...These items were supposed to have been left on the moon back in 1969 and Mr Armstrong never told anyone about them over the next four decades...
Assuming that the Temporary Stowage Bag (TSB or "purse") and it's contents reached the Armstrong home soon after Apollo 11, it's hard to believe that Neil would not have shown wife Janet and sons Mark, 6 and Ricky, 12, any of the items. Surely it would be any boy's dream to handle some of them, and almost a crime for any father to not show them.
And as for the claim that Neil "never told anyone", this page at the ALSJ,
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a12/A12Flown-Purse.htmltells about the Apollo 12 TSB that Al Bean has in his possession, and at the bottom mentions an email from Neil:
Finally, in a 13 July 2005 e-mail, Neil Armstrong says that the flown Apollo 12 purse "looks just the way I remember it - but it looks cleaner than the one on Apollo 11."
I wish I was more capable than I am right now of writing a scathing reply to Richard Wybrow, commenting about his mean-spirited heading and asking him where he got his information from and how much did he just make up. I've got lots of things in the bottom of wardrobes and cupboards, but that doesn't mean they are necessarily "secret" or "hidden" at all.
I wonder if he even knows that if Neil hadn't souvenired the items they would have most likely ended up destroyed when the LM eventually crashed on the moon. And whether he recognises that neither Neil nor second wife Carol put them on Ebay to see what they could "make" out of them.
Google shows that Wybrow is apparently a "Canadian-kiwi TV producer, writer, and journo. Auckland, New Zealand."
Edited to add: Yahoo! Smartcooky got stuck into Wybrow about 35 minutes ago:
smartcooky
Neil Armstrong's stolen space mementos on display
Discussion on 3NewsNZ • 4 comments
@Mr Wybrow, what sort of journalist are you? I would, say you are one who does not have the word "research" in his vocabulary. If you weren't so busy interviewing your own laptop, you could have taken the two minutes it took me to find out that these were not "stolen" as you stated, but were were surplus items that were originally planned to be left left in "Eagle" (the Lunar Module) after Armstrong and Aldrin transferred back to Columbia (The Command Module). Instead, they were transferred with the crew, who were allowed to keep them.
Where's that applause smiley?
Smartcooky: I'm not registered at TV3, nor on any of the other services they quote (Facebook etc.) Could you post a link there to this thread so that interested people can at least get the facts instead of Wybrow's nonsense?
LunarOrbit: If Wybrow keeps up that sort of crappy journalism, you're welcome to have him back in Canada, although I don't imagine you would want him.
Perhaps he should be getting stuck into Al Bean for having the Apollo 12 TSB, but I doubt if he's heard of Al Bean, or knows he's still alive. It's just so much "better journalism" to pick on the more famous astronaut who isn't alive to defend himself against false accusations of theft.