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Everyone remembers the dog who died early in space exploration. Almost no one remembers the Paris alley cat who came home. This is the true story of Félicette — the forgotten cat of the Space Race.
Everyone remembers Laika — the Soviet space dog who never came home.
Almost no one remembers Félicette — a Paris alley cat who rode a rocket launch into space, survived the mission, and quietly disappeared into history.
In 1963, at the height of the Cold War, a small, overlooked nation launched a different kind of spaceflight. No propaganda. No spectacle. Just disciplined space science and a stray cat chosen for her neurological precision.
This is the forgotten story of the Space Race’s most unlikely passenger — and what history chose to remember instead.
If this stayed with you, you probably know someone else who might appreciate it.
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Chapters (Timestamps)
00:00 - Spaceflight Testing
01:28 - The Animals Who Went First
02:04 - A Different Animal
03:43 - A Necessary Ending
04:12 - An Ounce
________________________________________
“The Accidentally Invented World”
A companion episode about how progress often comes from unnoticed, uncelebrated moments — and why history remembers the wrong things. https://youtu.be/cx7qyVf5g3k
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References (Plain-Text URLs + Context)
French Space Agency (CNES) — Official history of early spaceflight
https://cnes.fr
Astérix Satellite (1965) — France’s first orbital launch
https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/spacecraft/display.action?id=1965-096A
Félicette mission summary — Véronique AGI flight
https://www.space.com/15488-french-cat-space-felicette.html
Cold War animal space programs (US & USSR)
https://www.nasa.gov/centers/armstrong/news/FactSheets/FS-014-DFRC.html
By Jim Fugate5
1919 ratings
Everyone remembers the dog who died early in space exploration. Almost no one remembers the Paris alley cat who came home. This is the true story of Félicette — the forgotten cat of the Space Race.
Everyone remembers Laika — the Soviet space dog who never came home.
Almost no one remembers Félicette — a Paris alley cat who rode a rocket launch into space, survived the mission, and quietly disappeared into history.
In 1963, at the height of the Cold War, a small, overlooked nation launched a different kind of spaceflight. No propaganda. No spectacle. Just disciplined space science and a stray cat chosen for her neurological precision.
This is the forgotten story of the Space Race’s most unlikely passenger — and what history chose to remember instead.
If this stayed with you, you probably know someone else who might appreciate it.
________________________________________
Chapters (Timestamps)
00:00 - Spaceflight Testing
01:28 - The Animals Who Went First
02:04 - A Different Animal
03:43 - A Necessary Ending
04:12 - An Ounce
________________________________________
“The Accidentally Invented World”
A companion episode about how progress often comes from unnoticed, uncelebrated moments — and why history remembers the wrong things. https://youtu.be/cx7qyVf5g3k
________________________________________
References (Plain-Text URLs + Context)
French Space Agency (CNES) — Official history of early spaceflight
https://cnes.fr
Astérix Satellite (1965) — France’s first orbital launch
https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/spacecraft/display.action?id=1965-096A
Félicette mission summary — Véronique AGI flight
https://www.space.com/15488-french-cat-space-felicette.html
Cold War animal space programs (US & USSR)
https://www.nasa.gov/centers/armstrong/news/FactSheets/FS-014-DFRC.html