Photo: NASA

NASA astronaut Walter Cunningham, Apollo 7 lunar module pilot, is photographed during the Apollo 7 mission. Credits: NASA

The last survivingNASAastronaut from the 1968’s Apollo 7 mission, Walter Cunningham, has died. He was 90.

Cunninghamdied early Tuesday morningin Houston, NASA confirmed.

“NASA will always remember his contributions to our nation’s space program and sends our condolences to the Cunningham family,” the space agency’s administrator Bill Nelson said in a statement announcing the news.

Cunningham’s family also honored the late astronaut following his death, expressing their “immense pride in the life that he lived, and our deep gratitude for the man that he was – a patriot, an explorer, pilot, astronaut, husband, brother, and father.

“The world has lost another true hero, and we will miss him dearly.”

Apollo 7 astronauts, (L-R) Walter Cunningham, Donn Eisele, and Walter Schirra.Al Fenn/Getty

Apollo 7 astronauts, (L-R) Walter Cunningham, Donn Eisele, and Walter Schirra, at Cape Kennedy. (Photo by Al Fenn/Getty Images)

One of three astronauts aboard the first successful crewed space mission, Cunningham first joined NASA in 1963. Cunningham enlisted in the program as a then civilian alongside US Navy Captain Walter M. Schirra, Jr. and a US air force major, Donn F. Eisele. The famed Apollo 7 mission which lasted around 11 days later paved the way to land humans on the moon for the first time.

Born on March 16, 1932, in Creston, Iowa, Cunningham completed his high school education at Venice High School, in California. He later graduated from the University of California with a Bachelor of Arts with honors in physics in 1960 and a Master of Arts with distinction in physics in 1961. A few years later in 1974, he received a doctorate in physics with the exception of a thesis in the Advanced Management Program at the Harvard Graduate School of Business.

David Becker/Getty

LAS VEGAS - JANUARY 08: Retired astronaut Walt Cunningham arrives at the Canon U.S.A. and National Center for Missing & Exploited Children’s 11th Annual Canon U.S.A Customer Appreciation Red Carpet Reception at the Bellagio on January 8, 2010 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by David Becker/Getty Images)

Cunningham and the other members of the Apollo 7 mission won a special Emmy award for their daily reports from space. He retired from NASA in 1971 and went on to serve different roles in the private sector including as an executive, consultant entrepreneur, and radio talk show host.

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In an interview with NASA’s Oral History Office in 1999, Cunningham discussedhis inspirations for his career path.

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“I’m one of those people that never really looked back. I only recall that when someone asked me after I became an astronaut,” Cunningham said at the time.

“All I remember is just kind of keeping my nose to the grindstone and wanting to do the best I could as — I didn’t realize at the time, but that was because I always wanted to be better prepared for the next step. I’ve always been looking to the future. I don’t live in the past.”

source: people.com