Browse Items (15 total)
Sort by:
-
"NASA'S SA-5 undergoing pre-lounch check-out."
Back: NASA'S SA-5 undergoing pre-launch check-out. The Saturn is the free-world's largest space booster. It develops a million and a half pounds thrust. The NASA Marshall Space Flight Center at Huntsville. Alabama, has been developing and providing rockets for our space achievements since the very beginning of our entry into this field. -
Centaur II undergoes pre-launch tests
Back: Centaur II, our first space vehicle to use liquid hydrogen as a propellent, undergoes pre-launch tests.
The NASA Marshall Space Flight Center at Huntsville, Alabama, has been developing and providing rockets for our space achievements since the very beginning of our entry into this field. -
Dr. Wernher von Braun
Back: Dr. Wernher von Braun, director of the NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center, is shown with rocket models and hardware at the Huntsville, Alabama space installation. -
Enterprise Being Unloaded from 747 Carrier
Back: Enterprise being unloaded from 747 Carrier. -
Enterprise Passing a Saturn 1B
Back: The Old and the New, Enterprise passing a Saturn 1B. -
Enterprise's Home for 1978
Back: Enterprise's home for 1978. -
First Flight Configuration of the Saturn C-1
Back: The first flight configuration of the giant Saturn C-1 rocket is seen at the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, N.A.S.A. Huntsville, Ala. The C-1 will be capable of placing about 10 tons into low earth orbit. -
Gemini - Titan I Lifting Off Launching Pad
Back: Gemini-Titan 1 lifting off launching pad on its maiden voyage, testing spacecraft and vehicle. The Gemini is the first of NASA's two-man spacecrafts. The NASA Marshall Space Flight Center at Huntsville, Alabama, has been developing and providing rockets for our space achievements since the very beginning of our entry into this field. -
George C. Marshall Space Flight Center
Back: The George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), Huntsville, Alabama
Saturn rocket booster barge at dock on Tennessee River. Barge is used to carry boosters from MSFC at Redstone Arsenal, Ala., to NASA - Kennedy Space Center, Fla., for launch. -
Mercury Redstone
Front: Mercury Redstone
Back: National Aeronautics and Space Administration's "Mercury-Redstone" being readied for launch at the Cape Kennedy launch site. The rocket was provided by the NASA George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama.