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Feb. 3, 1995, Astronaut Eileen Collins at the Pilot’s Station on Shuttle Discovery

Astronaut Eileen Collins at pilot's station onboard shuttle Discovery
In this Feb. 3, 1995, image taken onboard space shuttle Discovery on flight day one of the STS-63 mission, astronaut Eileen M. Collins — the first woman to pilot the shuttle — is at the pilot's station during a "hotfiring" procedure prior to rendezvous with the Russian Mir Space Station.

In this Feb. 3, 1995, image taken onboard space shuttle Discovery on flight day one of the STS-63 mission, astronaut Eileen M. Collins — the first woman to pilot the shuttle — is at the pilot’s station during a “hotfiring” procedure prior to rendezvous with the Russian Mir Space Station. The successful rendezvous without docking brought Discovery to within 37 feet of the Mir; these flights through the Shuttle-Mir Program prepared the way for the International Space Station. Others onboard Discovery were astronauts James D. Wetherbee, mission commander; Bernard A. Harris, Jr., payload commander; mission specialists C. Michael Foale and Janice E. Voss, and cosmonaut Vladimir G. Titov. “As we are bringing our spaceships closer together, we are bringing our nations closer together,” Wetherbee said after Discovery was at point of closest approach. “The next time we approach, we will shake your hand and together we will lead our world into the next millennium.” “We are one. We are human,” Mir Commander Alexander Viktorenko responded.

Image Credit: NASA