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Patch, Mission, Apollo 14

Air and Space Museum

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International media Interoperability Framework
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    Object Details

    Summary

    This Apollo 14 mission patch, a replica of the one designed by the astronauts for that mission, uses the design of the astronaut pin as one of its central images in the iconography. The very first NASA astronauts, the Mercury 7, began the tradition of astronauts having a lapel pin in the design of a three-tailed shooting star encircled by an ellipse. Astronaut candidates or trained astronauts wore silver pins in that design until their first spaceflight; astronauts who had flown in space showed that accomplishment by wearing gold versions of the pin.
    Apollo 14, which launched on January 31, 1971 and returned after a little over nine days, was the seventh human spaceflight and the third human lunar landing in the Apollo program, flown by astronauts Stuart Roosa, Alan Shepard, and Edgar Mitchell. Notably, the crew included Shepard, the first American in space and one of the original Mercury astronauts. As a result, the mission patch design shows a gold astronaut pin emblem launching from Earth and headed for the Moon. The Apollo 14 mission patch design was the first mission patch to incorporate the astronaut pin emblem, although it later because a commonly-used element in mission patch designs.
    This patch was made by an unknown manufacturer for retail sale. It was donated to the museum by Mance Clayton in 1982.

    Credit Line

    Gift of Mance Clayton

    Inventory Number

    A19820404000

    Restrictions & Rights

    Usage conditions apply

    Type

    MEMORABILIA-Events

    Materials

    Cloth

    Dimensions

    2-D - Unframed (H x W): 7.6cm (3 in. dia.)

    Country of Origin

    United States of America

    See more items in

    National Air and Space Museum Collection

    Data Source

    National Air and Space Museum

    Metadata Usage

    Not determined

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nv9065a6782-f064-4d22-9541-b8209704bd6f

    Record ID

    nasm_A19820404000

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