back then and can not be fixed today by throwing money at them – they can only be fixed by a change of heart, a helping hand, a lack of selfishness (which is what the 60’s was really all AGAINST: "What ever feels good to YOU, do it!") and a genuine desire to make the opposite side of the world a better place, not just your neighborhood or block or city a better place. More Worldwide Unity was forged by seeing "The Blue Marble" than any single event or act centuries before it, so come down off of your lofty, self-agrandized pedistal @Seatonsnet, drop the "flower-child"/ hippy routine and join the *real* 21st Century.

  40. What an amazing story…just read it after your FB post on auto-dealerships and followed through the "60 Minutes" thread.

  41. I remember someone did this for SpaceX… but I did not know it was you who did this… going to great lengths to help all these Apollo astronauts come to understand and care about Elon’s dreams… Not many people can turn things around like this before its too late and these great men leave our presence. This is one of your many great deeds for Elon Musk… and the intangible one here is priceless.

  42. Heroic entrepreneurship, finance work, and beautiful gift creation! Maximum inspiration!!! Thanks for sharing.

  43. It was cool to see this Apollo tribute hanging in the SpaceX entry passage on Thursday: IMG_0469

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