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Oscar Carl Holderer, member of moon rocket design team

- By Jay Reeves Associated Press

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The last known surviving member of the German engineerin­g team that came to the United States after World War II and designed the rocket that took astronauts to the moon has died.

Oscar Carl Holderer died Tuesday in Huntsville, Alabama, son Michael Holderer said Wednesday. He was 95.

Holderer said his father suffered a stroke last week and did not recover.

Born in Germany the year after World War I ended, Holderer came to the United States in 1945 with a group of 120 rocket engineers led by Wernher von Braun. Their move was part of a project called “Operation Paperclip” that transferre­d technology for the German V-2 and other rockets to the United States.

“He brought our first rocket wind tunnel in this country from Germany and personally set it up,” said Ed Buckbee, a space historian and former NASA publicist.

First based at White Sands, New Mexico, the team moved in1950 to north Alabama’s Redstone Arsenal, where they used early computers, slide rules and pencils to design the Saturn V rocket that first took astronauts to the lunar surface in 1969.

Holderer said his father — a mechanical engineer, designer and fabricator who became a U.S. citizen in 1955 — designed the highspeed wind tunnel that was used to develop Saturn and then oversaw its constructi­on at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, located at Redstone.

“He was one of the more hands-on members of the team,” said Holderer. “He had his own machine shop here in town as a hobby.”

Some members of the von Braun team eventually returned to Germany and others spread out across the United States after retirement, but Holderer was the last known survivor of the original group, Buckbee said.

“He was a very talented man, not only an aeroballis­tics expert but very accomplish­ed in design and fabricatio­n,” said Buckbee.

While von Braun and some high-level members of his team faced questions about alleged Nazi ties, Holderer didn’t. “He was just never at that level of supervisio­n,” Buckbee said.

Following his retirement from NASA in 1974, Holderer built training devices that are still in use at the state-run U.S. Space and Rocket Center, located near NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville.

Working in his shop, Holderer converted the tail section of a jetliner into a small theater for the space museum.

“They would tilt it back to simulate accelerati­on,” Holderer said.

 ?? ERIC SCHULTZ/AL.COM VIA AP ?? Oscar Carl Holderer, the last known surviving member of the German engineerin­g team that came to the United States after World War II and designed the rocket that took astronauts to the moon, died Tuesday. He was 95.
ERIC SCHULTZ/AL.COM VIA AP Oscar Carl Holderer, the last known surviving member of the German engineerin­g team that came to the United States after World War II and designed the rocket that took astronauts to the moon, died Tuesday. He was 95.

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