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On This Day In Space: June 18, 1983: Sally Ride becomes America’s 1st woman in space

On This Day In Space: June 18, 1983: Sally Ride becomes America’s 1st woman in space_648f38748d7ec.jpeg

On June 18, 1983, NASA astronaut Sally Ride became America’s first woman in space after she and four colleagues blasted off on the space shuttle Challenger for the STS-7 mission.

The astronauts spent 6 days in space deployed two communications satellites for Indonesia and Canada.

Sally Ride, America’s first woman in space, looks out the forward windows of the space shuttle Challenger in June 1983.  (Image credit: NASA)

Ride became the first woman to operate Canadarm, the shuttle’s robotic arm. She used it to deploy a Shuttle Pallet Satellite that was loaded with science experiments, and later used it again to bring the satellite back inside the shuttle. They returned to Earth on June 24.

Ride later became the first American woman to travel a second time when she launched on another Challenger mission, STS-41G, in 1984. Ride also served as president of Space.com from 1999 to 2000.

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