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Astronaut hero John Young died this weekend. May he rest in peace having ventured forth so bravely on the final frontier. I will share here the most incredible artifact I have from his space adventures — the Apollo 16 cuff checklist he wore as he took the historic jump salute 3 ft. off the lunar surface.

Young is the only astronaut to have flown four different spacecraft, and he was the focus of my initial space collecting interest. He is the only astronaut to have flown two missions each in the Gemini, Apollo and Shuttle programs (GT-3, GT-10, Apollo 10, Apollo 16, STS-1, STS-9/Spacelab 1). He flew the first manned Gemini mission, and even more bravely, the very first flight of the Space Shuttles (there were no unmanned test flights before his flight).

In his detailed book, A Man on the Moon, Andrew Chaiken describes Young: “His sharp, intuitive approach to engineering problems was well known to his colleagues. Inside, Young had an unwavering determination, an overriding sense of responsibility — to the space program, to the country, to his crew — and an almost childlike sense of wonder at the universe.” (You can see why I was smitten)

Astronaut Ed Lu visited him in 2011, and he relayed a couple stories about his mentor and fellow pilot, John Young: “After the first EVA on Apollo 16, he couldn’t sleep, with bouts of sneezing and coughing as he had some moon dust stuck in his nose.”

And on one of of their many flights together, as they saw a full moon rising: “Does the sight of that make you dream of going back?” “Oh yes” Young replied.

Chaiken concludes his book, itself a culmination of eight years of primary research, with this wish:

“I want us to do justice to the magnificence of the adventure that Apollo began. To live up to the promise not only of what we can achieve, but who we can become. And once we are living on the moon and venturing out across the solar system, the fact that we waited so long to resume our explorations will hardly matter. Historians of the far future may look back on Apollo and the missions that are yet to come as one great Age of Space Exploration. But in my mind’s eye it is a slow dissolve, from memory to anticipation, from what has been to what will be, from dream to dream.”

And by strange coincidence, I first heard of Young’ passing when I was with Astronaut Chris Hadfield and former NASA Ames Director Pete Worden brainstorming the next generation of lunar exploration and settlement.

Hadfield followed up with this memory from their time together: John Young was a relentless dreamer engineer test pilot. He put his life on the line for what he believed in, over and over. I love what he said here: “My life has been long, and it has been interesting. It’s also been a lot of fun, and a lot of hard, challenging work. If I could do it over, I would do it over the very same way. Most of it has been a marvel to me.”

Here is a NASA video of Young’s EVA 1 (his first expedition on the lunar surface, wearing this cuff checklist) and the rest of my John Young Artifacts. This one is:
Cuff P/N SEB 33100302-302 S/N 1022
Strap P/N SEB 12100030-201 S/N 1084 Assy

The Smithsonian has John Young’s other cuff checklist (for EVA 2&3). The number of artifacts that traveled in the Lunar Module (LM) and returned to earth is few. It has been said that if you gathered all of them from all six lunar landings, other than rocks, they would fit into a small suitcase. The number of artifacts that went onto the lunar surface and returned to earth is even scarcer than LM flown items.

3 responses to “John Young’s Cuff Checklist Worn During His Famous Jump Salute on the Moon”

  1. Just after planting the flag, Charlie Duke called out to Commander John Young:

    “Hey, John, this is perfect, with the LM and the Rover and you and Stone Mountain. And the old Flag. Come on out here and give me a big Navy salute.”

    And he did just that, while jumping three feet in the air (well, into space more accurately 🙂 From my officeHeroic Memories of John Youngand here is the image from the TV camera on the Lunar Rover at the very same moment the jump shot was taken:
    Charlie Duke Reverse SaluteNASA video of that moment. And it’s amazing to think that his checklist was at his side as he drove an EV on the moon! The letter from Commander John Young when I purchased his Apollo 16 cuff checklist:I have it on display in a plexiglass box. The spiral bound curved around the arm has the good effect of making the pages stay in place (it takes a bit of effort to turn each page) Another example page, the Far UV Camera deployment procedures and drawing: Front signature pageThis Cuff Checklist has been in the Astronaut Hall of Fame from 1993 to 2013. Captain Young was inducted into the Hall in 1993, and In concert with his induction, he loaned a number of artifacts for the museum to have on display: Here is the line item from the Apollo 16 stowage list (bottom line)I also have the fifth item, Young’s Personal Preference Kit (PPK)Goodie BagBack to heroic John Young memories… Look how primitive the Nav system was on his first flight: Flown Gemini Orbital Chart GT-3And from the NASA transcript as they were using this map…Apollo 16 Map from Lunar Module Orion John Young says "Boy, this has got to be the neatest way to make a living anybody’s ever invented."

  2. Thanks for sharing

  3. Wow! Incredible post. Thanks for including all of the excellent detail in the description. These historical details are a fabulous reminder of the impressive milestones completed by John Young and others of the time. I really appreciate you sharing these!

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