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[i]Postcard showing the von Braun rocket team servicing a V2 rocket for launch at Peenemunde, Germany. The postcard, SP-11, was printed in 1978, New York, New York, by the Space Unit from a WW II photo of the rocket team servicing a V2 rocket for launch, provided by the Imperial War Museum, London, UK.[/i] [IMG]http://farm5.staticflickr.com/4482/37648326632_6ac042254f_o.jpg[/IMG] [i]Registered mail letter sent from L. Siwinski to Arbeitsmann Christof Siwinski of the Reichs Arbeit Dienst (RAD), August 16, 1942, at the Arbeitslager, Pennenumunde, Germany. The RAD was involved in Pennemunde rocket base construction and was an auxiliary unit of the Wehrmacht. The cover pictured above is mailed from Peenemunde and backstamped at Peenemunde, Germany on the important V2 rocket test date of August 16, 1942. This early V2 rocket test cover is from the author's V2 rocket cover collection.[/i] [IMG]http://farm5.staticflickr.com/4507/37648326562_fc0aba6b3c_o.jpg[/IMG] [i]The above handcancel on the back of the V2 rocket test cover above is cancelled August 16, 1942, Peenemunde, Germany. The date is an important V2 rocket test date because the first V2 rocket test was made at Peenemunde on June 13, 1942, and resulted in failure after the roket exploded shortly after launch. This test was the second V2 rocket test achieving an 11.7 km altitude on August 16, 1942. However, during its test, the rocket suddenly exploded crashing into the nearby Baltic Sea within view of a high ranking German military delegation witnessing the rocket test.[/i] [i]This postcard shows a V2 rocket in transit to the rocket firing site at White Sands Proving Ground, Las Cruces, New Mexico, with the Werner von Braun rocket team following the rocket transportation vehicle. In the group accompanying the V2 rocket vehicle in the far right last truck and wearing a white wide brimmed hat is V2 rocket Technical Director, Wernher von Braun, now head of the U.S. Army's V2 rocket test program in the late 1940s and early 1950s.[/i] [b]Space Cover #440: V2 rocket comes to America![/b] Technical Director of the top secret Peenemünde Rocket Facility, Wernher von Braun, had barely escaped Germany at the end of the war, May 2, 1945, near Reutte, Austria. The German Schutzstaffel, the feared SS, was looking for him, Soviet Union Military Intelligence agents were looking for him, and the United States Counter-Intelligence Corps also was scouring Germany looking for him. Von Braun, a protégé of Lieutenant General Walter Dornberger, had been instrumental in the start-up of the V2 German rocket program during the war. He believed he could jumpstart a United States' rocket program seen as vital for ending World War II in the Pacific theater. Playing for time, he had decided to turn-in himself and his team of rocket engineers and scientists to the United States military as Götterdämmerung enveloped Germany. Turning himself and his key team members in to the U.S. military, and later brought under contract to work with the U. S. Army to develop its own rocket program, von Braun and his colleagues crossed the Saar river into France to an airfield to fly to the United States. Von Braun said to his colleagues, "Well, take a good look at Germany, fellows. You may not see it for a long time to come." Puzzled by his remark, August Schulze, a systems engineer at Peenemünde's Elektromechanische Werke, said, "What do you mean? You know we only have a six-month contract with the Americans." Von Braun thought and then commented, "We may have only a six-month contract now; but I still don't think we will be back for a long time to come." Ten years later, Wernher von Braun becomes a U. S. citizen and is more involved than ever in U.S. rocket engineering for the Juno, Jupiter, and Redstone rocket programs. In 1960, von Braun becomes Director of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, to direct development of the Saturn Apollo rocket, Saturn 1B rocket, and finally, the Saturn V Moon rocket which will make John F. Kennedy's stated goal come true to land an astronaut on the Moon and return him safely to Earth, before this decade is out. This, then, begins the story of how the U.S. Saturn Apollo rocket as conceived by Wernher von Braun and a dedicated team of rocket engineers and scientists achieved an unparalleled success rate of ten out of ten major successes in completing their battery of Saturn Apollo rocket tests. The solid engineering work, test successes, and qualification of the Saturn Apollo rocket enabled NASA to see that its primary objective of landing astronauts on the Moon was indeed possible. It was also a race against time and against a valiant competitor attempting to upstage NASA with its own team of German rocket engineers and scientists making every effort to win a fierce space race for Russia to land cosmonauts on the Moon.
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