Ohio’s ties to aerospace and aviation are a big point of pride for the Buckeye State. Not only was Ohio home to the Wright Brothers, but it also birthed Neil Armstrong, the first person to step foot on the Moon. An American hero, Neil Armstrong was born in a charming small town called Wapakoneta, and today, visitors can learn all about this legendary astronaut in this proud Ohio town.
On August 5, 1930, in a small, ordinary town in Ohio, a boy was born. His name? Neil Alden Armstrong.
The town? Wapakoneta, a small community nestled roughly halfway between Toledo and Dayton. Today, Wapakoneta is home to around 10,000, but in 1930? It was home to about half that many people, and while charming in a small-town kind of way, there really wasn’t anything too extraordinary about this Ohio locale.
Armstrong was born at 601 West Benton Street in Wapakoneta, Ohio, to Stephen and Viola Louise. His father was an auditor for the Ohio state government, and the family moved around the state repeatedly, living in 16 towns over the next 14 years.
What remained constant through this time, though, was Armstrong’s interest in aviation and dreams of one day flying. When he was five or six, he experienced his first airplane flight in Warren, Ohio, when he and his father took a ride in a Ford Trimotor. The family’s last move was in 1944 and took them back to Wapakoneta, where Armstrong attended Blume High School and took flying lessons at the Wapakoneta airfield. He earned his pilot’s license at age 16, even before he had a driver’s license—a testament to his singular focus on the skies.
You can still stroll past Armstrong’s boyhood home and Blume High School, the latter of which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Walking these streets, it’s easy to imagine a young Neil gazing up at the moon, never knowing he would one day leave footprints upon it.
From there, Armstrong went on to study at Purdue University and then entered the U.S. Navy as an aviator, eventually setting his sights on experimental research, test piloting, and space travel. And the rest, as they say, is history…