The Telegram (St. John's)

Georg von Tiesenhaus­en was space pioneer

- HUNTSVILLE, ALA.

Georg von Tiesenhaus­en, the last of the German rocket team that launched the U.S. space program, has died at his Alabama home. He was 104.

U.S. Space & Rocket Center spokeswoma­n Pat Ammons confirmed to The Associated Press on Tuesday that von Tiesenhaus­en died Sunday.

Von Tiesenhaus­en started his career in 1943 at the German Rocket Center in Peenemeund­e, Germany, where he held the position of section chief. It was there that his career in rocket developmen­t began.

The famed scientist worked alongside Wernher von Braun during the Second World War in Germany.

Several years after the war, von Tiesenhaus­en joined von Braun in Huntsville, Alabama. While there, von Tiesenhaus­en proved instrument­al in forming the backbone of the U.S. space program, ultimately aiding in the launch of the first U.S. satellite and the first U.S. astronauts.

While at the Marshall Space Flight Center, von Tiesenhaus­en designed and created the famous lunar rover that accompanie­d the last three Apollo missions in 1971 and 1972.

Von Tiesenhaus­en developed the reputation as Marshall’s resident dreamer, working tirelessly to achieve his goal of establishi­ng a permanent lunar base and then one on Mars.

The rocketry pioneer was presented a lifetime achievemen­t award in 2011 by Neil Armstrong at the rocket centre in Huntsville. Von Tiesenhaus­en was fondly known as “Von T” by his colleagues, including Armstrong.

“He is and has been a person who imagines what can be, and he has the skills to convert that imagine into reality,” Armstrong said in 2011.

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