Answer:
Neil Armstrong
Neil Armstrong stepped into history on July 20, 1969, leaving the first human footprint on the surface of the moon.
"That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind," Armstrong is famously quoted as saying after walking on the moon, but in interviews he claimed that he meant to say "one small step for a man."
Armstrong died in 2012 at age 82 following complications resulting from cardiovascular procedures.
At left: Armstrong sits inside the lunar module after his historic walk on the surface of the moon.
Buzz Aldrin
Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin stands on the moon next to the lunar module "Eagle" on July 20, 1969.
Neil Armstrong can be seen taking the picture in the reflection on the helmet.
Apollo 11 from launch to lunar landing: Photos from the first journey to the moon
A young Buzz Aldrin poses in a NASA photograph at left. At right, Aldrin speaks in London in 2016.
Aldrin, now 89, was medically evacuated from the South Pole in December 2016 after suffering symptoms of altitude sickness, but quickly recovered
Alan Bean and Charles Conrad
Apollo 12 Astronaut Alan L. Bean holds a container filled with lunar soil during a moonwalk with Charles Conrad, Jr., in November 1969.
Conrad, who took this picture, is reflected in Bean's helmet visor.
Charles "Pete" Conrad, the third man to walk on the moon, poses at left in 1965 before his first space flight aboard Gemini 5.
Conrad died after a motorcycle accident in Ojai, California, in 1999. He was 69.
Apollo 12 lunar module pilot Alan Bean poses in 1969 at right.
Bean resigned from NASA in June 1981 to devote his time to painting. He died on May 26, 2018, at the age of 86, after suddenly falling ill while travelling.
Alan Bean
Alan Bean sits by two of his paintings at an exhibition of his artwork at the National Air and Space Museum to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the first Apollo moon landing in 2009.
Related: Alan Bean, the fourth astronaut to walk on the moon, dead at 86
Edgar Mitchell, left, conducts a seismic experiment during the first Apollo 14 moonwalk with Alan Shepard on Feb. 5, 1971.
The photograph was captured by an automatic camera mounted on a vehicle the mission used to haul equipment.
— NASA
Mitchell died at 85, in Florida, in early 2016. After NASA, Mitchell devoted his life to exploring the mind, physics and unexplained phenomena such as psychics and aliens.
Shepard died in 1988. Before walking on the moon, Shepard became the first American in space with a suborbital flight in 1961.
James Irwin, lunar module pilot, gives a military salute to David Scott, taking the picture, while standing beside the U.S. flag during the Apollo 15 mission on Aug. 1, 1971.
The lunar module Falcon stands at center. Hadley Delta in the background rises approximately some 13,000 feet above the plain.
Irwin resigned from NASA and the Air Force in July 1972 to form a religious organization, High Flight Foundation, in Colorado Springs. He died in 1991.
A personal watch that Scott wore while walking on the moon sold for a whopping $1.625 million at auction in 2015. He is only one of three astronauts who have flown both earth orbital and lunar Apollo missions. He is 87.
John Young captured the image as Duke stood at the rim of Plum crater.
From left, Thomas Mattingly II, John Young, and Charles Duke. Mattingly remained in orbit while Young and Duke landed on the moon.
At 36, Duke was the youngest man to walk on the moon. He retired from
NASA in 1975 to enter private business. He is 83.
Image: John Young
John Young was the only agency astronaut to go into space as part of the Gemini, Apollo and space shuttle programs, and the first to fly into space six times. He was the ninth man to walk on the moon.
Young was the commander for the space shuttle fleet's inaugural flight in 1981. He died Jan. 5, 2018, at his home in Houston following complications from pneumonia. He was 87.
Left: Young poses in a portrait for the Apollo 10 mission, where he was the command module pilot.
Right: Young, Apollo 16 commander, collects samples at the North Ray Crater geological site on April 23, 1972.
Related: John Young, legendary NASA astronaut who twice walked on moon, dies at 87
Schmitt was the first person initially trained as a scientist to walk on the moon. Originally a geologist, he was selected by NASA in June 1965 along with a group of other scientist-astronauts – the first group not to be test pilots. He is 84.
— Ronald Evans / NASA
Cernan, the last man on the moon, traced his only child's initials in the dust
before climbing the ladder of the lunar module the last time. He died on Jan. 16, 2017, in Texas.
Related: Gene Cernan, Last Astronaut on the Moon, Dies at 82
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