65 Years Ago: NASA Selects America's First Astronauts

On Nov. 5, 1958, NASA, newly established to lead America's civilian space program, formally established the Space Task Group (STG) at NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, to implement one of the nation's top priorities - to develop a spacecraft capable of sending humans into space and returning them safely to Earth. In January 1959, the STG selected a contractor to build the spacecraft for Project Mercury and began the process of choosing who would fly the spacecraft. President Dwight D. Eisenhower directed NASA to choose its first astronauts from among the ranks of military pilots. The three-month rigorous process led to the selection on April 2, 1959, of seven men from among America's military branches. The agency presented them to the world on April 9 as America's Mercury 7 astronauts.

The headquarters building for the Space Task Group at NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia An early cutaway representation of the Mercury capsule

Left: The headquarters building for the Space Task Group at NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. Right: An early cutaway representation of the Mercury capsule.

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