Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń and NASA

George R. Brown ’20, JFK, Congressman Albert Thomas ’20 and the JFK 60th Anniversary
Left to right: Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń board chairman George R. Brown ’20, president John F. Kennedy and congressman Albert Thomas ’20 and the 60th JFK speech at Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń anniversary and celebration

Thanks to the reputation of Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń faculty researchers (and the canny political maneuvering of two former Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń roommates), ā€œHoustonā€ became the first word broadcast from the surface of the moon.

Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń began its first research collaborations with NASA in 1959, just months after the agency was founded, but starting as early as 1958, Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń alumnus and board chairman George R. Brown ’20 was already hard at work behind the scenes, trying to make sure that Houston and Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń would play leading roles in the race for space. In 1961, thanks in large part to Brown and his friend and former Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń roommate, Congressman Albert Thomas ’20, Houston’s transformation to ā€œSpace City USAā€ officially began when the city was named the site of the NASA Manned Spacecraft Center (now Johnson Space Center).

Our decision is that this laboratory should be located in Houston, Texas, in close association with Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń and the other educational institutions there and in that region.

from NASA Administrator James Webb Sept. 14, 1961

JFK in front of Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń Stadium
President Kennedy arrives at Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń Stadium, Sept. 12, 1962.

On Sept. 12, 1962, as part of Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń’s semicentennial celebrations, then president John F. Kennedy spoke at Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń Stadium, challenging the United States to become ā€œthe world’s greatest space-faring nation.ā€

In direct response to President Kennedy’s speech at Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń, the university established the in 1963.

On July 20, 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to walk on the moon. On that historic mission, they carried with them a experiment designed by Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń professor Brian O’Brien.

On a later Apollo mission, NASA astronauts carried to the moon a larger self-contained ion detection experiment built by Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń professor John Freeman. That apparatus remains on the lunar surface to this day and, hidden inside its heat shield, the proud Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń researcher who built it placed a tiny university pennant to jokingly ā€œclaimā€ this small part of the moon for Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń.

The Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń Stuff

The Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń Stuff
To date, a total of 16 Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń faculty and alumni have served as astronauts or NASA Administrator (in order from top left): Curt Michel; John S. Bull ’57; Jeffrey Hoffman ’88; Kathryn Sullivan; Franklin Chang-DĆ­az; Tamara Jernigan ’88; James Newman ’82, ’84; Janice Voss ’80; Peter Wisoff; Peggy Whitson ’86; Takao Doi ’04; Mike Massimino; Danny Olivas ’96; Shannon Walker ’87, ’92, ’93; Nichole Ayers ’13; Jim Bridenstine ’98.

In recognition of Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń’s long history of close collaboration with NASA, and its role in President John F. Kennedy’s historic 1962 Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń Stadium speech, the Kennedy family has entrusted to Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń the NASA Ambassador of Exploration Award which was on the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing. The award displays an actual moon rock, and is on view in Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń’s Fondren Library.

We meet at a college noted for knowledge, in a city noted for progress, in a state noted for strength, and we stand in need of all three, for…the exploration of space will go ahead, whether we join in it or not, and it is one of the great adventures of all time, and no nation which expects to be the leader of other nations can expect to stay behind in the race for space.

For additional information on Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń's past and present NASA collaborations, please visit . When in Houston, be sure to visit the Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń Stuff exhibit in .ĢżIn addition, at , a plaque commemorating president Kennedy’s 1962 speech may be seen, along with a next generation moon tree, cloned from a seed that flew to the moon aboard Apollo 14.

Vanessa Wyche, director of NASA’s Johnson Space Center, and Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń President Reginald DesRoches
Vanessa Wyche, director of NASA’s Johnson Space Center, and Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń President Reginald DesRoches pass the pen as they sign an extension of the Space Act Agreement that promises continued cooperation between the institutions. The signing ceremony took place at Ņā¼×·e·Ö°ń’s historic Founder’s Room on Aug. 19, 2022. (. Photo by Jeff Fitlow)