ApolloHoax.net
Apollo Discussions => The Reality of Apollo => Topic started by: onebigmonkey on February 01, 2023, 09:00:53 AM
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Some of you might have come across what I've done here, but I have a page where I've uploaded all the memorabilia I've acquired.
http://onebigmonkey.com/apollo/ephemera/ephemera.html
The 'Specials' page in particular might be of use - I've got hold of some unusual period pieces recently :)
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This is a fantastic resource. Thank you.
I've got a few of the 'Life' editions in hard copy and 'Nat Geo' on CD-ROM, but most of the other stuff is new to me.
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Thanks for those. I wish I'd kept some of the newspapers I had from those times, but of course you never think they'll be historically important when you're young. (I thought it would all be commonplace, and we'd be holidaying on Mars by now... :) )
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Thanks :)
There would be more, but for the obscene cost of posting material from the USA!
I like them for the interesting articles in themselves, but they are great for waving in front of people when they make claims about images somehow all being new, or weren't public.
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Added a couple of things to the 'Specials' part - a Newsweek edition covering the Apollo 8 mission, and what is for my money the best of the popular souvenir specials, the 'Look Magazine' Apollo 11 issue.
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You might also want to add the following national geographic issues:
March 1964 (how we plan to put man on the moon)
November 1964 (the moon close up)
January 1965 (the making of an astronaut)
February 1969 (three articles: The Moon - man's first goal in space, awesome views of the forbidding moonscape, how we mapped the Moon. Plus a Moon map)
There were other issues with articles on Cape Canaveral, Mercury, and Gemini missions.
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Another national geographic you might want to get is October 1968 (Antarctica: icy testing ground for space). It briefly mentions von Braun's visit to Antarctica (popular amongst conspiracy theorists)
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I'll look out for those, thanks!
Edit - found the Feb '69 one at a bargain price on ebay :)
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I'll look out for those, thanks!
Edit - found the Feb '69 one at a bargain price on ebay :)
You can view on line copies of relevant ephemera found in Australia (not just Australian publications) at Trove https://trove.nla.gov.au/. Some of these you can purchase electronic copies, if you want. I assume they are printable.
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Added some more material to the 'Specials' page, including a couple of Aviation Week & Space Technology covering Apollo 15 & 16, a very cool Air Force newsletter with lots of detail about mission support, and an edition of 'American Scientist covering Apollo 15 (with a cool image of the lunar module on the surface taken by the Panoramic Camera.
http://onebigmonkey.com/apollo/ephemera/specials/specials.html
The National Geographic edition mentioned above is on this page:
http://onebigmonkey.com/apollo/ngeo/ngeo.html
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I've added quite a few things to this part of my site over the past year or so - if you're looking for original published material, there's quite a bit to go at!
I separated out quite a lot of the 'Special' publications as it was getting a little unwieldy. NASA documents have their own section, as do publications from companies directly connected to the Apollo program. I've also added separate pages for:
Spaceflight (magazine of the British Interplanetary Society)
Aviation Week & Space Technology
Interavia (an aviation industry publication that occasionally featured Apollo related articles).
My general rule now is that if I get more than 4 editions of something, it gets its own page!
I've also added a few more photos and lithographs, and lots more first day covers.
Happy browsing :)
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Love NASA facts.
Thank you for putting this together.