The Earth is the cradle of Humanity... but one cannot live in the cradle forever.
On the 20th of June 1944, Nazi Germany launched the first man-made object into outer space... a modified A-4 rocket (later rechristened the V-2 in September of that year), serial number MW-18014. Launched vertically as part of a test series to determine the behavior of rockets in vacuum conditions, the modified A-4 reached an apogee of 176 kilometers (109 miles); well above the Karman line that marks the official boundary of outer space.
Less than a year later, Hitler was dead and Nazi Germany had been defeated and occupied by the Western Allies and the Soviets. One of the first priorities of the victors was to arrest the German rocket scientists and dragoon them into Allied or Soviet service. As the Cold War started heating up, the West and the Soviets both started work on rocket projects, each intending to create a ballistic missile force capable of carrying nuclear warheads.
The emphasis was on developing a rocket that could carry a nuclear payload to destroy enemy cities. Except for a few visionaries like Werner von Braun (himself a Nazi party member), manned space-flight was still far from everyone's thoughts...
... until 1947, when a series of strange events in New Mexico USA, changed the game completely.
Our story opens in January of 1948.
On the 20th of June 1944, Nazi Germany launched the first man-made object into outer space... a modified A-4 rocket (later rechristened the V-2 in September of that year), serial number MW-18014. Launched vertically as part of a test series to determine the behavior of rockets in vacuum conditions, the modified A-4 reached an apogee of 176 kilometers (109 miles); well above the Karman line that marks the official boundary of outer space.
Less than a year later, Hitler was dead and Nazi Germany had been defeated and occupied by the Western Allies and the Soviets. One of the first priorities of the victors was to arrest the German rocket scientists and dragoon them into Allied or Soviet service. As the Cold War started heating up, the West and the Soviets both started work on rocket projects, each intending to create a ballistic missile force capable of carrying nuclear warheads.
The emphasis was on developing a rocket that could carry a nuclear payload to destroy enemy cities. Except for a few visionaries like Werner von Braun (himself a Nazi party member), manned space-flight was still far from everyone's thoughts...
... until 1947, when a series of strange events in New Mexico USA, changed the game completely.
Our story opens in January of 1948.
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