Apollo 11 Launched
From the time of its launch on July 16, 1969, until the return splashdown on July 24, almost every major aspect of the flight of Apollo 11 was witnessed via television by hundreds of millions of people in nearly every part of the globe. The pulse of humanity rose with the giant, 111-metre- (363-foot-) high, 3,038,500-kg (6,698,700-pound) Saturn V launch vehicle as it made its flawless flight from Pad 39A at Cape Kennedy (now Cape Canaveral), Florida.
@FireMonkey
Glad you asked. I am now educated on the renaming myself.
You may have already found the answer. It is a bit storied, depending on the source you find. Here is a good source.
https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/why-and-when-was-cape-canaveral-s-name-changed.html
I remember it like it was yesterday
I was 11 and all I could dream of was becoming an astronaut
Growing up watching the space program develop as my science teacher father made sure every question was explained to me in ways that would spark more questions to explore…astronaut seemed the best possible future
Little did I realize just how far the world would knock an 11 year old’s dreams off track.
I ended up a firefighter
@AndersonArtwork Just as, if or more a brave man's choice of career..
Thank you for the kind words. My eyesight stopped me from the astronaut dream. LASIK eye surgery came along too late for me to walk the path all the way through. But the fire department let me save lives and do something worthy with my life. All in all, a fair trade
@thereg001
& no conspiracy theorist will ever convince me it didn't! Why? Because Walter Cronkite told me so, that's why!
@thereg001
When did they change it back from Cape Kennedy to Cape Canaveral?