Media Relations
Press Release - May 31, 2024
Collection of Apollo Astronaut Fred Haise Touches Down in Heritage’s Space Exploration Auction June 14-15
| Relics from Wright Flyer also among event highlights DOWNLOAD DIGITAL PRESS KIT When the seventh crewed mission of the Apollo space program was launched April 11, 1970, from the John F. Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the plan was that it would be the third to land on the lunar surface, putting crew members Fred W. Haise, Jr., James A. Lovell, Jr., and John L. Swigert, Jr., on the same tier of universal identification as the likes of Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins. But about 56 hours after launch, and more than 200,000 miles from Earth, Haise was completing the shutdown of the lunar module when the crew members heard an explosion. Communication back to Earth was lost for a couple of seconds. Swigert considered the fact that a meteoroid had struck the module, but it turned out an oxygen tank in the service module had ruptured, disabling the vessel’s electrical and life-support systems. With oxygen in short supply, the decision was made to complete the loop around the moon, rather than forcibly changing direction in favor of a shorter path home. An impromptu change in plans shortened the return trip by about 36 hours, to a little over two days, ending in a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean. President Richard Nixon cancelled appointments and called the astronauts’ families and headed to NASA’s Goddard Spaceflight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Pope Paul VI led a congregation of 10,000 in prayer for the astronauts’ safe return. The U.S. Senate passed a resolution urging businesses to pause at 9 p.m. to allow employees to pray. On-the-fly decisions and calculations by the crew and by the support crew on Earth resulted in the safe return, assisted by other nations at the landing site. An estimated 40 million Americans watched Apollo 13’s splashdown, which was carried live on all three networks. Jack Gould of the New York Times wrotethat Apollo 13, “which came so close to tragic disaster, in all probability united the world in mutual concern more fully than another successful landing on the Moon would have.” With a status among the most important in the history of the American space program, multiple items from Haise’s personal collection will touch down in Heritage’s Space Exploration Signature® AuctionJune 14-15. Among the top items in the Haise collection is a magnificent group of Flown Sterling Silver Robbins from Apollo Missions 7 through 12. “This is an incredible and likely one-of-a-kind keepsake, almost a history book of an enormously important period within the American space program,” says Brad Palmer, Director of Space Exploration at Heritage Auctions. “Space collectors have always cherished flown Robbins medallions. To obtain six sequential examples from the collection of such an important figure in the Apollo program in one item is an incredibly unique opportunity.” The Haise collection is a remarkable assemblage, but definitely does not include all of the prizes that are available in the auction, among them a pair of lots from The Armstrong Family Collection™ that were aboard the two most significant flights in the history of aviation: an Apollo-11 Lunar Module Flown Piece of the Wright Flyer Propeller and an Apollo 11 Lunar Module-Flown Section of the Wright Flyer’s Wing Fabric, Position No. 145. Each was a part of the first successful powered controlled flight in history at Kitty Hawk in 1903, and later was taken aboard Apollo 11 by Armstrong, who was allowed to retain a portion of the cloth and propeller pieces for his own collection. An incredibly significant and historically important photo will find a new home when Lunar Orbiter 1: A Crescent Earth Rising over the Lunar Surface in a Photo Taken by the First American Spacecraft to Orbit the Moon is sold in this auction. The Lunar Orbiter program was a series of missions conducted by NASA in the mid-1960s, designed to map the surface of the moon in preparation for the Apollo program that eventually landed humans on the moon. As the Orbiter revolved around the moon, it transmitted photos as analog data through a series of strips. The unmanned spacecraft Lunar Orbiter 1 captured a historic image of Earth from lunar orbit August 23, 1966, marking a groundbreaking moment in exploring space and documenting Earth’s place in the universe. This iconic assembly of the transmitted photos is comprised of Lunar Orbiter images I-102H-1 & 2. The program included five separate missions and returned photos of nearly 99% of the lunar surface, which helped pave the way for NASA’s ultimate lunar landing goal. The auction includes the crucially important Apollo 17 Lunar Module-Flown “Lunar Surface Flight Plan” Originally from the Personal Collection of Mission Commander Gene Cernan. The plan is a detailed timeline from the time the Lunar Module Challenger undocked from the Command Module America in lunar orbit at 108:00 (Ground Elapsed Time) through their three EVAs, to the ascent liftoff and re-docking with the CM at 187:37 (GET), and the stowage of equipment and samples at 191:18 (GET). Said Cernan: “During our flight, we carried a seven-page flight plan with us to the lunar surface aboard our lunar module, which recorded from the time we undocked for lunar landing until we returned and jettisoned our ‘LM.’ This flight plan is especially historic because it records both mankind’s final Apollo landing on the Moon, and also mankind’s final moonwalk, which I accomplished on page ‘f’ of this checklist (‘EVA-3’)! This flight plan spent over three days on the lunar surface housed within our Lunar Module ‘Challenger,’ during which time it resided within the Moon’s one-sixth gravitational field and the vacuum of deep space!” Other top lots include, but are not limited to: • An Apollo 11-Flown American Flag Directly from The Armstrong Family Collection™, CAG Certified • An Apollo 12-Flown Gold Snoopy in Plaque Presented to NASA’s Apollo Program Director Rocco Petrone, Directly from His Family’s Collection • An Apollo 11 Complete Flown Heat Shield Ablative Plug #56 in Acrylic Display Directly from the Dr. Rocco Petrone Family Collection • A NASA Astronaut Group One Vintage Color Photo Signed by All, in Framed Display — signed (left to right): “Scott Carpenter,” “Gordon Cooper,” “J H Glenn,” “Virgil I Grissom,” “W M Schirra Jr,” “Alan B Shepard Jr” and “D K Slayton” • An Apollo 13 Crew-Signed (by four, with Swigert) “Mission Aborted” Cover • An Apollo 13-Flown Lunar Surface Map, Signed by James Lovell and Fred Haise Images and information about all lots in the auction can be found at HA.com/6292. Heritage Auctions is the largest fine art and collectibles auction house founded in the United States, and the world's largest collectibles auctioneer. Heritage maintains offices in New York, Dallas, Beverly Hills, Chicago, Palm Beach, London, Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels, Hong Kong and Tokyo. Heritage also enjoys the highest Online traffic and dollar volume of any auction house on earth (source: SimilarWeb and Hiscox Report). The Internet's most popular auction-house website, HA.com, has more than 1,750,000 registered bidder-members and searchable free archives of 6,000,000 past auction records with prices realized, descriptions and enlargeable photos. Reproduction rights routinely granted to media for photo credit. For breaking stories, follow us: HA.com/Facebook and HA.com/Twitter . Link to this release or view prior press releases . Hi-Res images available: Steve Lansdale, Public Relations Specialist 214-409-1699 or SteveL@HA.com |

