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World of Software > News > What did Neil Armstrong ‘steal’ from the moon?
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What did Neil Armstrong ‘steal’ from the moon?

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Last updated: 2026/04/02 at 6:08 AM
News Room Published 2 April 2026
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What did Neil Armstrong ‘steal’ from the moon?
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Neil Armstrong might have been the first man on the moon, but it seems that he was also pretty nifty at hiding mementos from his time in space.

Following his death in 2012, Armstrong’s wife, Carol, was going through his belongings when she found a bag full of Apollo 11 artefacts hidden inside a wardrobe.

She gave them to the Smithsonian’s Air and Space Museum, where they were later confirmed to be the real deal.

While the items were supposed to left behind on the moon, the museum gratefully received them. They are now on display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC.

For more than 40 years between the Apollo 11 mission and his death, Armstrong made no mention of the bag.

Picture taken 20 July, 1969, of astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., lunar module pilot, walking on the surface of the moon during the Apollo 11 extravehicular activity (EVA). (Photo: Nasa/AFP/Getty Images)
Neil Armstrong leads Edwin 'Buzz' Aldrin and Michael Collins out of the space centre on the Apollo 11 space mission to the moon. (Photo by Keystone/Getty Images)
Neil Armstrong leads Edwin ‘Buzz’ Aldrin and Michael Collins out of the space centre on the Apollo 11 space mission to the moon (Photo by Keystone/Getty Images)

Alan Needdell, curator of the Air and Space Museum, wrote a post about the hidden items inside the bag, which was named the McDivitt Purse and was stowed in the Lunar Module during Apollo 11.

In a post on the museum’s website, published in 2015, he wrote: ‘I received an email from Carol Armstrong that she had located in one of Neil’s closets a white cloth bag filled with assorted small items that looked like they may have come from a spacecraft.

‘She wanted to know if they were also of interest to the Museum. She provided the following photograph of the bag and the items spread out on her carpet.

‘Needless to say, for a curator of a collection of space artifacts, it is hard to imagine anything more exciting. Realizing how important it would be to determine whether any or all of these items were actually flown in the Lunar Module Eagle during the historic Apollo 11 mission, I decided to enlist the expertise of Eric Jones, Ken Glover, and the team of experts who have put together the incredible Apollo Lunar Surface Journal (ALSJ) website, an indispensable site of detailed information about all aspects of the Apollo program.’

He said he immediately recognised it as the McDivitt purse. Once they received it, he said they found nearly 20 artefacts from the mission, including helmet straps and tools, were taken aboard the Lunar Module for the landing, an extremely valuable 16mm movie camera that recorded Apollo 11’s descent to the surface of the moon, and an optical alignment sight used to assist the crew in docking manoeuvres.

February 9, 2015: Neil Armstrong might have been the first man on the moon, but it seems that he was also pretty nifty at hiding mementos from his galactic travels, after his widow discovered a bag full of Apollo 11 artefacts in a closet. Carol Armstrong donated the priceless items to the Smithsonian Museum after she found the bag following her husband?s death in 2012, and discovered that the iconic spaceman had kept mementos which were supposed to be left on the moon. This is the whole collection of tools discovered in the bag.
This is the whole collection of tools discovered in the bag (Picture: Nasa)
February 9, 2015: Neil Armstrong might have been the first man on the moon, but it seems that he was also pretty nifty at hiding mementos from his galactic travels, after his widow discovered a bag full of Apollo 11 artefacts in a closet. Carol Armstrong donated the priceless items to the Smithsonian Museum after she found the bag following her husband?s death in 2012, and discovered that the iconic spaceman had kept mementos which were supposed to be left on the moon. his camera, found in the bag, documented the landing of Apollo 11.
This camera, found in the bag, documented the landing of Apollo 11 in 1969 (Picture: Nasa)

There are even records of Armstrong talking about the purse to fellow moon-lander Buzz Aldrin.

Speaking after the pair returned to the command module, he said of the purse: ‘That [is] just a bunch of trash that we want to take back — LM parts, odds and ends’.

While the camera was the most valuable object captured in the remarkable horde, other bizarre objects include a cover for Apollo 11’s pressurised waste management system.

February 9, 2015: Neil Armstrong might have been the first man on the moon, but it seems that he was also pretty nifty at hiding mementos from his galactic travels, after his widow discovered a bag full of Apollo 11 artefacts in a closet. Carol Armstrong donated the priceless items to the Smithsonian Museum after she found the bag following her husband?s death in 2012, and discovered that the iconic spaceman had kept mementos which were supposed to be left on the moon. Utility Lights with Power Cables found in the McDivitt Purse.
Utility Lights with Power Cables were also found inside the McDivitt Purse (Picture: Nasa)

‘In the future, we hope to complete documenting and cataloging the entire collection of items and, as appropriate, to place them on public display,’ Needdell said.

‘Seeing such things with one’s own eyes helps us to appreciate that these accomplishments are not just in history books or movies, but involved real people and real things, and that they involved an extraordinary amount of detailed engineering and planning.’

Every item Neil Armstrong ‘stole’ from the moon

The whole collection of items found in Neil Armstrong’s McDivitt purse include:

1. Temporary stowage bag, the ‘purse’

2. Power cable

3. Power cable and utility light

4. Power cable and utility light

5. Utility clamp

6. Utility clamp

7. Crewman Optical Alignment Sight mirror device

8. Filter for COAS (number 7)

9. Light bulb assembly

10. Waist tether

11. Helmet straps

12. 16mm camera used to film landing and flag planting

12a. Bracket for camera

12b. 10mm lens for camera

13. Netting 

14. Lens shade

15. Eye guard assembly

16. Mirror

17. Wrench

18. Waste management cover 

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at [email protected].

For more stories like this, check our news page.

Arrow MORE: Historic Artemis II launch upstaged by ‘legendary’ kid swearing live on TV

Arrow MORE: Inside the Orion, the cosmic ‘minivan’ the Artemis II crew will spend 10 days inside

Arrow MORE: Artemis II launches Nasa astronauts to the moon for first time in 53 years

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