Space Mountain at 50: Five nods to NASA from the Walt Disney World ride

“We astronauts are here today to salute all those who made our trip into space possible. They have permitted us to see the Earth as a precious blue jewel in the blackness of space. Now all of us may enjoy this sense of wonder because of Walt Disney.”

With those words 50 years ago today (Jan. 15), Apollo 15 moonwalker Jim Irwin opened Space Mountain at Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom in Florida. Later to be reproduced at other Disney theme parks, this was the original — the first roller coaster intended to give the public the same feeling that only astronauts had experienced up until then.

“Blast off on a rip-roaring rocket into the furthest reaches of outer space on this roller-coaster ride in the dark,” reads the current description of Space Mountain on the Walt Disney World Resort website.

Apollo 15 astronaut Jim Irwin talks to reporters backdropped by the People Mover attraction at Walt Disney World's Tomorrowland in Florida.

Apollo 15 moonwalker Jim Irwin, seen here giving an interview with the People Mover in the background, was the first passenger to ride Space Mountain on Jan. 15, 1975. (Image credit: J.L. PIckering Collection via collectSPACE.com)

In 1975, however, the very idea for such a ride preceded the existence of the technology needed to build it. First proposed by Disney and sketched out by Imagineer John Hench in 1964, construction on Space Mountain did not begin until Dec. 15, 1972, just as the last Apollo astronauts to walk on the moon were on their way back to Earth. It was also six years after the death of Walt Disney.

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