Cheers erupted in the main plaza of Space Center Houston as NASA launched its first crewed mission to the moon in more than 50 years. The Wednesday evening liftoff of Artemis II, from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, was followed by several minutes of silence as the audience in Texas took in the historic moment.
Hundreds packed into Space Center Houston — located close to Mission Control at NASA’s Johnson Space Center, which will manage the 10-day mission — to watch the spacecraft take off. They cheered loudly, waving American flags and keeping their eyes fixed on the massive projector screen streaming NASA’s live coverage.
At liftoff, a wave of emotion swept through the watch party. Some attendees wiped tears from their eyes and most recorded the moment on their cellphones.
The mission had already been delayed twice this year and many in the audience, like 11-year-old Nicolas Gifford, said they have been eagerly awaiting the moment.
Gifford has had the Artemis II launch on his mind for months.
“I’m really obsessed,” he said. “My dream is to go to space when I’m older [and] to be the first person on Mars.”
His family bought tickets to the watch party months ago and even traveled to Cape Canaveral, Florida, in March, hoping to see the launch in person. When the mission was postponed until April, they came home to Houston disappointed.
Gifford arrived at the space center on Wednesday with his younger brother Eli and his grandmother Mary Alice Gifford feeling cautiously optimistic.
“Fingers crossed,” Mary Alice said ahead of the liftoff. She worried about the launch being scheduled on April 1.
“We thought, ‘April Fool’s Day, really?'” she said.
Still, she pulled Nicolas and Eli out of school early and made the nearly hourlong drive to Clear Lake.











