I saw this on wikipedia
On 23 November 2015, after reaching 100.5 km (62.4 mi) altitude (outer space), the suborbital New Shepard booster successfully performed a powered vertical soft landing, the first time a suborbital booster rocket had returned from space to make a successful vertical landing
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Shepard
This was the first such successful rocket vertical landing on Earth after travelling higher than 3,140 m (10,300 ft) that the McDonnell Douglas DC-XA achieved in the 1990s, and first after sending something into space. Jeff Bezos was quoted as saying that Blue Origin planned to use the same architecture of New Shepard for the booster stage of their orbital vehicle.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Shepard#First_vertical_soft_landing
Didn't the Falcon 9 first stage also softly land from that height after putting something into space? Why do they say that New Shepard is the first one to do so?