HomeSpace FlightStoke Space to balance past and future at historic launch pad

Stoke Space to balance past and future at historic launch pad

The long-retired launch pad where astronaut John Glenn lifted off to become to the first American to orbit Earth is getting a new lease on life.

The U.S. Space Force on Tuesday (March 7) announced it had allocated Space Launch Complex 14 (LC-14) to Stoke Space (opens in new tab), a Washington-based company developing a reusable rocket intended to fly daily. In addition to LC-14 being the site where Glenn left the ground (opens in new tab) in February 1962, the Florida complex also supported the launches of Scott Carpenter, Walter “Wally” Schirra and Gordon Cooper on the three NASA Mercury-Atlas missions that followed.

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