Alexei Leonov, First Spacewalking Astronaut, Dies in Moscow Aged 85

Soviet-era cosmonaut Alexei Leonov, who was the first man to conduct a spacewalk in 1965, died in Moscow on Friday aged 85, The Independent reported.

The Russian space agency Roscosmos said it was saddened to announce the death of “cosmonaut No 11” who was twice decorated with the country’s top honor, the Hero of the Soviet Union.

Leonov was a close friend of Yury Gagarin, the first human to go to outer space in 1961. He trained together with Gagarin and was selected to perform the first spacewalk as the Soviet Union and United States, cold war foes on Earth, were locked in a frantic race to conquer space. In 1965, Leonov made history when he left a spacecraft during the Voskhod 2 mission for a spacewalk that lasted 12 minutes and nine seconds.

“I gently pulled myself out and kicked off from the vessel,” Leonov, then a sprightly 80-year-old, said in 2015.

“(There was) an inky black, stars everywhere and the sun so bright I could barely stand it,” he added.

Tethered to the craft with a five-metre (16-foot) long cord, he gazed in wonder at Earth’s geography laid out sweepingly below him, his motherland perfectly visible.“I filmed the Earth, perfectly round, the Caucasus, Crimea, the Volga. It was beautiful,” he said.

Leonov and another cosmonaut, pilot Pavel Belyayev (codenames Almaz-1 and Almaz-2), were rocketed almost 500 kilometers (310 miles) into orbit. Back on the surface, millions followed the mission as it was beamed live on radio and television.

The mission was successful on the whole but the men’s return to Earth nearly ended in tragedy when Leonov and Belyayev crash-landed deep in the Russian woods.They completed man’s first spacewalk 10 weeks before the United States.