Wemher Von (Braun Rr'eam Q'ri6ute Vnveifino Ceremony

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Wemher Von (Braun Rr'eam Q'ri6ute Vnveifino Ceremony Wemher von (Braun rr'eam q'ri6ute Vnveifino Ceremony July 3, 2010 5:00 p.m. )fpo{[o Courtyartf vs. Space ~ qu,c~t Center rrfiose wfio are fionored . .. WILHELM ANGELE HELMUT HOELZER EBERHARD REES ERICH BALL OSCAR HOLDERER KARL REILMANN OSCAR BAUSCHINGER HELMUT HORN GERHARD REISIG HERMANN BEDUERFTIG HANS HOSENTHIEN WERNER ROSINSKI RUDOLF BEICHEL HANS HUETER LUDWIG ROTH ANTON BEIER WALTER JACOBI HEINRICH ROTHE HERBERT BERGELER RICHARD JENKE WILHELM ROTHE JOSEF BOEHM HEINZKAMPMEIER ARTHUR RUDOLPH MAGNUS VON BRAUN ERICH KASCHIG FRIEDRICH VON SAURMA THEODOR BUCHHOLD ERNST KLAUSS HEINZ SCHARNOWSKI WALTER BUROSE FRITZ KRAEMER MARTIN SCHILLING WERNERDAHM HERMANN KROEGER RUDOLF SCHLIDT KONRAD DANNENBERG HUBERTKROH ALBERT SCHULER GERDDEBEEK GUSTAV KROLL HEINRICH SCHULZE KURT DEBUS WILLI KUBERG WILLIAM SCHULZE FRIEDRICH DOHM WERNER KUERS FRIEDRICH SCHWARZ GERHARD DRAWE ERNST LANGE ERNST SEILER FRIEDRICH DUERR HANS LINDENMAYR KARLSENDLER OTTO EISENHARDT KURT LINDNER WERNER SIEBER HANS FICHTNER HERMANN LUDEWIG FRIEDTJOF SPEER ALFRED FINZEL HANNES LUEHRSEN ARNOLD STEIN EDWARD FISCHEL CARL MANDEL WOLFGANG STEURER HERBERT FUHRMANN ERICH MANTEUFEL ERNST STUHLINGER ERNST GEISSLER HANSMAUS BERNHARD TESSMANN WERNER GENGELBACH HANSMILDE ADOLPH THIEL DIETERGRAU HEINZ MILLINGER GEORG VON TIES EN HAUSEN HANS GRUENE RUDOLF MINNING WERNER TILLER WALTER HAEUSSERMANN WILLIAM MRAZEK JOHANNES TSCHINKEL KARL HAGER FRITZ MUELLER JULIUS TUEBBECKE GUENTHER HAUKOHL ERICH NEUBERT ARTHUR URBANSKI ARNOHECK MAX NOWAK FRITZ VANDERSEE KARL HEIMBURG ROBERT PAETZ WERNER VOSS EMIL HELLEBRAND HANS PALAORO THEODORVOWE GERHARD HELLER KURTPATT FRITZ WEBER BRUNO HELM HANS PAUL HERMANN WEIDNER ALFRED HENNING FRITZ PAULI WALTER WIESMAN BRUNO HEUSINGER HELMUT PFAFF ALBIN WITTMANN OTTO HIRSCHLER THEODOR POPPEL HUGO WOERDEMANN OTTO HOBERG WILLIBALD PRASTHOFER ALBERT ZEILER RUDOLF HOELKER WILHELM RAITHEL HELMUT ZOIKE Wem6er von (}Jraun 'Team 'Tri6ute VnveiCing Ceremony July 3,2010 5:00p.m. Apollo Courtyard U.S. Space & Rocket Center Welcome Larry R. Capps Chief Executive Officer, U.S. Space & Rocket Center Wernher von Braun Team Tribute Project Jackie Dannenberg Redstone Arsenal and the German Rocket Team M G Genaro Dellarocco Brick Unveiling Jackie Dannenberg and MG Genaro Dellarocco Visitors are welcome to view the bricks. Following the to-minute brick viewing, the bus will depart for the Education Training Facility for the private reunion dinner. .
Recommended publications
  • Victor Or Villain? Wernher Von Braun and the Space Race
    The Social Studies (2011) 102, 59–64 Copyright C Taylor & Francis Group, LLC ISSN: 0037-7996 print / 2152-405X online DOI: 10.1080/00377996.2010.484444 Victor or Villain? Wernher von Braun and the Space Race JASON L. O’BRIEN1 and CHRISTINE E. SEARS2 1Education Department, University of Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, Alabama, USA 2History Department, University of Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, Alabama, USA Set during the Cold War and space race, this historical role-play focuses on Wernher von Braun’s involvement in and culpability for the use of slave laborers to produce V-2 rockets for Nazi Germany. Students will grapple with two central questions. Should von Braun have been allowed to emigrate to the United States given his affiliation with the Nazis and use of slave laborers? Should the U.S. government and military have put Braun in powerful positions in NASA and military programs? This activity encourages students to hone their critical thinking skills as they consider and debate a complex, multi-layered historical scenario. Students also have opportunity to articulate persuasive arguments either for or against von Braun. Each character sketch includes basic information, but additional references are included for teachers and students who want a more in depth background. Keywords: role-play, Wernher von Braun, Space Race, active learning Victor or Villain? Wernher von Braun and the Space Role-Playing as an Instructional Strategy Race By engaging in historical role-plays, students can explore In 2009, the United States celebrated the fortieth anniver- different viewpoints regarding controversial topics (Clegg sary of the Apollo 11 crew’s landing on the moon.
    [Show full text]
  • PEENEMUENDE, NATIONAL SOCIALISM, and the V-2 MISSILE, 1924-1945 Michael
    ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: ENGINEERING CONSENT: PEENEMUENDE, NATIONAL SOCIALISM, AND THE V-2 MISSILE, 1924-1945 Michael Brian Petersen, Doctor of Philosophy, 2005 Dissertation Directed By: Professor Jeffrey Herf Departmen t of History This dissertation is the story of the German scientists and engineers who developed, tested, and produced the V-2 missile, the world’s first liquid -fueled ballistic missile. It examines the social, political, and cultural roots of the prog ram in the Weimar Republic, the professional world of the Peenemünde missile base, and the results of the specialists’ decision to use concentration camp slave labor to produce the missile. Previous studies of this subject have been the domain of either of sensationalistic journalists or the unabashed admirers of the German missile pioneers. Only rarely have historians ventured into this area of inquiry, fruitfully examining the history of the German missile program from the top down while noting its admi nistrative battles and technical development. However, this work has been done at the expense of a detailed examination of the mid and lower -level employees who formed the backbone of the research and production effort. This work addresses that shortcomi ng by investigating the daily lives of these employees and the social, cultural, and political environment in which they existed. It focuses on the key questions of dedication, motivation, and criminality in the Nazi regime by asking “How did Nazi authori ties in charge of the missile program enlist the support of their employees in their effort?” “How did their work translate into political consent for the regime?” “How did these employees come to view slave labor as a viable option for completing their work?” This study is informed by traditions in European intellectual and social history while borrowing from different methods of sociology and anthropology.
    [Show full text]
  • Expelled Nazis Paid Millions in Social Security
    Expelled Nazis paid millions in Social Security By DAVID RISING, RANDY HERSCHAFT and RICHARD LARDNEROctober 19, 2014 9:17 PM OSIJEK, Croatia (AP) — Former Auschwitz guard Jakob Denzinger lived the American dream. His plastics company in the Rust Belt town of Akron, Ohio, thrived. By the late 1980s, he had acquired the trappings of success: a Cadillac DeVille and a Lincoln Town Car, a lakefront home, investments in oil and real estate. Then the Nazi hunters showed up. In 1989, as the U.S. government prepared to strip him of his citizenship, Denzinger packed a pair of suitcases and fled to Germany. Denzinger later settled in this pleasant town on the Drava River, where he lives comfortably, courtesy of U.S. taxpayers. He collects a Social Security payment of about $1,500 each month, nearly twice the take-home pay of an average Croatian worker. Denzinger, 90, is among dozens of suspected Nazi war criminals and SS guards who collected millions of dollars in Social Security payments after being forced out of the United States, an Associated Press investigation found. The payments flowed through a legal loophole that has given the U.S. Justice Department leverage to persuade Nazi suspects to leave. If they agreed to go, or simply fled before deportation, they could keep their Social Security, according to interviews and internal government records. Like Denzinger, many lied about their Nazi pasts to get into the U.S. following World War II, and eventually became American citizens. Among those who benefited: —armed SS troops who guarded the Nazi network of camps where millions of Jews perished.
    [Show full text]
  • NASA MSFC Oral History Interview Steve Johnson Interviews ‒ Apollo
    Steve Johnson Interviews – Apollo/Saturn Program NASA MSFC Oral History Interview Steve Johnson Interviews – Apollo/Saturn Program Brooks Moore Interviewed by Steve Johnson Huntsville, Alabama – Unknown, Circa 2012 Steve Johnson: I am talking now with Brooks Moore, who was at Marshall Space Flight Center from 1960 to 1981. Brooks, would you talk a little bit about your educational background? Brooks Moore: I was educated out in the country in Perry County, sixty-five miles south of Birmingham [Alabama], a little country community called Hillsboro. I often say all the education I ever needed I got at Hillsboro Junior High School. You have heard the story about all you needed you got in Kindergarten. I cannot quite say that. I finished junior high, then Perry County High School. I went in to the Army. I was on the tail end of World War II, so I did have a little setback timewise. I entered Auburn [University] in 1946. I was in Officer Training School while I was in the Navy, so I was able to finish Auburn in only a couple of years. I got a B.S. [Bachelor of Science] degree in electrical engineering. I then went over to Georgia Tech [Georgia Institute of Technology] and got a master’s degree. I finished there in March 1949. Then I started Unknown, Circa 2012 1 Steve Johnson Interviews – Apollo/Saturn Program my career at Panama City, Florida Naval Research Laboratory there before I came to Huntsville [Alabama] in 1952. Johnson: You worked for the Army when you came to Huntsville? Moore: I worked for the Army.
    [Show full text]
  • Marshall Space Flight Center
    ............__........ Marshall Space Flight Center Introduction This booklet, prepared by the Marshall Space Flight Center, is illustrative of the Center's support for the von Braun Celebration of the Arts and Sciences (VBCAS). Marshall is honored to be a participant in the celebration of this 50-year cultural and technological legacy of Dr. Wernher von Braun and the members of his famed German rocket team. The VBCAS features a year-long series of events, performances, exhibits and historical, cultural and educational programs. Special performances by internationally known artists and speakers, and commemorative events featuring an aerospace, German, or nostalgic theme will be held during this year-long celebration. More than 30 arts, technology, educational and community organizations have been working for almost three years to plan this series of events. In 1950, Dr. von Braun and approximately 100 of his team members came to Huntsville, Alabama, to begin work on what would later become America's historic space program. Dr. von Braun eventually served as the first director of the Marshall Center and led the development of the Saturn V launch vehicle that lofted three American astronauts on their journey to the moon in July 1969. music. In the 1920s, von Braun was accepted for led the piano lessons by the great composer Paul design for the most powerful rocket the world has Hindemith and had even composed some pieces of ever known and used it to launch the first humans his own by the age of 15. Von Braun also took cello to the surface of the moon in 1969.
    [Show full text]
  • FROM the CHIEF HISTORIAN BORIS CHERTOK's Rockets and People
    NASA HISTORY DIVISION Office of External Relations volume 26, number 2 second quarter 2009 FROM BORIS CHERTOK’S THE CHIEF ROCKETS AND PEOPLE HISTORIAN By Asif A. Siddiqi, visiting scholar, Space, Policy, and Society Research Group, Massachusetts Institute of Technology For those interested in the history of Russian space exploration, and more broadly in the history of space exploration during the Cold War, the mem­ oirs of Boris Chertok provide a striking and unique perspective. Chertok This is my last newsletter as the National is one of those rare actors in history who not only played a critical role Aeronautics and Space Administration in the program but has been able to convey with grace and eloquence his (NASA) Chief Historian. Having reached the experiences to the broader public. For over 40 years, Chertok worked at canonical 30 years of federal government ser- the senior-most levels of the famous “OKB-1” design bureau, which in its vice, I will be retiring shortly after the Apollo present incarnation as the Energiya Rocket-Space Corporation continues 11 40th anniversary, returning to full -time to play a leading role in the Russian human spaceflight program. research and writing. It has been an honor to Chertok began his career as an electrician in 1930 at an aviation factory serve, especially during the 50th -anniversary near Moscow. Thirty years later, he was one of the senior designers in celebrations, as historian for the world’s pre - charge of the Soviet Union’s crowning achievement as a space power: the mier agency for exploration. launch of Yuriy Gagarin, the world’s first space voyager.
    [Show full text]
  • {In Memoriam}: Arthur Rudolph, Space Pioneer
    Click here for Full Issue of EIR Volume 23, Number 4, January 19, 1996 InMemoriam Arthur Rudolph, space pioneer by Marsha Freeman On Jan. 1, the man who built the Saturn V rockets that took could raise the funds to take on the U.S. government,Rudolph Americans to the Moon, Arthur Rudolph, passed away in signed an agreement on Nov. 28, 1983 on the OSI's terms. Hamburg, Germany, at the age of 89. He had come to the On March 27, 1984, he and his wife, Martha, left for West United States with Wernher von Braun at the end of the Sec­ Germany. ond World War, and had become an American citizen in the mid-1950s, while he was working for the U.S. Army develop­ Evidence? Witnesses? ing the missiles for NATO deployment in Western Europe. Shortly after he arrived in West Germany, Arthur Ru­ With his transfer in 1961 to the Marshall Space Flight dolph formally renounced his American citizenship, as he had Center in Huntsville, Alabama, operated by the National agreed to do. The West German government sent a note to the Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Rudolph U.S. State Department protesting that it had sent a man to was given the task by von Braun of managing the largest, their country under a U.S. passport, then revoked it, and left most complex research, development, and manufacturing job Rudolph in Germany with no passport and no visa. Since he in history-the Saturn V Moon rocket. After the successful had given up his German citizenship to become an American, lunar landing of the first Apollo mission, and having received Arthur Rudolph now had no citizenship anywhere.
    [Show full text]
  • The Clean Wehrmacht: Myths About German War Crimes Then and Now
    Georgia Southern University Digital Commons@Georgia Southern University Honors Program Theses 2020 The Clean Wehrmacht: Myths about German War Crimes Then and Now Narayan J. Saviskas Jr. Georgia Southern University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/honors-theses Part of the European History Commons, Military History Commons, Political History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Saviskas, Narayan J. Jr., "The Clean Wehrmacht: Myths about German War Crimes Then and Now" (2020). University Honors Program Theses. 474. https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/honors-theses/474 This thesis (open access) is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. It has been accepted for inclusion in University Honors Program Theses by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Clean Wehrmacht: Myths about German War Crimes Then and Now An Honors Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Honors in the Department of History. By Narayan Saviskas Under the mentorship of Dr. Brian Feltman. ABSTRACT On October 1st, 1946, the Nuremberg high command trails ended. The executions and life sentences of representatives of the German military and political elite were carried out by the Allied powers. At the time, the Soviet Union posed a greater threat than the Germans tried at Nuremberg. Years later, on October 9th, 1950, former officers of the German military gathered in Himmerod Abbey. Together they wrote the Himmerod Memorandum, which laid the foundation of the German rearmament and called for the release of German soldiers (Wehrmacht) and Schutzstaffel (SS) members convicted of war crimes.
    [Show full text]
  • Wernher Von Braun - Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
    Wernher von Braun - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wernher_von_Braun From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Wernher Magnus Maximilian, Freiherr von Braun (March 23, 1912 – June 16, 1977) was a German rocket Wernher von Braun scientist, aerospace engineer, space architect, and one of the leading figures in the development of rocket technology in Nazi Germany during World War II and, subsequently, in the United States. He is credited as being the "Father of Rocket Science". In his 20s and early 30s, von Braun was the central figure in Germany's rocket development program, responsible for the design and realization of the V-2 combat rocket during World War II. After the war, he and some select members of his rocket team were taken to the United States as part of the then-secret Operation Paperclip. Von Braun worked on the United States Army intermediate range ballistic missile (IRBM) program before his group was assimilated by NASA. Under NASA, he served as director of the newly formed Marshall Space Flight Center and as the chief architect of the Saturn V launch vehicle, the superbooster that propelled the Apollo spacecraft to the Moon.[1] According to one NASA Von Braun at his desk at Marshall Space Flight source, he is "without doubt, the greatest rocket scientist in Center in May 1964, with models of the Saturn history".[2] His crowning achievement was to lead the rocket family development of the Saturn V booster rocket that helped land Born Wernher Magnus Maximilian, [3] the first men on the Moon in July 1969.
    [Show full text]
  • The Pioneering Legacy and Consequence of Wernher Von Braun
    Student Publications Student Scholarship Fall 2019 The Pioneering Legacy and Consequence of Wernher von Braun Ethan S. Wilt Gettysburg College Follow this and additional works at: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship Part of the Aviation and Space Education Commons, and the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine Commons Share feedback about the accessibility of this item. Recommended Citation Wilt, Ethan S., "The Pioneering Legacy and Consequence of Wernher von Braun" (2019). Student Publications. 751. https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship/751 This is the author's version of the work. This publication appears in Gettysburg College's institutional repository by permission of the copyright owner for personal use, not for redistribution. Cupola permanent link: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship/751 This open access student research paper is brought to you by The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College. It has been accepted for inclusion by an authorized administrator of The Cupola. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Pioneering Legacy and Consequence of Wernher von Braun Abstract The fundamental research question of this paper revolves around the idea of; would it have been possible for the United States to land on the Moon by the close of the decade if it hadn’t been for the effort, influence, and work of ernherW von Braun? The secondary question of the paper is what significant accomplishments and work did von Braun contribute to the United States space flight program that consequently led to the success in 1969? Through the effort, work, and influence of ernherW von Braun, it was possible for the United States to land on the Moon in 1969.
    [Show full text]
  • The Representation of International States, Societies, And
    THE REPRESENTATION OF INTERNATIONAL STATES, SOCIETIES, AND CULTURES IN TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY SPACE-THEMED EXHIBITS: AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL INQUIRY INTO MUSEUMS IN CALIFORNIA, OREGON, WASHINGTON, AND BRITISH COLUMBIA ____________ A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of California State University, Chico ____________ In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Arts in Anthropology Museum Studies Option ____________ by © William Robert Townsend 2017 Fall 2017 THE REPRESENTATION OF INTERNATIONAL STATES, SOCIETIES, AND CULTURES IN TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY SPACE-THEMED EXHIBITS: AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL INQUIRY INTO MUSEUMS IN CALIFORNIA, OREGON, WASHINGTON, AND BRITISH COLUMBIA A Thesis by William Robert Townsend Fall 2017 APPROVED BY THE INTERIM DEAN OF GRADUATE STUDIES: Sharon Barrios, Ph.D. APPROVED BY THE GRADUATE ADVISORY COMMITTEE: Georgia Fox, Ph.D. Georgia Fox, Ph.D., Chair Graduate Coordinator David Eaton, Ph.D. PUBLICATION RIGHTS No portion of this thesis may be reprinted or reproduced in any manner unacceptable to the usual copyright restrictions without the written permission of the author. iii DEDICATION I dedicate this thesis in memory of my grandmother, Elizabeth Ann Gerisch, for having taken me to Italy and, in doing so, inspiring my interest in cultural history. Grazie, nonna. iv ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Foremost, I would like to thank my wonderful wife, Yaneli Torres Townsend, who has been by my side through the excitement, stress, and countless sleepless study- nights of both undergraduate and graduate school. Forever and always. I would also like to thank my amazing mom, Mary Ann Townsend, for always believing in me and for encouraging me to aim a little higher. As for my dad, Edward Townsend, thank you for taking me adventuring under the stars during our camping trips when I was young—our walks and philosophical conversations inspired my awe of the cosmos, and this thesis is undoubtedly an extension of that wonderment.
    [Show full text]
  • Henry Kolm by Brandon Bies and Sam Swersky May 7 & 8, 2007
    Fort Hunt Oral History P.O. Box 1142 Interview with Henry Kolm by Brandon Bies and Sam Swersky May 7 & 8, 2007 HENRY KOLM: -- [unintelligible] I knew about. [laughter] BRANDON BIES: We good? All right. I’m just going to give a brief introduction, and we’ll go ahead and get started since the cameras are rolling. This is part of the Fort Hunt Oral History Project. We’re here at the home of Dr. Henry Kolm, just outside of Boston, Massachusetts. Today is May 7, 2007. This is National Park Service historian Brandon Bies, as well as Fort Hunt Oral History Project team member Sam Swersky. With that, we’re going to go ahead and get started. So as we were just discussing, if you don’t mind just starting off with a little bit of background about your family in Austria, your parents, if you had any siblings. HK: I was born in Austria in 1924 near Vienna. I had one younger brother named Eric. My father was a physician and a teacher [01:00] at the Boston Medical School. He worked for the man who invented endocrinology, the science of the endocrine gland, and precursor for everything we know now about the glandular systems. We lived in Vienna until a year or so after the annexation, invasion, we call it, or after the annexation. My father wisely decided his life wasn’t worth all the property. He left everything instead of -- he signed away all his property to the Nazis [01:45], is essentially what it amounted to, and he left for Czechoslovakia, which was then Moravia, part of Austria, trying to persuade our relatives to leave also.
    [Show full text]