1850 AD - 1957
1865. Jules Verne published his novel, entitled FROM THE EARTH TO
THE MOON.
1883. Tsiolkovsky's FREE SPACE was published. In this,
Tsiolkovsky showed that a rocket would function in a vacuum due to Newton's
Action-Reaction" laws of motion.
1895. Tsiolkovsky published a book on rocketry and space exploration
which was entitled DREAMS OF THE EARTH AND THE SKY.
1901. H.G. Wells published his book, THE FIRST MEN IN THE MOON,
in which a substance with anti-gravity properties launched men to the moon.
1903. Tsiolkovsky produced a work entitled EXPLORING SPACE WITH
DEVICES. Within, he discussed the applications of liquid propellants.
1909. Robert Goddard, in his study of fuels, determined that
liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen would serve as an efficient source of
propulsion, when properly combusted.
1911. Russian Gorochof published plans for a reaction airplane
which operated on crude oil and compressed air for fuel.
1914. Goddard was granted two U.S. patents for rockets using
solid fuel, liquid fuel, multiple propellant charges, and multi-stage designs.
1918. November 6-7, Goddard fired several rocket devices for
representatives of the U.S. Signal Corps, Air Corps, Army ordinance and
other assorted guests, at the Aberdeen proving grounds.
1919. Goddard wrote, and then submitted A METHOD OF ATTAINING
EXTREME ALTITUDES, to the Smithsonian Institution for publication.
1923. Herman Oberth published DIE RAKETE ZU DEN PLANETENRAUMEN
(The Rocket into Interplanetary Space) in Germany, and cause much discussion
about the technology of rocket propulsion.
1924. Tsiolkovsky conceived the idea of multi-stage rockets,
and discussed them for the first time in COSMIC ROCKET TRAINS.
A Central Committee for the Study of Rocket Propulsion was established
in the Soviet Union, in April.
1925. THE ATTAINABILITY OF CELESTIAL BODIES, by Walter Hohmann,
described the principles involved in interplanetary flight.
1926. March 16: Robert Goddard tested the world's first successful
liquid-fueled rocket, in Auburn, Massachusetts. It attained a height
of 41 feet in 2.5 seconds, and it came to rest 184 feet from the launch
pad.
1927. Rocket enthusiasts in Germany formed the Society for Space
Travel (VfR). Hermann Oberth was among the first several members to join.
Die Rakete, a rocket publication, began in Germany.
1928. The first of nine volumes of an encyclopedia on interplanetary
travel was published by Professor Nikolai A. Rynin, in Russia
In April, the first manned, rocket-powered, automobile was tested by
Fritz von Opel, Max Valier and others, in Berlin, Germany.
In June, the first manned flight in a rocket-powered glider was
achieved. Friedrich Stamer was the pilot, and flew about one mile.
Launch was Achieved by an elastic launch rope and a 44 pound thrust
rocket, then a second rocket fired while airborne.
Hermann Oberth began acting as consultant to Fritz Lang's FRAU
IM MOND (Girl in the Moon) to build a rocket for premiere publicity.
The prototype exploded on the launch pad.
1929. Hermann Oberth published his second book about space travel,
and one chapter included the idea of an electric space ship.
On July 17, Robert Goddard launched a small 11 ft. rocket which
carried a small camera, barometer and thermometer which were recovered
after the flight.
In August, many small solid-propellant rockets were attached
to Junkers-33 sea- plane, and were used to achieve the first recorded jet-assisted
airplane take-off.
The movie FRAU IM MOND was released. It created an increased
interest in rocket technology in Germany.
1930. In April, The American Interplanetary Society was founded
in New York City by David Lasser, G. Edward Pendray, and ten others for
the purpose of promoting interest in space travel. It was later renamed
the American Rocket Society.
December 17th marked the establishment of a rocket program Kummersdorf.
It was also decided that the Kummersdorf proving grounds would be equipped
to develop military missiles.
On December 30th, Robert Goddard fired an 11 foot liquid fueled
rocket to a height of 2000 feet at a speed of 500 miles per hour.
The launch took place near Roswell New Mexico.
1931. In Austria, Friedrich Schmiedl fired the world's first
mail carrying rocket.
David Lasser's book, THE CONQUEST OF SPACE, was published in
the United States.
May 14: VfR successfully launched a liquid-fueled rocket to a
height of 60 meters.
1932. Von Braun and his colleagues demonstrated a liquid-fueled
rocket to the German Army. It crashed before the parachute opened,
but Von Braun was soon employed to develop liquid fueled rockets for the
Army.
On April 19th, the first Goddard rocket with gyroscopically controlled
vanes was fired. The vanes gave it automatically stabilized flight.
In November, at Stockton N.J., the American Interplanetary Society
tested a rocket design that they had adapted from VfR designs.
1933. The Soviets launched a new rocket fueled by solid and
liquid fuels, which reached a height of 400 meters. The launch took
place near Moscow.
At Stanten Island, New York, the American Interplanetary Society
launched it's No. 2 rocket, and watched it attain 250 feet in altitude
in 2 seconds.
1934. In December, Von Braun and his associates launched 2 A-2
rockets, both to heights of 1.5 miles.
1935. The Russians fired a liquid powered rocket that achieved
a height of over eight miles.
In March, a rocket of Robert Goddard's exceeded the speed of
sound.
In May, Goddard launched one of his gyro-controlled rockets to
a height of 7500 feet, in New Mexico.
1936. Scientists from the California Institute of Technology
began rocket testing near Pasadena, CA. This marked the beginning
of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
The Smithsonian Institution printed Robert Goddard's famous report,
"Liquid Propellant Rocket Development," in March.
1937. Von Braun and his team relocated to a special, purpose-built
rocket testing facility at Peenemunde on the Baltic Coast of Germany.
Russia established rocket test centers in Leningrad, Moscow and
Kazan.
Goddard watched one of his rockets fly to higher than 9,000 feet,
on March 27. This was the highest altitude attained by any of the Goddard
Rockets.
1938. Robert Goddard began to develop high speed fuel pumps,
in order to better outfit liquid fueled rockets.
1939. German scientists fired, and recovered, A-5 rockets with
gyroscopic controls that attained seven miles altitude and eleven miles
range.
1940. The Royal Air Force used rockets against the Luftwaffe
planes in the Battle of Britain.
1941. In July, the first U.S. based launch of a rocket assisted
airplane took place. Lt. Homer A. Boushey piloted the craft.
The U.S. Navy began developing "Mousetrap," which was a ship-based
7.2 inch mortar-fired bomb.
1942. The U.S. Air Force launched it's first air-to-air and
air-to-surface rockets.
After a failed attempt in June, Germans managed to successfully
launch an A-4 (V2) rocket, in October. It traveled 120 miles downrange
from the launch pad.
1944. January 1st marked the beginning of long-range rocket
development, by the California Institute of Technology. This testing
resulted in the Private-A and Corporal rockets.
In September, the first fully operational V2 rocket was launched
against London, from Germany. Over a thousand V2's followed.
Between the 1st and 16th of December, twenty four Private-A rockets
were test fired at Camp Irwin, CA.
1945. Germany successfully launched the A-9, a winged prototype
of the first Intercontinental Ballistic Missile, which was designed to
reach North America. It reached almost 50 miles in altitude, and
achieved a speed of 2,700 mph. The launch was executed on January
24th.
In February, the Secretary of War approved the Army's plans to
establish the White Sands Proving Grounds, for testing new rockets.
On April 1st through 13th, seventeen rounds of Private-F rockets
were fired at Hueco Ranch, Texas.
On May 5th, Peenemunde was captured by the Red army, but the
facilities there were mostly destroyed by the personnel. Von Braun
was captured by the U.S. and relocated to the White Sands proving ground
in New Mexico. He was made part of "Operation Paperclip."
May 8th marked the end of the war in Europe. At the time of the
German collapse, more than 20,000 V-1's and V-2's had been fired.
Components of approximately 100 V-2 rockets arrived at the White
Sands Testing Grounds, in August.
On August 10, Robert Goddard died due to cancer. He died
at the University of Maryland Hospital in Baltimore.
In October, the U.S. Army established it's first Guided Missile
Battalion, with the Army Guard Forces.
The Secretary Of War approved plans to bring top German rocket
engineers to the U.S., in order to further knowledge and technology.
Fifty five German scientists arrived at Fort Bliss and White
Sands Proving Grounds, in December.
1946. In January, the U.S. outer space research program was
started with captured V-2 rockets. A V-2 panel of representatives
of interested agencies was formed, and more than 60 rockets were fired
before the supply was finally exhausted.
On March 15, the first American built V-2 rocket was static-fired
at the White Sands Proving Grounds.
The first American-built rocket to leave the earth's atmosphere
(the WAC) was launched on March 22nd. It was launched from White
Sands, and attained 50 miles of altitude.
The first actual launch of an American-built V-2 took place at
White Sands in April.
The U.S. Army began a program to develop two stage rockets.
This resulted in the WAC Corporal as the 2nd stage of a V-2.
On October 24th, a V-2 with a motion picture camera was launched.
It recorded images from 65 miles above the earth, covering 40,000 square
miles.
On December 17th, the first night-flight of a V-2 occurred.
It achieved a record making 116 miles of altitude, and velocity of 3600
mph.
German rocket engineers arrived in Russia to begin work with
Soviet rocket research groups. Sergei Korolev built rockets using
technology from the V-2.
1947. The Russians began launch tests of their V2 rockets, at
Kapustin Yar.
Telemetry was successfully used for the first time in a V-2,
launched from White Sands.
On February 20th, the first of a series of rockets was launched
for the purpose of testing ejection canister effectivity.
On May 29, a modified V-2 landed 1.5 miles south of Juarez, Mexico,
narrowly missing a large ammunition dump.
The first V-2 to be launched from a ship was launched from the
deck of the U.S.S. Midway, on September 6th.
1948. On May 13th , the first two-stage rocket launched in the
Western Hemisphere was launched from the White Sands facility. It
was a V2 which had been converted to include a WAC-Corporal upper stage.
It reached a total altitude of 79 miles.
White Sands launched the first in a series of rockets that contained
live animals, on June 11. The launches were named "Albert," after
the monkey that rode in the first rocket. Albert died of suffocation
in the rocket. Several monkeys and mice were killed in the experiments.
On June 26, two rockets, a V-2 and an Aerobee were launched from
White Sands. The V-2 attained 60.3 miles, while the Aerobee attained
70 miles altitude.
1949. A number 5 two-stage rocket was launched to 244 miles
of altitude, and 5,510 mph velocity over White Sands. It set a new
record for the time-being, on February 24.
On May 11, President Truman signed a bill for a 5,000 mile test
range to extend from Cape Kennedy Florida.
The Secretary of the Army approved the relocation of the White
Sands scientists and their equipment to Huntsville, Alabama.
1950. On July 24th, the first rocket launch from Cape Kennedy
was a number 8 of the two-stage rockets. It climbed to a total of
25 miles in altitude.
A number 7 two-stage rocket was launched from Cape Kennedy.
It set the record for the fastest moving man-made object, by traveling
Mach 9.
1951. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory of California launched the
first of a series of 3,544 Loki rockets, on June 22. The program
ended 4 years later, after having fired the most rounds in ten years at
White Sands.
On August 7, a Navy Viking 7 rocket set the new altitude record
for single stage rockets by reaching 136 miles and a speed of 4,100 mph.
The launch of the 26th V-2, on October 29, concluded the
use of the German rockets in upper atmosphere testing.
1952. On July 22, the first production-line Nike rocket made
a successful flight.
1953. A missile was fired from an underground launch facility
in White Sands on June 5. The facility was constructed by the Army Corps
of Engineers.
The first launch of the Army's Redstone missile, on August 20th,
was conducted at Cape Kennedy by Redstone Arsenal Personnel.
1954. On August 17th, the first firing of a Lacrosse "Group
A" missile was conducted at the White Sands facility.
1955. The White House announced, on July 29th, that President
Eisenhower approved plans to launch unmanned satellites to circle the earth,
as participation in the International Geophysical Year. The Russians
soon made similar announcements.
On November 1st, the first guided-missile-equipped cruiser was
placed in commission at the Philadelphia Naval Yard.
On November 8th, the Secretary of Defense approved the Jupiter
and Thor Intermediate Range Ballistic Missile (IRBM) programs.
President Eisenhower placed highest priority on Intercontinental
Ballistic Missile (ICBM) and the Thor and Jupiter IRBM programs on December
1st.
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