• 4 months ago
On Aug. 1, 1968, NASA cancelled the production of its Saturn V rocket.

The giant rocket was the only launch vehicle to have ever carried astronauts beyond low-Earth orbit, and it was the largest, most powerful rocket ever. NASA built 15 of these rockets but only flew 13 of them. When NASA made the decision to stop building the Saturn V, it was almost a year before Apollo 11 astronauts would walk on the moon for the first time. A federal budget deficit and the rising costs of the Vietnam War led Congress to slash nearly three-quarters of the funding that President Johnson had allotted for the Apollo program. The last Saturn V launched in 1973, and it was originally supposed to send Apollo 18 to the moon. However, that mission was canceled, and that Saturn V launched the Skylab space station instead.

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Transcript
00:00On this day in space.
00:04In 1968, NASA canceled the production of its Saturn V rocket.
00:08The giant rocket was the only launch vehicle to have ever carried astronauts beyond low Earth orbit,
00:12and it was the largest, most powerful rocket ever.
00:16NASA built 15 of these rockets, but only flew 13 of them.
00:20When NASA made the decision to stop building the Saturn V, it was almost a year before Apollo 11
00:24astronauts would walk on the moon for the first time.
00:28And the rising cost of the Vietnam War led Congress to slash nearly three quarters of the funding
00:32that President Johnson had allotted for the Apollo program.
00:36The last Saturn V launched in 1973, and it was originally supposed to send Apollo 18 to the moon.
00:40However, that mission was canceled, and that Saturn V rocket launched
00:44the Skylab space station instead.
00:48And that's what happened on this day in space.
00:52NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology

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