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Birth name: Edwin Eugene Aldrin Jr.
Father: Edwin Aldrin Sr., an aviation pioneer and oil executive
Mother: Marion (Moon) Aldrin
Marriages: Lois Driggs Cannon (February 14, 1988-December 28, 2012, divorced); Beverly Van Zile (December 31, 1975-date unknown publicly, divorced); Joan A. (Archer) Aldrin (December 29, 1954-1972, divorced)
Children: with Joan A. (Archer) Aldrin: James Michael, Janice Ross and Andrew John
Education: US Military Academy at West Point, B.S., 1951; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Astronautics Sc.D.,1963
Military service: US Air Force, 1951-1972, Colonel
Other Facts
The nickname “Buzz” came from the way his sister Fay Ann said the word buzzer instead of brother.
His doctoral dissertation at M.I.T. dealt with the piloting and rendezvous of two spacecraft in orbit. Aldrin’s techniques have been used on many NASA missions.
He logged 289 hours and 53 minutes in space between the Gemini and Apollo programs.
Timeline
1951 – Graduates third in his class at West Point, out of 475.
November 11, 1966 – Is launched into space as the pilot of Gemini 12. Aldrin sets a new Extra-Vehicular Activity (EVA) record of 5 ½ hours. The flight lasts almost four days.
July 20, 1969 – After landing near the Sea of Tranquility, Armstrong and Aldrin spend about two hours on the surface. Aldrin then pilots the Lunar Module back to the Command Module orbiting above.
1969 – Receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Richard Nixon.
1971 – Retires from NASA.
1971-1972 – Commandant of the Aerospace Research Pilots School, Edwards Air Force Base, California.
1971 – Is hospitalized in San Antonio for depression and alcoholism.
March 1972 – Retires from the Air Force as a colonel.
1988 – Legally changes his name to Buzz Aldrin.
1993 – Patents his design for a permanent space station.
March 19, 1993 – Is inducted into the Astronauts Hall of Fame.
1994 – Appears as himself on “The Simpsons.”
1996 – Founds the rocket design company, Starcraft Boosters, Inc.
1998 – Founds ShareSpace, a nonprofit company designed to help fund and promote mass-market space travel.
September 9, 2002 – Punches journalist Bart Sibrel after he demands that Aldrin prove he had actually been to the moon.
July 21, 2004 – Attends a White House ceremony with Armstrong and Collins marking the 35th anniversary of Apollo 11.
December 15, 2006 – Makes a cameo appearance on the television show “Numb3rs.”
March 20, 2007 – Aldrin opens the Skywalk, a glass bottomed observation deck over the Grand Canyon, that extends 70 feet from the canyon wall.
May 14, 2009 – “Look to the Stars,” a children’s book about space travel penned by Aldrin and illustrated by Wendell Minor, is published.
June 2009 – Autobiography “Magnificent Desolation: The Long Journey Home from the Moon” is published.
August 19, 2009 – NASA receives the Philo T. Farnsworth Award, an Emmy given to NASA for, “…engineering excellence and technological innovations that made possible the first live TV broadcast from the moon by the Apollo 11…” Aldrin accepts on behalf of NASA.
March-April 2010 – Competes on ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars.” Aldrin is voted off the show on April 6, 2010.
May 7, 2013 – Aldrin makes a case for commercial travel into the cosmos with the book, “Mission to Mars: My Vision for Space Exploration.”
September 1, 2015 – Aldrin collaborates with author Marianne Dyson on a children’s book, “Welcome to Mars: Making a Home on the Red Planet,” published by National Geographic.
June 7, 2018 – Files a lawsuit against his children Janice and Andrew and others for financial misuse and for undermining his romantic relationships. The lawsuit follows the children’s petition for guardianship, which questioned Aldrin’s competence. The petition is withdrawn and Aldrin voluntarily dismisses the case March 13, 2019.
July 28, 2020 – Is nominated for an Emmy for “Outstanding Cinematography for a Nonfiction Program” at the 72nd Emmy Awards for the CNN documentary “Apollo 11.”
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