Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The V2 Rocket
Episode Date: November 17, 2025The Second World War saw the development of many new weapons. Perhaps none was more terrifying than the development of long-range strategic rockets. Rockets had been used in combat for centuries, d...ating back to their development in ancient China; however, the rockets developed by Germany were a different matter altogether. They terrorized civilians in England and actually served as the starting point of the space race. Learn more about the V1 and V2 rockets and the Nazi rocket program on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase. Newspaper.com Go to Newspapers.com to get a gift subscription for the family historian in your life! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Second World War saw the development of many new weapons, but perhaps none was more terrifying
than the development of long-range strategic rockets. Rockets had been used in combat for centuries,
dating back to their development in ancient China. However, the rockets developed by Germany
were a different matter altogether. They terrorized civilians and actually served as the starting
point of the space race. Learn more about the V2 rocket and the Nazi rocket program
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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The roots of the Nazi rocket program stretch back to the night.
1920s, when Germany's defeat in World War I and the Treaty of Versailles severely restricted
conventional weapons development. This created an unexpected opportunity for experimental weapons research.
A young engineer named Werner von Braun became fascinated with rocketry through his involvement
with the German Society for Space Travel, where amateur enthusiasts conducted primitive
rocket experiments fueled by dreams of space exploration. The German military, particularly the
Army Ordinance Office under Captain Walter Dornberger, recognized
the potential of rockets as a means to circumvent treaty restrictions. Unlike artillery,
rockets were not explicitly prohibited. In 1932, the military hired von Braun, then only 20 years old,
to develop liquid-fueled rockets for military purposes. This partnership between von
Brown's technical genius and the Army's funding would prove transformative, though it required
von Brown and his team to subordinate their space travel dreams to weapons development. By 1937,
the program had grown sufficiently important to warrant a dedicated facility.
The military established a secret research center at Pena Mundi on a remote island in the Baltic Sea.
This isolated location provided both security and space for testing increasingly powerful rockets.
Under von Braun's technical leadership and Dornberger's military direction,
the team expanded to eventually include thousands of engineers, scientists, and technicians.
The Pena Mundi team's work progressed through a series of increasingly sophisticated
prototypes or aggregate test vehicles from A1 to A3 to reach the A4. The A4 rocket, which would later
become known as the V2, represented the culmination of years of development. V2 stood for
Vergelten Sufa Zvae or Vengeance Weapon 2. October 3, 1942, the team achieved a historic milestone
when an A4 successfully reached an altitude of 53 miles and traveled 118 miles down range.
This marked the first time a human-made object had reached space, defined as the boundary beyond the Earth's atmosphere.
The V2 was a revolutionary weapon system.
Standing 46 feet tall and weighing over 27,000 pounds at launch, it was powered by liquid oxygen and alcohol fuel that generated 56,000 pounds of thrust.
The rocket could carry a one-ton warhead, approximately 200 miles, at speeds exceeding 3,500 miles per hour,
faster than the speed of sound.
Crucially, this supersonic speed meant that unlike conventional aircraft, the V2 arrived without warning,
giving no opportunity for evacuation or defensive measures.
The technology represented an extraordinary leap forward.
The V2 required sophisticated guidance systems, fuel pumps capable of handling volatile propellants,
engines that could withstand extreme temperatures and pressures,
and a structure that was both light enough to fly, yet strong enough to survive
launch stress. Von Braun's team solved problems that had never been encountered before,
and essentially invented the field of modern rocketry through trial and air. While the V2 development
proceeded, the German military pursued a parallel program for a simpler, cheaper weapon. The V1 took an
entirely different technological approach. Rather than a true rocket, the V1 was essentially an
unmanned cruise missile powered by a pulse jet engine. The V1 resembled a small aircrew. The V1 resembled a small
aircraft measuring approximately 25 feet length with a wingspan of 17 feet. Its pulse jet engine produced a
distinctive buzzing sound, earning it the nickname Buzz Bomb and doodlebug amongst allied populations.
The V1 carried a 1,870-pound warhead and could travel approximately 150 miles at speeds of around 400
miles per hour. Fast for the era, but far slower than a V2. The V1 was designed for simplicity and mass
production. Unlike the complex V2, the V1 used relatively straightforward technology that could
be manufactured in large quantities at a lower cost. It was typically launched from fixed ramps using a
catapult system, although some were air launch from modified bombers. A simple guidance system
based on a preset compass heading, an air speed indicator, and a counter tracking distance,
meant the V1 could only be aimed at large area targets such as cities. Both weapon systems
were developed with specific strategic purposes that evolved as Germany's military situation
deteriorated. Initially conceived as tactical weapons that might support military operations,
the V-weapons increasingly became instruments of terror intended to break civilian morale and force
allied governments to negotiate. Adolf Hitler became personally obsessed with these
wonder weapons, or Wunderwaffe, believing they could reverse Germany's declining fortunes.
He envisioned massive bombardments that would devastate London and other Allied
cities, forcing Britain out of the war. This political pressure led to premature deployment and
unrealistic expectations about the weapons impact. The V1 campaign began on June 13, 1944, just one
week after the LID day landings in Normandy. Launch sites in Occupied France began firing V1s
towards England, primarily targeting London. This was the beginning of the second Blitz.
I previously did an episode on the first and second Blitz if you want to hear the story of the
blitz from the British perspective. The campaign intensified throughout the summer of 1944, with
thousands of V-1s launched. While many were shot down by fighters, anti-aircraft guns, or barge balloons,
significant numbers reached their targets, causing substantial civilian casualties and damage.
The first V2 attacks followed on September 8, 1944, striking Paris and London. Unlike the V1,
the V2 was virtually impossible to defend against with existing technology.
Because the rockets couldn't be stopped, the only defense was to destroy launch sites or disrupt the supply chain.
The story of the V weapons cannot be told without acknowledging the horrific human cost of their production.
As Allied bombing disrupted German industry and the military demanded accelerated production of weapons,
the Nazi regime increasingly relied on slave labor from concentration camps.
The most notorious production facility was at the Middlewerk factory, located in the vast underground tunnels near Nordhausen in the Harz Mountains.
This facility was connected to the Middle Baudora concentration camp, where tens of thousands of prisoners were worked to death under appalling conditions.
Prisoners labored in the damp, unventilated tunnels assembling rockets, while suffering from starvation, disease, and brutal treatment by SS guards.
The death toll among concentration camp workers who built the V-weapons exceeded the number of people killed by the weapons themselves.
Estimates suggest that more than 20,000 prisoners died producing V2 rockets,
while the V2 attacks killed approximately 9,000 people, including around 5,000 in Britain and 4,000 in continental Europe,
most notably in Belgium.
The V1 caused roughly 6,000 deaths in Britain.
Werner von Braun and other senior engineers were aware of the condition,
and visited production facilities where slave labor was employed.
The extent of their complicity became a deeply controversial issue in the post-war years.
Despite Hitler's hopes and the amount of resources invested,
the V-Weapons failed to achieve their strategic objectives.
Neither weapon was accurate enough to strike military targets effectively,
and while they caused civilian casualties and damage,
they did not break British morale or significantly affect the war's outcome.
Each V-2 required enormous resources to,
produce and launch, yet carried only a single one-ton warhead, far less destructive than what a
conventional bomber aircraft could deliver in a single raid. From a purely military standpoint,
Germany would have been better served by dedicating those resources to fighter aircraft or
other conventional weapons. In total, between September 1944 and March of 1945,
approximately 3,000 V-2s were launched primarily against London, Antwerp, and other targets.
The attacks continued until advancing Allied armies overran the launch sites.
The final V2 struck Britain on March 27, 1945, and the campaign ended when British forces
captured the launch areas in the Netherlands.
However, this was not the end of the V2 story.
As Germany collapsed in early 1945, both American and Soviet forces raced to capture German
rocket technology and personnel.
The advancing armies discovered very much.
vast quantities of equipment, documents, and partially assembled rockets, along with the scientists
who had created them. Verner von Braun and his core team of engineers made a calculated
decision to surrender to American forces rather than Soviets. Von Braun correctly reasoned that
the Americans would be more interested in their technical knowledge and more likely to allow them
to continue rocket development. In May of 1945, Von Braun and approximately 120 key members of his
team surrendered to American forces. The United States military, recognizing the strategic value of
German rocket expertise, initiated Operation Paperclip, a secret program to bring German scientists to
America, which was the subject of a previous episode. The operation's name derived from the
paper clips attached to the files of those selected for recruitment. American officials downplayed
or deliberately obscured the Nazi affiliations and war records of many participants to facilitate
their immigration. Over the following years, more than 1,600 German scientists, engineers,
and technicians were brought to the United States under Operation Paperclip and related programs.
Von Braun and his rocket team were initially stationed at Fort Bliss, Texas, where they
worked with captured V2 rockets and trained American personnel. In 1950, they relocated to Redstone
Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, where they would develop a new generation of missiles and
rockets for the U.S. military.
Meanwhile, the Soviet Union captured its own contingent of German rocket specialists,
along with manufacturing equipment and technical documentation, from facilities in the eastern
occupation zone.
Soviet engineers, led by Sergei Khoralev, studied the V2 rocket intensively and utilized
German expertise to jumpstart their own rocket program, although they relied more heavily
on domestic talent than the Americans did.
The long-term impact of the Nazi rocket program far exceeded its wartime effects.
effectiveness. The V2 represented the world's first ballistic missile and the first human-made object
to reach space. The technology and expertise developed at Pena Mundi became the foundation for both
the Cold War missile programs and the space race. In the United States, Von Braun emerged as
the public face of space exploration. His team developed the Redstone, Jupiter, and eventually the
Saturn series of rockets. The Saturn 5, which carried Apollo astronauts to the moon, was a direct
technological descendant of the V2, although vastly larger and more sophisticated.
Von Braun's transformation from weapons developer to space visionary was aided by
aggressive public relations efforts that glossed over his Nazi past and his use of slave labor.
The Soviet Union's rocket program, similarly built on V2 foundations, produced the R7 Semyorka,
which launched Sputnik in 1957 and Yuri Gargarin in 1961, making him the first human in space.
The V2 also established ballistic missiles as a central element of modern warfare.
Both superpowers developed increasingly powerful intercontinental ballistic missiles
that extended the principles that Von Braun's team had pioneered.
The doctrine of mutually assured destruction, which defined Cold War strategy,
rested on delivery systems that trace their lineage directly to the rockets developed at Pena Mundi.
In a very real sense, all modern rocketry,
For better or worse, can trace its lineage back to the Nazi rocket program.
The same program that killed thousands and terrorized millions.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
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