The Daily Telegraph

Georg von Tiesenhaus­en

Scientist who worked with Wernher von Braun at Peenemünde and on the US space programme

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GEORG VON TIESENHAUS­EN, who has died aged 104, was the last surviving member of the team of German rocket scientists who worked with Wernher von Braun at the German V-2 factories during the Second World War and later followed him to America to work on the US space programme.

“Von T”, as he was known to colleagues, was not among the original group of German scientists spirited away from under the noses of America’s Soviet allies in 1945, or among the team, led by von Braun, which, in 1950, moved to Huntsville, Alabama, to lead the American rocket developmen­t programme.

But he had been with von Braun at Peenemünde and after a few years working in Germany after the war, he joined his team at what would become Nasa’s Marshall Space Flight Center, in 1953.

Von Tiesenhaus­en was with von Braun’s team when it launched

Explorer 1, the first US satellite, and when the first American astronaut, Alan Shepard, blasted into space in 1961. He was credited with conceiving and designing the mobile launch facilities for the Saturn V, the threestage launch vehicle developed to support the Apollo programme.

He also designed the original concept for the battery-powered rover that astronauts drove on the lunar surface during the last three Apollo missions to the moon in 1971 and 1972.

Georg von Tiesenhaus­en was born into an aristocrat­ic German family on May 18 1914 in Riga, Latvia, in what was then the Russian Empire. His paternal ancestors had settled in Livonia, as it was, in the 12th century. Other prominent family members included Ferdinand von Tiesenhaus­en (1782–1805), the officer in the Russian Imperial army whose death at Austerlitz inspired Tolstoy’s character Andrei Bolkonsky in War and Peace, and Hans-diedrich von Tiesenhaus­en (1913–2000), a decorated U-boat captain of the Second World War.

Georg joined von Braun’s team at Peenemünde in 1941 straight from the eastern front. A qualified mechanical engineer, he was recalled from the Wehrmacht once Hitler realised that technical expertise could be vital in the war effort.

He was present at the first launch of a V-2 rocket in 1942 and was involved in designing a top secret launcher for the V-2 which could be towed by a submarine out into the Atlantic, enabling Germany to launch missiles against New York. Von Tiesenhaus­en reflected later that it was probably as well for his future career that the idea proved unworkable.

When asked to comment on criticism of what von Braun’s team had done in the war, von Tiesenhaus­en said the situation they had been in was “indescriba­ble. Nobody else could imagine the pressure we were under and the situation around us … You could not, as an individual, extricate yourself. It was impossible.”

When the war ended, von Tiesenhaus­en was offered the opportunit­y to go to America with von Braun, but turned it down, not wanting to leave his family in Germany. For the next few years he worked, variously, as a teacher, a truck driver, a mechanic and a designer of winches for cargo ships, before moving to the US.

He spent more than 30 years as an engineer at the Marshall Space Flight Center, but was bitter about the way in which von Braun’s team had been treated in the early 1970s, when pressure from contractor­s involved in the space programme led to the removal of most of Nasa’s German scientists, with von Braun transferre­d to a desk job in Washington and other team members offered a choice between being demoted or resigning.

“The greatest shock of my life was sitting in my director’s office and being told to step down,” von Tiesenhaus­en told an interviewe­r in 1986. “I’ve cried only a very few times … It was like killing someone … We had done our best and been thrown out.”

Von Tiesenhaus­en remained with Nasa when most of his colleagues left “because I had no choice”. He accepted a pay cut and worked on proposals for the space station and ideas for using tethers to help launch orbiting satellites with less fuel.

As Nasa’s assistant director of advanced systems, in the early 1980s he designed blueprints for a new breed of self-replicatin­g robots that, he hoped, would eventually run space factories on the moon.

But when, in 1986, the space shuttle

Challenger exploded shortly after lift-off from Cape Canaveral, killing its seven crew members (the result of the failure of a rubber seal) von Tiesenhaus­en claimed that the disaster would not have happened had the German team remained in place: “We were definitely betrayed. So much knowledge was lost.”

After his retirement in 1986 von Tiesenhaus­en worked as a volunteer teaching Space Camp cadets about the space programme. In 2011 the astronaut Neil Armstrong made a rare public appearance to present him with the US Space & Rocket Center’s inaugural Lifetime Achievemen­t Award for Education.

In 1942 he married Asta Esch, with whom he had two daughters and a son. He became an American citizen in 1962.

Georg von Tiesenhaus­en, born May 18 1914, died June 2 2018

 ??  ?? Von Tiesenhaus­en and, right, the Apollo lunar rover for which he had the original idea
Von Tiesenhaus­en and, right, the Apollo lunar rover for which he had the original idea
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