April 12, 2021 08:20

Remembering Yuri Gagarin, the first person to enter outer space

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The monument of Yuri Gagarin, the first person who flew to space, in Moscow, Russia. The monument built in 1980 standing on a pedestal made to resemble a rocket exhaust is made of titanium. From a giant statue towering over Moscow to a more modest monument on the Sakhalin Island in the Pacific Ocean, dozens of memorials across Russia commemorate Yuri Gagarin.
In this undated photo, Soviet cosmonaut Major Yuri Gagarin, first man to orbit the Earth. The successful one-orbit flight on April 12, 1961 made the 27-year-old Gagarin a national hero and cemented Soviet supremacy in space until the US put a man on the moon more than eight years later.
In1961, Major Yuri Gagarin, standing in an open car, waves to crowds of spectators as he drives into London from the London airport.
On April 12 1961, the Vostok-1 spaceship blasts off on top of Rocket R-7 from the Baikonur space center with Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin on board for the first manned trip into space.
People queue up to lay flowers at a grave of Yuri Gagarinin Moscow, Russia. After Gagarin died in a training jet crash in March 1968, he was buried near the Kremlin Wall alongside Soviet leaders.

On international day of Human Space Flight, here’s a quick look at the life of Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first person to enter outer space. Yuri Gagarin’s 108-minute flight into space 50 years ago set new a horizon for humanity. It turned a farmworker’s son into one of the century’s heroes overnight. Born in the village of Klushino, some 150 km west of Moscow, his father was a carpenter and his mother a milkmaid.

The family was forced to live in a tiny mud hut when the village was burned down during the German occupation in World War Two. The Vostok spaceship piloted by Gagarin completed one Earth orbit on April 12, 1961. Gagarin sung Soviet hymns during the last checks, strapped atop the 30m-high (98 ft) rocket that would blast him into space from the spaceport Baikonur cosmodrome. "Let’s go," he cried in Russian as the space flight launched, in a phrase that has become synonymous with Gagarin in Russia.

This achievement is considered to be one of the Soviet Union’s most enduring Cold War victories even today. It is proudly remembered, especially in the cosmonaut town that is the heart of the nation’s space program known as Star City. Star City is the world’s oldest space-flight training centre and it resembles in many ways a shrine to the first man in space. Gagarin’s premature death in a mysterious plane crash led to widespread speculation. It’s been half a century after his exploit captured the world’s imagination and fuelled a space race with the United States.