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Spacecraft launched in 1969

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Apollo 12
second crewed Moon landing
Apollo 10
fourth crewed flight of the United States Apollo program
Apollo 9
third crewed flight of the United States Apollo program
Venera 5
Soviet Venus space probe
Luna 15
space probe
Venera 6
Soviet Venus space probe
Soyuz 5
spaceship
Soyuz 4
crewed flight of the Soyuz programme
Soyuz 7
crewed flight of the Soyuz programme
Soyuz 8
crewed flight of the Soyuz programme
Soyuz 6
Soviet crewed space mission
Mariner 6 and 7
uncrewed probes sent by NASA as part of Mariner program in 1969
Azur
first German scientific satellite
Kosmos 300
failed Soviet lunar sample-return mission (1969)
Zond 7
1969 Soviet test spaceflight to the Moon
Kosmos 305
failed Soviet lunar sample-return mission
Mars 1969A
Soviet Mars probe
Mars 2M No.522
Soviet spacecraft
Eagle
lunar module used during Apollo 11; first crewed spacecraft on the Moon
Luna E-8 No.201
USSR-era Soviet spacecraft
Columbia
Apollo command module used during Apollo 11
Kosmos 314
Soviet satellite
Kosmos 283
Soviet satellite
Kosmos 303
Soviet satellite
Luna E-8-5 No.402
lunar spacecraft which was destroyed in a launch accident
Kosmos 285
Soviet satellite
Kosmos 277
Soviet satellite
Kosmos 295
Soviet satellite
Kosmos 265
Soviet satellite
Kosmos 311
Soviet satellite
Kosmos 268
Soviet satellite
Kosmos 307
Soviet radar calibration target satellite
Kosmos 275
satellite
Kosmos 308
satellite
Explorer 41
NASA satellite of the Explorer program
International Satellite for Ionospheric Studies
satellites studying Earth's inosphere
Applications Technology Satellite 5
ATS-5 (Applications Technology Satellite-5) also known as ATS-E was a communications satellite launched into geosynchronous orbit on August 12, 1969. Built by Hughes Aircraft and launched by NASA, it was the final Hughes/NASA joint mission in the Applications Technology Satellites program.
TacSat-1
TACOMSAT (also known as TACSAT 1, OPS 0757, or Tactical Communications Satellite) was a communications satellite designed and built by Hughes Aircraft Corporation under the direction of the United States Air Force Space and Missile Systems Organization (SAMSO). TACOMSAT was used by the United States Department of Defense to explore the feasibility of geostationary satellite communications between ground stations comprising fixed bases, military field units, aircraft, and ships.
Meteor-1 1
satellite
Kosmos 291
Soviet anti-satellite weapon target satellite