NASA’s Refined Leap After Lightning Strikes

NASA’s Refined Leap After Lightning Strikes

Posted on Friday, November 14, 2025

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by The Association of Mature American Citizens

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On November 14, 1969, the United States took another bold leap in its lunar ambitions when Apollo 12—the second manned mission to attempt a lunar landing—lifted off from Cape Canaveral with astronauts Charles “Pete” Conrad, Jr. (commander), Richard F. Gordon, Jr. (command module pilot), and Alan L. Bean (lunar module pilot) aboard.

This launch was rife with drama from the outset. Just 36 seconds after liftoff, the Saturn V rocket was struck by lightning—an unexpected jolt that tripped circuit breakers in the command module. Luckily, the onboard systems recovered quickly, and the flight continued as planned. Despite this early scare, Apollo 12 would go on to achieve remarkable successes and further cement the U.S. lead in the space race.

Once in lunar orbit, Conrad and Bean descended in the lunar module to the Moon’s surface. They made a pinpoint landing near the unmanned Surveyor 3 probe in the lunar “Ocean of Storms,” becoming the 3rd and 4th humans to walk on the Moon. During their two moonwalks, they recovered parts of Surveyor 3—bringing them back to Earth for study—and collected rock and soil samples with great precision, advancing lunar science and showing that landings didn’t have to be broad brush strokes in vast lunar seas but could be surgical missions.

Meanwhile, Richard Gordon remained alone aboard the command module in lunar orbit, maintaining operations and conducting experiments. Back on Earth, the mission displayed the increasing sophistication of NASA’s efforts: improved targeting, detailed scientific goals, and an evolving partnership between human ambition and robotic assistance.

The mission returned safely on November 24, 1969, splashing down just three miles from its recovery ship, the USS Hornet. Apollo 12 reaffirmed that lunar missions could be executed reliably and deliberately—and did so following the pioneering footsteps of Apollo 11.

In the grand scope of space exploration, Apollo 12’s liftoff represents more than just the second lunar landing mission—it speaks to refinement, resilience, and the steady march toward mastery of spaceflight. From a lightning strike mere seconds after launch to achieving one of the most accurate landings in lunar history, Apollo 12 exemplified both the danger and the determination of that era. It showed that the Moon was no longer just a destination—it was a laboratory, a proving ground, and a symbol of human reach.

Today, when we look back on November 14, 1969, we remember it as a day when humanity reaffirmed its capacity to travel beyond Earth’s bounds—not just in spectacular firsts, but in thoughtful seconds.



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