Miss Baker and Big George were two spider monkeys who had a lasting pair bind and made history in long careers in service to the United States NASA space program.
Big George's tombstone stands next to the monument honoring Miss Baker at the main entrance to US Space and Rocket Center.
The stone reads as follows:
"BIG GEORGE
Husband of Miss Baker
Died Jan. 8 1979 age 16"
From Atlas Obscura: (
visit link)
"The Grave of Miss Baker
Bananas are often left for the first monkey America ever recovered alive after being launched into space.
America began tossing monkeys at the stars in 1948, but it was not until the launch of the loving squirrel monkey known as “Miss Baker” in 1959 that they were able to recover one alive.
The American space program had previously succeeded in recovering fruit flies after sub-orbital space flight, but the higher primates quickly became a problem. While Russia was throwing dogs into space and catching them alive on the way down for years, America just kept losing their little test subjects, be it to exploding rockets, the violence of return impact, or simply losing their capsules at sea.
Assumedly buying in bulk at this point, the program purchased Miss Baker along with dozens of other monkeys from a Miami pet shop. She quickly stood out from the pack of other test animals as she withstood confinement, electrodes, and other rigors. In the end she and a larger rhesus monkey known as “Miss Able” were selected to be fired into space in the name of progress.
The monkeys were fitted with adorable little caps and jackets to wear into space and crammed into less than adorable metal monitoring capsules which kept them from moving around too much and was covered in monitoring equipment for the electrodes that were surgically placed in the animals. Then in the wee hours of May 28, 1959, the duo were placed into a Jupiter rocket and shot 300 miles into the sky. The flight only lasted 16 minutes, over half of which consisted of weightlessness, and the rocket landed safely, for the first time, in the Atlantic Ocean.
Both of the heroic monkeys were pulled from the capsule alive, but unfortunately Miss Able died four days later from too much anesthesia while surgeons attempted to remove her electrodes**. Both animals were featured on the cover of Life magazine, but with Able out of the way, Baker’s star was free to rise. Hundreds of letters poured in from admirers and she was given a cushy life during which she was married to not one, but two other monkeys.
Miss Baker lived at the Naval Aerospace Medical Center in Pensacola, Florida until 1971. In 1962, Pensacola caretakers held a marriage ceremony to wed Miss Baker to Big George, who predeceased Miss Baker on January 8, 1979. Three months later, Miss Baker was wed to Norman, in a ceremony presided over by Alabama District Court judge Dan McCoy. She refused, however, to wear white, pulling off her wedding train moments after it was put on her.
Miss Baker tragically passed away of kidney failure in 1984 at the age of 27, earning her the secondary honor of being the longest lived squirrel monkey on record.
She was buried in a grave outside of the U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Alabama and given a proper headstone next to her first husband, Big George. The grave is located right near the entrance of the main building. You’ll see the headstone just to the right of the walkway near a grove of trees. Admirers and fans of the little astronaut still come by and leave bananas on her headstone.
**Incidentally, the body of Miss Able is on display (in her flight capsule) at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum."