On May 5, 1961, Alan Shepard became the first American in space, riding the Freedom 7 capsule for a 15-minute suborbital flight. That single mission — the first crewed flight of Project Mercury — served two purposes: it showed the US could still compete after Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin's earlier flight, and it proved that a human could be safely launched into space and returned to Earth. The data from those 15 minutes became the foundation for the entire US human spaceflight program.
65 years later
Sixty-five years on, the Artemis program is attempting to build on that foundation. The goal has shifted from proving survival in space to demonstrating that humans can build permanent infrastructure and thrive there. The Artemis II mission, which concluded last month, sent its crew farther from Earth than any previous human spaceflight mission.
The reality check
The path has not been smooth. Mission delays, aborted launches, and funding cuts have been constants. Commercial space companies are not filling the gap — their priorities are tourism, satellites, and orbital data centers. Meanwhile, Americans are questioning the cost of rocket launches amid rising prices at home.
The enduring reason
Human spaceflight remains a powerful tool for inspiring STEM education. It drives students, engineers, and future astronauts to tackle fundamental questions about the universe. The photos from America's first human spaceflight program are a reminder of that instinct to explore.