ABMA

On October 4, 1957, the Space Age began in earnest: on that day, the Soviet Union orbited Sputnik 1, shocking the world and especially the United States. Sputnik was flying overhead, the Russians were having a propaganda feast, and military leaders were confronting a sobering new reality.

Fear and anger washed over the West. If the Soviet Union could orbit the entire planet, then their missiles could strike any target any place in the world too. Suddenly, the Cold War was a lot colder. Nobody was safe. Anywhere.

Then came the questions: Were the Russians that far ahead of everyone, especially the US? Could America have orbited a satellite first? Then, of course, the biggest question, the one that was usually shouted: What are we going to do about it?

The answer to the last question was to orbit our own artificial moon, or satellite. Soon.

The answers to the other questions are nuanced. The US was indeed capable, and could have been the first to orbit, probably. Even if it had, America was still technically behind the Russians, who could loft more mass than the US.

President Dwight D. Eisenhower (1953 to 1961)

From the convenience of the hindsight offered by history, the short answer is technically that the United States rocket probably could have won the race to orbit, but politically, not under President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Geopolitical Chess Games

Eisenhower deliberately chose a civilian path to America’s first satellite to set a crucial legal precedent for future reconnaissance, and he kept the Army’s rocket team (ABMA) on a tight leash until after Sputnik flew. Meanwhile, the Army had nearly complete orbit-capable rockets stored in an Alabama warehouse long before October 4, 1957, and the launch of Sputnik 1. Eisenhower sidelined them.

Years before Sputnik, Eisenhower was already pursuing reconnaissance satellites. In 1954, he had established The Killian Panel to devise technology for global intelligence gathering that would reduce the possibility of a surprise nuclear attack. The result was an initial concept for the WS-117L reconnaissance satellite program, which the Air Force began in earnest in 1956, with the result being the first American spy satellites.

Eisenhower’s advisers worried before Sputnik that if the United States put a military satellite such as a WS-117L spacecraft over other countries first, it could trigger diplomatic protests that outer space was sovereign airspace above each nation below.

To negate this idea, the White House therefore backed a civilian International Geophysical Year (IGY) satellite using the Navy’s Vanguard, precisely to establish the norm that satellites could lawfully overfly national territory—a principle dubbed “freedom of space.”

When Sputnik crossed American skies without international protest, Eisenhower saw that the norm was effectively validated. The concept of “Freedom of space” remains relevant to this day. So do reconnaissance satellites.

The firestorm was intense and instantaneous. ‘America,’ many political commentators said, ‘cannot let this stand.’

Publicly, the President downplayed Sputnik’s military significance but privately, he took it as a useful assist to the overflight precedent he wanted for reconnaissance. The punch certainly stung, but Eisenhower, ever the cagey strategist rolled with it.

It took Eisenhower four days to order an acceleration of the first U.S. launch. On Oct. 8, 1957, he directed the Pentagon to ready the Army Ballistic Missile Agency (ABMA) to orbit a satellite; the formal go-ahead arrived in Huntsville on Nov. 8. Explorer 1 flew on Jan. 31, 1958.

Did The US Have An “Orbit-Capable” Rocket Before October 4, 1957?

“The Redstone flew in ’53 the first time, and even before that, in about ’52, von Braun and I met each other in the hallway one day, and just in passing, he said to me, “With the Redstone we can do it.”

“I was dumb enough. I said, “Do what?”

“He said, “Launch a satellite, of course.”

Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger, in a NASA Oral History

From a technical standpoint, the Army’s Jupiter-C was close to being an orbital launcher. But “close” is not “on the pad.” Juno did not have a flight-ready payload assembled and qualified, nor had it been authorized for an orbital mission. The ABMA team was dealt out despite holding the best hand at the table. Moreover, the orbital configuration’s design existed, had even been flight tested, but had never, of course, gone into orbit.

In 1956–57, Jupiter-C performed high-altitude nose-cone tests and ABMA and JPL engineers knew that adding a small fourth stage a small payload could reach orbital velocity—the configuration that lofted Explorer 1. In those earlier tests, the highest stage was intentionally “dead” (often described as being ballasted with sand) to prevent any accidental satellite. Those were orders, not a lack of know-how. The fourth stage would have to wait.

Were Orbit-Capable Rockets Just “Sitting In A Warehouse?”

One of the enduring stories claims ABMA had “orbit-capable rockets sitting in a warehouse” before Oct. 4, 1957. There is a kernel of truth wrapped in myth that has become legend.

ABMA did keep Jupiter-C hardware available from its nose-cone test series in storage in Huntsville, and senior Army leaders argued they could orbit a small satellite quickly if authorized. Those rockets were, of course, in Alabama, and not here in Florida, where they would eventually launch.

Later accounts (and Army memoirs) recall these “surplus” Jupiter-C vehicles “on the shelf” and describe efforts to ensure no accidental orbital launches resulted during previous test flights.

“Tucked away inside the Jupiter-C program was a well-known secret agenda to assemble one of these vehicles with a 4th stage that could place a small object into orbit about the earth.  One of the Jupiter-Cs received special handling and security.  When we conducted the SFT, which included testing all the electronics necessary to activate the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th stages, the Commanding General and Dr. von Braun were on hand to observe the test.  

“When that test was completed, the whole assembly was wrapped and carried to a sealed hanger to await the possible permission to orbit a satellite.”

Willie (Bil) Weaver, Stories from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center: The Jupiter-C Rocket and Explorer-1 Satellite

That supports the notion of ready hardware—but not a complete, cleared satellite mission waiting only for a countdown. Some final preparations would be needed. A payload needed to be designed, built and tested. The rockets would need to be transported to the Cape, they’d need to be prepared, tested, payload installed, tested some more, taken out to the launch pad then prepared to launch, etc. before finally flying. Once flying, telemetry would need to be monitored, a global task then involving international cooperation and even ships placed at points mid-ocean.

Those preparations are demanding and exacting and encountering problems during a launch campaign is almost expected. Especially when it is your first time doing it.

The Flop Heard Around The World: Vanguard TV3

On December 6, 1957, the US made its first reply to the Soviet feat.

Here at Cape Canaveral, Vanguard Test Vehicle-3 (TV-3) managed to rise only about 4 feet before it lost power. The rocket then collapsed back onto the launch pad and detonated in a tremendous fireball. It was a highly visible and embarrassing setback for the US.

Newspapers derided the failure with nicknames like “Flopnik” and “Kaputnik,” playing off the Soviets’ Sputnik triumph. Though the Vanguard payload was hurled clear of the blast and later recovered, it was too damaged for any further use. The rocket was in thousands of pieces and for it, there was no repair. For the time being, Vanguard was out. Redstone and ABMA were the US best hope to reply to the Soviet Union.

Meanwhile, In Huntsville

Now tasked to orbit a satellite after Sputnik, ABMA and JPL went to work as preparations for another Vanguard attempt continued elsewhere. The ABMA / JPL teams fielded the Juno I / Explorer 1 booster and satellite combination and launched successfully on Jan. 31, 1958.

If that sounds simple, it wasn’t. VL Pinson, Sr., an ABMA employee then located here in Cocoa said, “We checked, then we rechecked, then we checked again. When we were asleep we were dreaming about what we should check the next day. Everything had to be right.”

Turned out, the ABMA and JPL team did a whale of a good job. They successfully launched to orbit on their first try, a feat that even today is notable. In 1957, it was an incredible achievement.

William Pickering, James Van Allen, and Wernher von Braun celebrating at the announcement of Explorer I’s successful launch in 1958.

That mission is obviously the stuff of legend: in 119 days, the United States joined the Soviet Union as a spacefaring nation. While the two countries had launched “scientific” satellites, the meaning was very clear to military leaders from both sides of the Iron Curtain: either side can strike the other at any place and at any time. The reality of Mutual Assured Destruction was coming quickly into focus.

The speed of the ABMA Juno-1 turnaround underscores how mature the hardware was—but also that it was policy, final approvals and geopolitical gamesmanship that stood between Huntsville and an actual pre-Sputnik orbit.

So, Could The US Have Gone First?

There are a lot of ifs, but yes, under different political circumstances, the US probably would have beaten Sputnik 1.

If Washington had chosen the Army’s route in 1955–56 instead of Vanguard, the U.S. might have launched first. ABMA and its Redstone family were farther down its development timeline, its team more experienced, and its platform more robust. Its chances of success were always higher than Vanguard.

On the surface, that might suggest the US backed the wrong horse. Still, Eisenhower’s decision to support the Vanguard program was strategic and never careless: it prioritized a civilian image and the overflight precedent essential for the reconnaissance satellites that his administration was already developing.

So, sometimes when you lose, you win.

As NASA’s own history notes, the administration viewed Sputnik less as a military threat than as an (unwelcome) but useful boost to establishing “freedom of space.” Once that point of international law was established, Eisenhower unleashed Huntsville and JPL—and Explorer 1 was in orbit within weeks. And not so long afterward,

The Space Age was born and the starting gun for the Space Race had been fired…twice. The world and especially the areas around Cape Canaveral would never be the same.

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It’s funny how when you see something often enough, you never forget it — even decades since the last time you saw that thing. For me, one of those things is my grandfather giving the “OK” or “go ahead” point of his finger. He did it whenever we left his house when I was a little kid, and I saw him do it to others. He gave it to me and to my cousins when we rode bicycles.

VL Pinson Sr. Signals His Team Is Ready For Launch

I saw this old video, “Biography of a Missile” that was made for CBS television back in the early days of rocket science: the goal at the time were long range missiles and the race to get them working and reliable in service of America’s self-defense. It was an all-out effort with nearly as many failures as launches. As the title suggests, it was the story of one such missile, culminating in its launch and liftoff.

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At the end of World War II, Cape Canaveral was a quiet, sleepy place. The fishing village wasn’t much of a tourist destination, Banana River Naval Air Station was in disuse, and would close in September 1947 where it would be placed in a caretaker status.

That would change, however, on September 1, 1948, when the former naval air station was transferred to the newly formed US Air Force. In 1949, it was renamed the Joint Long Range Proving Ground, and was designated as the launch point for the military’s efforts to develop long range missile weapons.

It took until July 1950 for a rocket launch to happen at the new JLRPG. According to the NASA/US Army publication  NIX 66P-0631, GPN-2000-000613:

“Bumper 8 was an ambitious two-stage rocket program that topped a V-2 missile base with a WAC Corporal rocket. The upper stage was able to reach then-record altitudes of almost 400 kilometers, higher than even modern Space Shuttles flown many years later. Launched under the direction of the General Electric Company, the Bumper Project was used primarily for testing rocket systems and for research on the upper atmosphere. Bumper rockets carried small payloads that allowed them to measure attributes including air temperature and cosmic ray impacts.”

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When an employee of NASA or one of its contractors participated in a major milestone, they were often sent a thank you letter from their manager. Here’s one my grandfather got from his boss, Dr. Kurt Debus.

In this case, my grandfather got a letter from his boss, Dr. Kurt Debus, congratulating him for his participation in helping to launch America’s first satellite, Explorer 1. The satellite was not only the first for the nation, it was also the first to carry scientific instruments designed to make measurements in the new frontier of outer space.

Explorer 1: Scientific Payload (courtesy NASA / Jet Propulsion Laboratory

One of the measurements that the satellite made was cosmic rays — a form of high-energy radiation that constantly bombards the Earth, and originates from outside our solar system. The expected count was thirty strikes per second on the instruments aboard Explorer 1, but periodically, it would drop to near zero. Analysis of this data showed that zero counts were occurring when Explorer 1 was at an altitude of 2,000 km above Earth, but it would rise to the expected level of thirty. This in turn led to more experimentation on later satellites, and as a result, the Van Allen Belt was discovered — a geomagnetic phenomena where highly changed particles are trapped in the magnetic fields surrounding the Earth.

Explorer 1 at LAunch Complex 26-A in Cape Canaveral prior to its launch (photo: NASA)

Debus’s letter to my grandfather:

Kurt Debus letter to V. L. Pinson Sr. (from Pinson’s archives)

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