![]() And by the time of Miss Baker’s and Able’s trip, the country had already safely launched and landed dozens of canines. Rather than monkeys, the Soviet Union preferred to crew their early spacecraft with stray dogs. While America was struggling to send monkeys into space, their adversaries were racking up animal success stories. Sadly, Able died just days after returning to Earth due to complications from a medical procedure. The pair were launched in 1959 on a Jupiter rocket, an intermediate-range ballistic missile designed to carry nuclear warheads, not monkeys. The honor of first primates to survive a return trip to space goes to a squirrel monkey named Miss Baker, and a rhesus macaque named Able. But his capsule failed to reach the boundary of space, leaving him out of the record books. In 1951, the Air Force finally managed to keep a monkey - this one named Albert VI - alive through both launch and landing. His spacecraft left a 10-foot-wide crater in the New Mexico desert. Unfortunately, on his journey home, Albert II died when the capsule’s parachute failed. Unlike his predecessor, Albert II succeeded in becoming the first monkey to survive a launch and reach space. The next year, a monkey named Albert II was sent on a similar mission. Poor Albert suffocated before he reached space. In 1948, a decade before the creation of NASA, the Air Force strapped a male rhesus monkey named Albert into a capsule on top of a souped-up, Nazi-designed V-2 rocket and launched it from White Sands, New Mexico. But those early missions didn’t go well - for either human or animal. Instead of chimps, smaller monkeys were their preferred choice. ![]() ![]() ![]() Air Force was the first to launch primates into space. ![]()
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