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  [Heritage] Space Exploration (June 2024)

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Author Topic:   [Heritage] Space Exploration (June 2024)
Robert Pearlman
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Posts: 52592
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 05-28-2024 09:35 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Heritage Auctions' next Space Exploration sale will be held on June 14 - 15, 2024 in Dallas, Texas and online.

The auction is now live for proxy bidding on Heritage's website.

Robert Pearlman
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Posts: 52592
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 05-31-2024 09:29 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Heritage Auctions
Collection of Apollo Astronaut Fred Haise Touches Down in Heritage's Space Exploration Auction June 14-15

Relics from Wright Flyer also among event highlights

A nearly catastrophic explosion derailed the Apollo 13 mission on its way to a planned lunar landing is the only reason its crew members' names were not added to the list of 24 who have walked on the moon.

When the seventh crewed mission of the Apollo space program was launched April 11, 1970, from the John F. Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the plan was that it would be the third to land on the lunar surface, putting crew members Fred W. Haise, Jr., James A. Lovell, Jr., and John L. Swigert, Jr., on the same tier of universal identification as the likes of Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins. But about 56 hours after launch, and more than 200,000 miles from Earth, Haise was completing the shutdown of the lunar module when the crew members heard an explosion. Communication back to Earth was lost for a couple of seconds. Swigert considered the fact that a meteoroid had struck the module, but it turned out an oxygen tank in the service module had ruptured, disabling the vessel's electrical and life-support systems.

With oxygen in short supply, the decision was made to complete the loop around the moon, rather than forcibly changing direction in favor of a shorter path home. An impromptu change in plans shortened the return trip by about 36 hours, to a little over two days, ending in a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean. President Richard Nixon cancelled appointments and called the astronauts' families and headed to NASA's Goddard Spaceflight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Pope Paul VI led a congregation of 10,000 in prayer for the astronauts' safe return. The U.S. Senate passed a resolution urging businesses to pause at 9 p.m. to allow employees to pray.

On-the-fly decisions and calculations by the crew and by the support crew on Earth resulted in the safe return, assisted by other nations at the landing site. An estimated 40 million Americans watched Apollo 13's splashdown, which was carried live on all three networks. Jack Gould of the New York Times wrotethat Apollo 13, "which came so close to tragic disaster, in all probability united the world in mutual concern more fully than another successful landing on the Moon would have."

With a status among the most important in the history of the American space program, multiple items from Haise's personal collection will touch down in Heritage's Space Exploration Signature Auction June 14-15.

Among the top items in the Haise collection is a magnificent group of Flown Sterling Silver Robbins from Apollo Missions 7 through 12.

"This is an incredible and likely one-of-a-kind keepsake, almost a history book of an enormously important period within the American space program," says Brad Palmer, Director of Space Exploration at Heritage Auctions. "Space collectors have always cherished flown Robbins medallions. To obtain six sequential examples from the collection of such an important figure in the Apollo program in one item is an incredibly unique opportunity."

Also from the Haise collection is an out-of-this-world trophy that he received from the famous astronauts who first landed on the moon: an Apollo 11 Lunar Surface-Flown Beta Cloth Mission Insignia Presented by the Three-Man Crew to Haise, who served as the Lunar Module pilot backup for the historic mission. This extraordinary display includes a circular swatch (4-inch diameter) of Beta cloth with a mission insignia depicting an eagle carrying an olive branch to the moon, with Earth in the distance over the eagle's right wing. Printed below the patch: "This emblem carried to the lunar surface/ July 20, 1969." The patch is framed along with two 5-by-7-inch color photos of iconic images of the first lunar landing. Affixed to the frame is a metal plate that states: "Presented To/ Fred Haise/ In Appreciation For Your Service To Apollo 11/ From Neil, Mike, & Buzz." Haise served as Aldrin's backup for this mission.

Haise wore an Apollo 13 Recovery Ship U.S.S. Iwo Jima Hat while aboard the U.S.S. Iwo Jima and to meet President Richard Nixon in Hawaii. The blue wool baseball-style cap, with yellow cloth bullion on the bill and embroidered "U.S.S. IWO JIMA/ASTRONAUT/HAISE/APOLLO 13" on the front is the headcovering he wore in the iconic recovery photos aboard the U.S.S. Iwo Jima after the flight and dangerous splash landing of Apollo 13. A facsimile of this hat crowns a statue of Haise and the Apollo 13 crew as part of a life-size sculpture that was unveiled at the Space Center in Houston in 2021.

The Haise collection is a remarkable assemblage, but definitely does not include all of the prizes that are available in the auction, among them a pair of lots from The Armstrong Family Collection™ that were aboard the two most significant flights in the history of aviation: an Apollo-11 Lunar Module Flown Piece of the Wright Flyer Propeller and an Apollo 11 Lunar Module-Flown Section of the Wright Flyer's Wing Fabric, Position No. 145. Each was a part of the first successful powered controlled flight in history at Kitty Hawk in 1903, and later was taken aboard Apollo 11 by Armstrong, who was allowed to retain a portion of the cloth and propeller pieces for his own collection.

An incredibly significant and historically important photo will find a new home when Lunar Orbiter 1: A Crescent Earth Rising over the Lunar Surface in a Photo Taken by the First American Spacecraft to Orbit the Moon is sold in this auction. The Lunar Orbiter program was a series of missions conducted by NASA in the mid-1960s, designed to map the surface of the moon in preparation for the Apollo program that eventually landed humans on the moon. As the Orbiter revolved around the moon, it transmitted photos as analog data through a series of strips. The unmanned spacecraft Lunar Orbiter 1 captured a historic image of Earth from lunar orbit August 23, 1966, marking a groundbreaking moment in exploring space and documenting Earth's place in the universe. This iconic assembly of the transmitted photos is comprised of Lunar Orbiter images I-102H-1 & 2. The program included five separate missions and returned photos of nearly 99% of the lunar surface, which helped pave the way for NASA's ultimate lunar landing goal.

The auction includes the crucially important Apollo 17 Lunar Module-Flown "Lunar Surface Flight Plan" Originally from the Personal Collection of Mission Commander Gene Cernan. The plan is a detailed timeline from the time the Lunar Module Challenger undocked from the Command Module America in lunar orbit at 108:00 (Ground Elapsed Time) through their three EVAs, to the ascent liftoff and re-docking with the CM at 187:37 (GET), and the stowage of equipment and samples at 191:18 (GET). Said Cernan: "During our flight, we carried a seven-page flight plan with us to the lunar surface aboard our lunar module, which recorded from the time we undocked for lunar landing until we returned and jettisoned our 'LM.' This flight plan is especially historic because it records both mankind's final Apollo landing on the Moon, and also mankind's final moonwalk, which I accomplished on page 'f' of this checklist ('EVA-3')! This flight plan spent over three days on the lunar surface housed within our Lunar Module 'Challenger,' during which time it resided within the Moon's one-sixth gravitational field and the vacuum of deep space!"

Other top lots include, but are not limited to:

Larry McGlynn
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Posts: 1434
From: Boston, MA
Registered: Jul 2003

posted 06-01-2024 07:13 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Larry McGlynn   Click Here to Email Larry McGlynn     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
The Apollo 17 Lunar Flight Timeline (lot #50205) is complete, but it is a chapter that came from the Apollo 17 Lunar Surface Checklist. In fact, the chapter was listed in the table of contents as the "Lunar Stay Flight Plan... 'a.'"

While it is a very good section of the Apollo 17 Lunar Surface Checklist, it is still a chapter from the complete book and that should be noted in the description. Sotheby's sold a similarly formatted lot of the abbreviated flight plan from the Apollo 11 Flight Plan book in the July 2022 space auction and it was noted as such by the consignor of the lot. That minor correction to the lot description on lot #50205 would make it clearer to any potential buyer what they are buying.

Either way it is the complete lunar stay flight plan from Apollo 17 and was taken to the lunar surface.

Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 52592
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 06-03-2024 12:12 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I heard back from Heritage and the following has been added to the description:
The item offered here is a detailed timeline section from the Apollo 17 "LM Lunar Surface Checklist" book.

4allmankind
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Posts: 1111
From: Dallas TX
Registered: Jan 2004

posted 06-03-2024 12:23 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for 4allmankind   Click Here to Email 4allmankind     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
So happy to learn the description has been augmented for accuracy.

NicDavies
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Posts: 69
From: Tobermory, Argyll, Scotland
Registered: Jan 2019

posted 06-06-2024 03:26 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for NicDavies   Click Here to Email NicDavies     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Regarding Lot 50384:

I thought the argument about who took which photos on Apollo 8 had been settled a while ago.

This image (in original black and white, albeit expertly and very effectively colourised recently) is AS8-13-2329, and the photographer was Bill Anders, not Frank Borman as the Heritage listing asserts. Borman was busy controlling the spacecraft at the time. Anders went on to swap to a colour magazine and took a further two shots, one of which of course is the iconic "Earthrise".

It's worth noting that I believe Anders maintains his favourite shot is that of the full Earth (AS8-16-2593), the first such image taken by a human and an image that in its vintage 10x8 incarnation ("red number" etc) attracts as much attention as "Earthrise".

davidcwagner
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Posts: 1033
From: Albuquerque, New Mexico
Registered: Jan 2003

posted 06-15-2024 12:18 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for davidcwagner   Click Here to Email davidcwagner     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Why did the Chuck Yeager signed model sell for over $1,900?

drs. j
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From: Austerlitz, Netherlands
Registered: Jul 2014

posted 06-15-2024 12:34 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for drs. j   Click Here to Email drs. j     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Because someone wanted it real bad, and as it is an auction, it is what you bid. Auctions are often the same as the question: How long is a string?

Ianhetho
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Posts: 321
From: Bogangar NSW Australia
Registered: May 2018

posted 06-15-2024 06:44 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Ianhetho   Click Here to Email Ianhetho     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Please share your thoughts on lot 50512, Elliot See's autograph. It seems to match a known autopen pattern with the included inscription.

hbw60
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Registered: Aug 2018

posted 06-15-2024 07:19 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for hbw60   Click Here to Email hbw60     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
You're correct that it's VERY close to the autopen pattern. I had to use Photoshop to combine the two, and they lined up almost exactly. He clearly had a very consistent signature.

However, they're not a perfect match. The shape/flow are unique in subtle ways. Most notable is the "B" in "Best". The autopen has a sort of hook shape inside of the bottom half of the letter. Also, the tailing lines at the beginning and end of his signature are a bit longer in the autopen. They're definitely distinct from each other, but it's so close that without actually laying one on top of the other, I wouldn't have been able to spot them.

Ianhetho
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Posts: 321
From: Bogangar NSW Australia
Registered: May 2018

posted 06-15-2024 08:33 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Ianhetho   Click Here to Email Ianhetho     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Thank you, some interesting forensics used there, I'll have to learn to use Photoshop.

With so few examples available online it's difficult. Even the astronaut autopen guide states there are no autopen pattern definitively identified at present. I was really hoping it was autopen, one of only a few I now need to complete my collection.

NicDavies
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Posts: 69
From: Tobermory, Argyll, Scotland
Registered: Jan 2019

posted 06-18-2024 06:41 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for NicDavies   Click Here to Email NicDavies     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I was intrigued about the See as well so had a quick look too. I found a supposed autopen on spacedirectory.org.uk and the Heritage piece is definitely different, even taking into account the variations with autopen machines (and machine operators!).

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