Neil Armstrong

Neil Armstrong was an American twentieth-century test pilot and Earth-based NASA astronaut.

On July 20, 1969, he commanded the Apollo 11 lunar mission and became the first Human to set foot on Earth's moon.

In 2143, Jonathan Archer commented that no one knew what Buzz Aldrin said when he set foot on the moon, because Armstrong did so first. 

After learning from T'Pol that the Vulcan First Contact with Humans took place in Carbon Creek, Pennsylvania, in 1957, the astonished Charles Tucker noted that she just rewrote Earth's history books. He further stated that it was "like finding out Neil Armstrong wasn't the first man to walk on the moon," to which T'Pol implied that maybe he wasn't.

Prior to performing the warp 10 flight, Kathryn Janeway told Tom Paris he would be joining such an elite group of pilots including Orville Wright, Zefram Cochrane, and Neil Armstrong. 

Lake Armstrong and the Federation starship USS Armstrong (24th century) were both named for Neil Armstrong. 

In 2376, Commander Chakotay remarked that Armstrong, along with fellow astronauts John Kelly, Rose Kumagawa, and John Glenn were Earth's true space pioneers.