RoundupReads 60 Years Ago: NASA’s Manned Spacecraft Center Opens, Moving to Houston

60 Years Ago: NASA’s Manned Spacecraft Center Opens, Moving to Houston

by John Uri | 2021-11-02

Johnson's 60th anniversary banner

EXTRA! EXTRA! Read all about it in the first issue of Space News Roundup.

In May 1961, President John F. Kennedy committed the nation to landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth. The Space Task Group (STG), established in 1958 at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, was already tasked with putting American astronauts into space. With the new Moon-landing goal, the STG required larger facilities and, following a nationwide search for a proper location, NASA chose an area southeast of Houston to build the new center. On Nov. 1, 1961, the agency announced the renaming of the STG to the Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) and its relocation to Houston. The MSC’s functions included control of human space missions, spacecraft development and testing, astronaut selection and training, and research and development.

Left: Director of the newly named Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston, now NASA’s Johnson Space Center, Robert R. Gilruth, left, and his special assistant Paul E. Purser read the inaugural issue of the Space News Roundup announcing the renaming of the Space Task Group and its relocation to Houston. Right: The front page of the Space News Roundup issue that Gilruth and Purser are reading. Credits: NASA

Left: Director of the newly named Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston, now NASA’s Johnson Space Center, Robert R. Gilruth, left, and his special assistant Paul E. Purser read the inaugural issue of the Space News Roundup announcing the renaming of the Space Task Group and its relocation to Houston. Right: The front page of the Space News Roundup issue that Gilruth and Purser are reading. Credits: NASA

On the day of the announcement, the MSC published the very first issue of its newsletter, the Space News Roundup, its pages reproduced in this article. Today, 60 years later, Roundup continues to provide, in its online version, useful and timely information to the center’s employees.

Pages 2, 3, and 4 of the Nov. 1, 1961 issue of the Space News Roundup.   

Pages 2, 3, and 4 of the Nov. 1, 1961 issue of the Space News Roundup.

A photo spread on pages 5 and 6 of the Nov. 1, 1961 issue of the Space News Roundup, highlighting some Houston attractions of interest to the NASA Langley Research Center employees planning to relocate. Credits: NASA

A photo spread on pages 5 and 6 of the Nov. 1, 1961 issue of the Space News Roundup, highlighting some Houston attractions of interest to the NASA Langley Research Center employees planning to relocate. Credits: NASA

Pages 7 and 8 of the Nov. 1, 1961 issue of the Space News Roundup.

Pages 7 and 8 of the Nov. 1, 1961 issue of the Space News Roundup.

Left: The site on Clear Lake, southeast of Houston, being prepared for construction of the Manned Spacecraft Center, now NASA’s Johnson Space Center, in 1962. Right: Johnson as it appeared in 2019. Credits: NASA

Left: The site on Clear Lake, southeast of Houston, being prepared for construction of the Manned Spacecraft Center, now NASA’s Johnson Space Center, in 1962. Right: Johnson as it appeared in 2019. Credits: NASA

Over the past 60 years, the MSC, renamed NASA’s Johnson Space Center in 1973 following the death of President Lyndon B. Johnson, has grown and changed to maintain its lead role in America’s ever-more-complex human spaceflight programs. The area surrounding the center has also seen tremendous growth.

Left: The sign at the main entrance to the Manned Spacecraft Center, now NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. Right: The U.S. Navy Blue Angels fly over the sign at JSC’s main entrance in 2020. Credits: NASA 

Left: The sign at the main entrance to the Manned Spacecraft Center, now NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. Right: The U.S. Navy Blue Angels fly over the sign at JSC’s main entrance in 2020. Credits: NASA

Houston’s downtown skyline in 1959. Credits: Image courtesy Sloane Gallery

Houston’s downtown skyline in 1959. Credits: Image courtesy Sloane Gallery

Houston’s downtown skyline today. Credits: Image courtesy HDR

Houston’s downtown skyline today. Credits: Image courtesy HDR

And, of course, the city of Houston, overall, has grown much larger, as exemplified by the views of its downtown skyline then and now.

A few fun facts about Houston then and now.

A few fun facts about Houston then and now.

We can use our imaginations as to what Roundup’s headline will read on Nov. 1, 2081. Let’s see what the next 60 years bring!