Apollo 8 was one of the boldest missions in the history of human spaceflight — the first time humans left the safety of Earth orbit and voyaged to another world. Launched on December 21, 1968, atop the first crewed Saturn V rocket, it carried Commander Frank Borman, Command Module Pilot James Lovell, and Lunar Module Pilot William Anders on a six-day journey that rewrote the boundaries of human exploration.
The mission was conceived as an audacious acceleration of the Apollo program. Originally planned as an Earth-orbit test of the Lunar Module, Apollo 8 was redesigned as a lunar orbital mission after LM production delays and intelligence that the Soviet Union was preparing its own circumlunar flight. The decision, made just four months before launch, sent three men farther from home than any human had ever traveled.
On Christmas Eve 1968, as the spacecraft orbited the Moon, the crew conducted a live television broadcast — the most-watched TV event in history at that time. Borman, Lovell, and Anders took turns reading from the Book of Genesis while showing viewers the stark lunar landscape below. During the fourth orbit, William Anders looked out the window and captured the iconic “Earthrise” photograph (AS08-14-2383), showing our fragile blue planet rising above the barren lunar horizon. The image is widely credited with inspiring the modern environmental movement.
Apollo 8 orbited the Moon 10 times over 20 hours before firing the Service Propulsion System engine for Trans-Earth Injection. The crew splashed down safely in the North Pacific Ocean on December 27, 1968, and was recovered by the USS Yorktown. The mission proved that humans could navigate to the Moon and return safely, paving the way for the Apollo 11 lunar landing just seven months later.