Earth Day, a celebration of clean air, land, and water, is coming up on April 22nd. Earth Day began in 1970 as part of a newly-developing environmental movement. But did you know, the environmental movement really took off, so to speak, far away from the Earth, with the Apollo space missions?
The Apollo missions, which began in 1961 and concluded in 1972, brought back to us Earth-dwellers inspiring photographic images that set our startlingly blue orb of a planet in stark contrast to the blackness of space. The first photo of the Earth taken from space by a human (as opposed to images from unmanned observation flights or satellites) became known as the “Earthrise” photo of the Earth rising over the Moon’s horizon on Christmas Eve, 1968, during the Apollo 8 mission. The most famous of the Apollo Earth photos became known as the “Blue Marble,” a portrait of the Earth taken on Dec. 7, 1972, during Apollo 17. Over 50 years later, the Artemis II mission has been recreating many of these same photographs, with technological upgrades, such as the “Hello, World” photo of April 3, 2026, that catches the Earth in the same “pose” as the Blue Marble.
Perhaps the most famous of the Apollo missions was Apollo 11, which launched July, 1969. Its lunar landing module put humans, astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong, on the moon for the very first time. In 1989, the Shreveport Times did a 20-year retrospective story on locals’ memories of that day, and their own special connections to the event. At least half of the group were Bossierites, including John and Maybelle Manry of Plain Dealing. Mr. Manry’s memories and reactions were fascinating, because as a native of the year 1903, his memories predated the arrival of automobiles in his hometown. And Maybelle Manry pointed out how exciting the Apollo missions were to her, because their son Charles Manry, was a crucial part of the mission.
John Ardis Manry was a printer, regional historian, photographer, and genealogist who for a while was publisher of the Bossier Banner newspaper and worked for the Shreveport Times. He was born two weeks before brothers Orville and Wilbur Wright took their famous flight in December, 1903. He remembers the “pop-pop-pop” sounds of the first Model T Ford automobiles in town keeping neighbors awake in Plain Dealing. He watched the first hot air balloon liftoff from Bossier Parish soil in 1915 and thought that the pilot “had gone to heaven right there.” The moonwalk of Apollo 11, though, “was the greatest thing that ever happened in my 85 years,” he said. Mr. Manry remembered, “We saw every bit of it we could and we read everything we could.” He reminisced that before that, the most fantastic thing they’d personally seen was the sending of the first newspaper wire photo in 1935, “a marvel.”
At one point in Mr. Manry’s remisncenses of Apollo 11 for the Times reporter, his wife Mrs. Maybelle Manry interjected that really the missions were so interesting to them and that they didn’t miss a minute of coverage of it was likely due to the fact that they “had a child involved in it.” The Manrys’ son Charles E. Manry, a 1954 graduate of Plain Dealing High School, majored in physics at Georgia Tech. Following college, he entered the US Navy working as a “radio man” and as an electronics instructor and then worked in the Naval Ordnance Design station in California, developing the technology to photograph the ocean floor. In 1963 he went from exploring the ocean floor to exploration of space, by moving to Houston and taking a job with NASA.
At NASA, Manry designed the guidance system that was used on the Apollo spacecraft and personally trained each astronaut in how to use it. He became an expert in manned space flight and in 1971, in the thick of the Cold War, was selected as member of a team of physicists sent to Moscow to work out a joint rendezvous and docking system. These systems were to allow US and Russian spacecraft to link up in space, and give each country the ability to rescue the other’s astronauts or cosmonauts in space. As a part of NASA’s Manned Space Center, Guidance and Control Section in Houston, Charles Manry had worked in the Gemini manned space program, and he also helped create the NASA computer programs to map the Space Shuttle's routes. He then worked for the Martin Marietta company in Denver and passed away in Colorado in 2011.
If you have stories or photographs of some of the area’s space or environmentally-minded citizens, we’d love to see or hear them, and perhaps make copies for our collection, with your permission. The Bossier Parish Libraries History Center located at 7204 Hutchison Drive, Bossier City, LA and are open M-F 9-6. Our phone number is (318) 746-7717 and our email is history-center@bossierlibrary.org For other fun facts, photos, and videos, be sure to follow us @BPLHistoryCenter on FB, @bplhistorycenter on TikTok, and check out our blog http://bpl-hc.blogspot.com/.
Images:
- NASA’s Apollo 8 Earthrise photo
- John and Maybelle Manry on their 50th anniversary, BPLHC photo
- Charles Manry as a boy, BPLHC photo
Article by Pam Carlisle