CONTENTS
- Fall Edition of News & Notes Highlights the NASA Archives
- NASA History Lunchtime Presentation on Architecture and the Space Complex
Fall Edition of News & Notes Highlights the NASA Archives
Get to know the NASA Archives in our
Fall 2024 issue of NASA History News & Notes!
With American Archives Month upon us, what better time is there to underscore the importance of NASAâs historical records and how they shape our understanding
of the agencyâs activities. NASAâs archivists preserve and provide access to the documents, photos, oral histories, and other media that illustrate the missions, programs, and people of the agency from its earliest days. These records help tell the story of
NASAâs work, its leaders, its triumphs, and challenges. They not only become the basis of historical research communicated in books and documentaries, but also inform managers, engineers, and program planners, and inspire new generations with lessons from
our past.
CONTENTS
- From the Chief Archivist
- Getting to Venus with an Assist from the Ames Research Center Archives
- Robert R. Gilruth Papers Make Their Way Home to NASA
- A NASA Internship in the Summer of 1969 Becomes Part of the Goddard Archives
- Building an Archive: The Complicated Archival History at NASA Headquarters
- A Deep Space Network of History: The Jet Propulsion Laboratory Archives
- NASA Oral Histories Shared in NOAA Voices Oral History Archive
- Personal Histories Hidden in the Archives
- The Kennedy Space Center Archives: A Peek Inside
- Houston, We Have an Archive: Real Use Cases from the Johnson Space Center Archives
- Glenn Archives Marks 25th Anniversary
- Rocket Science: The Wallops Photo Collection
- Marshallâs History Preserved for Generations to Come
- A Dig into the Archives Reveals Archaeological History at NASAâs Kennedy Space Center
Read the new edition:
https://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/newsnotes-41-3.pdf
The NASA History Office presents
A LUNCHTIME PRESENTATION ON
Architecture and the Space Complex
By Jeffrey S. Nesbit
Architect and Professor at Temple University
Wednesday, October 9, 12:00â1:00 pm ET on Teams (link
below)
Contact: Michele
Ostovar
Have you ever wondered why NASAâs space complexes look the way they do? If so, join Jeffrey S. Nesbit for a look at the stories
behind the architectural design and development of NASAâs space centers in the 1950s and 1960s.
Jeffrey S. Nesbit is an
architect, founding director of the research group Grounding Design, and a professor at Temple University. His research focuses on processes of urbanization, infrastructure, and the evolution of "technical lands." His latest book, Ground Control: A Design
History of Technical Lands and NASAâs Space Complex, was published in 2024.
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