when it was ready.
The Apollo mission 14 launch date was January 31, 1971.
The rocket to launch Apollo 13 was the Saturn 5 rocket.
Apollo 7 launched from the Air Force Station's launch pad LC-34 (this was the only Apollo mission that did not launch from Kennedy Space Center's launch pad 39-A)
Apollo 1 was supposed to launch on February 21, 1967.
The Apollo 11 Command Module had a mass of about 12,800 kilograms (28,200 pounds) at launch.
The Apollo mission 14 launch date was January 31, 1971.
The rocket to launch Apollo 13 was the Saturn 5 rocket.
Apollo 7 launched from the Air Force Station's launch pad LC-34 (this was the only Apollo mission that did not launch from Kennedy Space Center's launch pad 39-A)
Apollo 1 was supposed to launch on February 21, 1967.
Apollo 12 was launched in December 1969.
Apollo 15 was launched in July 1971.
The Apollo 11 Command Module had a mass of about 12,800 kilograms (28,200 pounds) at launch.
I assume you're referring to the manned lunar landings. Those launch dates are as follows: Apollo 11 - July 20, 1969 Apollo 12 - November 14, 1969 Apollo 14 - January 31, 1971 Apollo 15 - July 26, 1971 Apollo 16 - April 16, 1972 Apollo 17 - December 7, 1972
Apollo 10 was launched from Cape Kennedy Florida.
Apollo 13 occurred between Apollo 12 and Apollo 14. The numbering of the Apollo missions was determined by their launch sequence, so skipping directly from Apollo 12 to Apollo 14 would have disrupted this order. Additionally, each mission had specific objectives and goals, so skipping missions would have meant missing out on valuable scientific data and progress in the Apollo program.
Alan Shepard and his crew was supposed to fly Apollo 13, but he got an ear infection close to the launch, so the crew of Apollo 14 were moved up a place allowing Alan Shepard to fly Apollo 14. The reason the whole crew switched was because they trained with each other and were put together to compliment each others skills.
Nixon