Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cernan, last man to step foot on moon, dies at 82

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lunar module the last time. It was a moment that forever defined him in both the public eye and his own.

“Those steps up that ladder, they were tough to make,” Cernan recalled in a 2007 oral history. “I didn’t want to go up. I wanted to stay awhile.”

Cernan called it “perhaps the brightest moment of my life. … It’s like you would want to freeze that moment and take it home with you. But you can’t.”

Decades later, Cernan tried to ensure he wasn’t the last person to walk on the moon, testifying before Congress to push for a return. But as the years went by he realized he wouldn’t live to witness someone follow in his footsteps — still visible on the moon more than 40 years later.

“Neil (Armstrong, who died in 2012) and I aren’t going to see those next young Americans who walk on the moon. And God help us if they’re not Americans,” Cernan testified before Congress in 2011. “When I leave this planet, I want to know where we are headed as a nation. That’s my big goal.”

Cernan died less than six weeks after another American space hero, John Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth in 1962. Their flights weren’t the first or last of the Mercury and Apollo eras. Yet to the public they were the bookends of America’s space age glory.

On Dec. 11, 1972, Cernan guided the lander, named Challenger, into a lunar valley called Taurus-Littrow, with Harrison “Jack” Schmitt at his side. He recalled the silence after the lunar lander’s engine shut down.

“That’s where you experience the most quiet moment a human being can experience in his lifetime,” Cernan said in 2007.

“The dust is gone. It’s a realizatio­n, a reality, all of a sudden you have just landed in another world on another body out there (somewhere in the) universe, and what you are seeing is being seen by human beings — human eyes — for the first time.”

 ?? NASA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Eugene Cernan is pictured in his spacesuit prior to the Apollo 17 mission in December 1972. NASA announced Monday that Cernan, the last of 12 men to have walked on the moon, died earlier in the day surrounded by his family. He was 82.
NASA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Eugene Cernan is pictured in his spacesuit prior to the Apollo 17 mission in December 1972. NASA announced Monday that Cernan, the last of 12 men to have walked on the moon, died earlier in the day surrounded by his family. He was 82.

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