The Apollo 11 mission was launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the lunar surface on July 20 with a three-man crew. Neil Armstrong was the mission commander and was the first man to set foot on the moon. Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin was the lunar module pilot and the second man on the surface. Michael Collins was the command module pilot and did not get to walk on the moon.
The Apollo 12 mission launched on November 14, 1969, with a three-man crew and reached the moon's surface five days later. Mission commander Charles Conrad Jr. was the third man to walk on the moon. Alan L. Bean was the lunar module pilot and the fourth man on the moon's surface. Command module pilot Richard F. Gordon did not get to walk on the moon.
Apollo 14 and its three-man crew launched on January 31, 1971, reaching the moon's surface on February 5. The mission commander was Alan B. Shepherd, who became the fifth man to walk on the moon. The sixth man was Edgar D. Mitchell, the lunar module pilot. Stuart A. Roosa did not leave the command module.
Apollo 15 launched on July 26, 1971, reaching the lunar surface on July 30 with its three-man crew. David R. Scott became the seventh man on the lunar surface as mission commander. Lunar module pilot James B. Irwin was the eighth man to walk on the moon. Alfred M. Worden was the command module pilot and did not walk on the moon.
Apollo 16 launched on April 16, 1972, and landed on the moon on April 20 with a three-man crew. Mission commander John W. Young became the ninth man to walk on the moon. Charles M. Duke, lunar module pilot, was the 10th man to walk on the surface. Thomas K. Mattingly remained in the command module.
Apollo 17, the final manned mission to the moon launched, on December 7, 1972, and landed on the moon on December 11. Eugene A. Cernan, as mission commander, was the 11th man on the moon. As of April 2011, lunar module pilot Harrison H. Schmitt was the 12th and last man to walk on the lunar surface. Robert B. Evans remained in the command module.