7 of the 12 Apollo Astronauts who walked on the Moon were Naval Aviators, as were the largest percentage of those Astronauts involved in the Apollo program itself. This was due in large part to the ocean-based recoveries of the Command Module by the Navy.
Neil Armstrong (Apollo 11) - Naval Aviator, though he was a NASA Astronaut and not an active duty Navy pilot at the time, unlike the other Astronauts who were active duty Navy when they went to the Moon.
Pete Conrad / Alan Bean (Apollo 12)
Alan Shepard / Edgar Mitchell (Apollo 14)
John W. Young (Apollo 16)
Eugene Cernan (Apollo 17)
Of this list, all but Eugene Cernan (also known as "the Last Man on the Moon") were also Test Pilots. Cernan was a Fighter Pilot.
I believe that would be pilots from the US Naval Air Station around 1913.
Flight crews call them "Lavs"- short for lavatory. Naval aviators still call them the "Head".
The name of the rocket that launched the first US moon walkers into space was Saturn V.
George H. Bush, Barry Goldwater, John McCain, Randy 'Duke" Cunningham, John Glenn, and Al Shepherd were all naval aviators.
Observations of both Air Force & Naval Air Crewmen indicated black combat boots, similar to US Ground Troop issue; often with zippers instead of laces.
Aviators are pilots and fly aircraft.
yes aviators do have swag
That is the correct spelling of "aviators" (pilots).
The Aviators flew the planes
Aviators 100%
Abilene Aviators was created in 1998.
Abilene Aviators ended in 2001.