Photokhronika TASS
22.9 x 15.2 cm
On June 24, 1963, in the marble heart of the Kremlin, a monumental moment in human history unfolded. Just days earlier, two Soviet cosmonauts had reshaped humanity’s dreams of space. Valentina Tereshkova — the first woman to break the ultimate frontier — had completed her spectacular Vostok 6 mission, orbiting Earth 48 times. Her colleague, Valery Bykovsky, pilot of Vostok 5, had set a record for the longest solo spaceflight at that time. Together, their missions captivated the world — two spacecraft circling the Earth simultaneously for the very first time.
Now, back on Soviet soil, they stood before the most powerful man in the USSR — Secretary General Leonid Brezhnev — as he awarded them the Gold Star of the Hero of the Soviet Union, the highest honor of the nation. Photographers from the elite Soviet photo agency Fotokhronika TASS pressed in to document the triumph. In this captured frame, one can almost feel the weight of history: pride, global rivalry, and the ideological stakes of the Cold War rushing through the air like electricity.
This original silver-gelatin press photograph — stamped “FOTOKHRONIKA TASS – MOSCOW, USSR” on the verso — bears period editorial markings and a vintage newsprint write-up describing the extraordinary rise of Tereshkova, a textile worker turned cosmonaut turned world icon. Each mark echoes the journey of the image through newsrooms and international wire desks, as the story of the “First Woman in Space” rocketed across continents.
A rare archival artifact from the earliest years of human spaceflight — when the race to the stars was not at all guaranteed — and the cosmos still felt impossibly new.
Original Press Photograph — Not a reproduction.
Captured: June 24, 1963 — Moscow, USSR
Subjects: Leonid Brezhnev, Valentina Tereshkova, Valery Bykovsky
Photographic Agency: Fotokhronika TASS
Provenance
Photokhronika Tass, Moscow USSR.Past in Present.com Inc private historical archive.
