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Raumfahrt - Decades later, Gemini 5s Titan booster returns to Cape Canaveral

21.01.2023

Nearly 60 years after it launched two astronauts on a historic mission to Earth orbit, the Gemini 5 mission's Titan II booster has returned to its Cape Canaveral launch site.

The Space Force on Thursday oversaw the arrival a 27-foot fragment of the booster that launched Gordon Cooper and Pete Conrad on an eight-day mission in August 1965, proving that astronauts could stay in space long enough to fly to the moon and back. It's the only launched-and-recovered Titan booster in existence.

"This is the only retrieved booster from the entirety of America's crewed space program leading up to shuttle (in 1981)," James Draper, director of the Cape Canaveral Space Force Museum, said during arrival of the fragment. "We're returning it home to Cape Canaveral and putting on display with our aerospace restorations here at Hangar C."

The booster was returned to the Cape from the U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, where it was stabilized, put in a new display cradle, and transported to Florida. It joins dozens of other displays at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station's Hangar C, which acts as a museum and houses restored ballistic missiles and other hardware from the Space Race and beyond.

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A 27-foot fragment of the Gemini-Titan 5 booster Shipped to Brevard
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