Anniversary Of First Man In Space

Fact checked by The People's Voice Community
yuri gagarin
yuri gagarin

The first man in space was Yuri Gagarin.

Space fans will already know that today – April 12 – is International Day Of Human Space Flight, and celebrates the 54th anniversary of sending the first man into space.

Russian Yuri Gagarin, then 27, orbited Earth just the once at a speed of 27,400 kms per hour. The trip took a total of 108 minutes.

Voice Of America News reports:


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April 12 is the International Day of Human Space Flight, marking the day in 1961 when 27-year-old Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the world’s first man in space.

His historic single orbit around Earth, while crouched in the Vostok 1 spacecraft at a speed of 27,400 kilometers per hour, lasted only 108 minutes, but ushered in a new chapter of history – space travel.

Before Gagarin’s flight, space travel had been the purview of science fiction writers.

Gagarin had no control over his spacecraft while it was orbiting. It was instead controlled by a computer program sending radio commands to the Vostok. However, a key had been placed in the spacecraft in case Gagarin needed to take command.

Premier Nikita Krushchev named Gagarin a hero of the Soviet Union, and Gagarin, who became an international hero, was dubbed “the Christopher Columbus of the Cosmos.”

His flight during Cold War tensions sent the American space program into a frenzy. The Soviet Union had said the space flight was an affirmation of “the genius of the Soviet people.”

Less than a month later, U.S. astronaut Alan Shepherd became the first American in space. In February of the next year, U.S. astronaut John Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth.

Yuri Gagarin died in a plane he was piloting in 1968. At the time of his death, he was training for a second space mission.


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Jacqui Deevoy
About Jacqui Deevoy 128 Articles
Jacqui Deevoy has been a full-time freelance journalist for more four decades. Over the last few years, she’s lost faith in the MSM and now prefers to work for news outlets that deal in truth, not propaganda. In 2021, she launched an investigation into involuntary euthanasia within the NHS in the UK and this resulted in her producing the shocking documentary ‘A Good Death?’ with Ickonic Media. Watch at Ickonic or on Rumble. Her second film – ‘Playing God’: an investigation into medical democide in the UK - was released in April 2024. Watch on Rumble, UK Column or Children’s Health Defense (US). For two years, she produced and presented the UNN Friday night show – a sometimes serious but often irreverent chat-fest with an array of fascinating guests talking on a wide range of subjects. She was also one of UNN’s lead reporters. She’s currently writing and editing a book - ‘Murdered By The State’ - a compilation of horrifying true stories about involuntary euthanasia.