Moon Rocks At Home.

AuthorBaker, Bob
PositionExhibit held in Germany in 1976 regarding space race between the U.S. and Soviet Union - Personal account

In 1976, I requested from NASA a special collection of three moon rocks. NASA had offered to send them to U.S. Embassies for public exhibition for one month in each foreign country. I hand carried them all around Germany to demonstrate to the German public, the U.S. technical and scientific lead over our main military rival, the Soviet Union. Germany was a key ally in Europe. The moon rocks were closely identified with rocket power and high technology, both a part of the image of the U.S. as a very strong military power, and therefore a powerful ally for Germany.

I have a photo of my little daughter holding a NASA moon rock in the living room of our Bonn suburb (Plittersdorf) apartment. It was in the American "golden ghetto" on Martin Luther King Strasse across from the American baseball field which abutted the Rhine River.

I had been showing off the moon rocks around Germany as part of our excellent made in Bonn space exhibit. That was the creation of two dedicated German USIS employees and took a big truck to carry.

The Soviets had surprised and scared Europeans and Americans by launching the first earth orbiting satellite, Sputnik, and then by sending up the first man in space. Since then the U.S. had overtaken and surpassed Moscow in rocketry and space science. Two German staffers, in Bonn, Gunter and Al, had over the years, put together an excellent exhibit on U.S. space accomplishments. It filled a whole moving van and included a full-size figure in a real NASA space suit, a 1/5 size moon landing craft, cardboard rockets, astronauts, etc. Germans loved it.

The real moon rocks were an extra attraction and drew thousands in big crowds in each town where the show appeared. NASA insisted that only an American officer could carry them by hand to each exhibit site and...

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