Buzz Aldrin’s mother’s maiden name was Moon.
Buzz Aldrin's Mother's Maiden Name Was Actually Moon
In one of history's most poetic coincidences, the second human to walk on the lunar surface was born to a woman named Moon. Buzz Aldrin's mother, Marion Gladys Moon, married Edwin Eugene Aldrin Sr., giving her the full name Marion Moon Aldrin. When her son stepped onto the Sea of Tranquility in 1969, he carried a surname that perfectly bridged Earth and its celestial companion.
Aldrin himself has acknowledged this remarkable twist of fate. "My Mother's maiden name was Marion MOON!" he tweeted years later. "I guess serving on Apollo 11 was always my destiny!"
A Tragedy Behind the Triumph
Marion Moon Aldrin never saw her son walk on the moon. She died by suicide in May 1968, just over a year before the historic Apollo 11 mission. She was 64 years old.
The circumstances were heartbreaking. After Buzz's successful Gemini 12 mission in 1966, he became an instant celebrity. The sudden fame and media attention surrounding her son reportedly unsettled Marion, who struggled with depression. Buzz and his sister later concluded that his newfound celebrity status contributed to her decision to take her life.
Aldrin carried profound guilt about his mother's death, believing his space program success had played a role in her mental health decline. Depression ran in Marion's family—her own father had also died by suicide. Buzz would later recognize he'd inherited depressive tendencies from his mother's side, a struggle that would follow him even after returning from the moon.
From Moon to Moon
The nominal destiny becomes even more striking when you consider the odds. Marion wasn't named Moon as some kind of space-age prophecy—she was born in 1903, decades before humans would seriously contemplate lunar travel. The Moon surname has English origins, sometimes given to people considered dreamy or changeable, or occasionally to those born during a full moon.
When Buzz left his bootprint on the lunar surface on July 20, 1969, he honored his mother's memory in the most literal way imaginable. A woman named Moon helped create the man who would leave humanity's mark on the Moon itself. Marion was laid to rest in Arlington National Cemetery, but her legacy reached 238,855 miles beyond Earth.
Sometimes truth writes better poetry than fiction ever could. Destiny isn't always what we choose—sometimes it's written in our names.
