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Peenemünde Army Research Center

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Peenemünde Army Research Center
NamePeenemünde Army Research Center
Native nameHeeresversuchsanstalt Peenemünde
LocationUsedom, Nazi Germany
TypeMilitary research and development facility
Built1936–1938
Used1937–1945
ControlledbyGerman Army (Heer), Army Ordnance Office
BattlesOperation Hydra
GarrisonWehrmacht
CommandersWalter Dornberger, Wernher von Braun

Peenemünde Army Research Center. The Peenemünde Army Research Center was the primary German site for the development of rocket technology and advanced weapons during the Second World War. Established on the remote island of Usedom in the Baltic Sea, it became the birthplace of the world's first guided ballistic missile, the V-2 rocket. Its work fundamentally shaped postwar aerospace and missile programs in both the United States and the Soviet Union.

History and establishment

The facility's origins trace to the Reichswehr's covert interest in rocketry, which circumvented restrictions of the Treaty of Versailles. Following the rise of the Nazi Party, the German Army's Army Ordnance Office, led by Karl Emil Becker, sought a dedicated testing ground. The isolated coastal location on Usedom was selected in 1935, with construction beginning in 1936 under the direction of Walter Dornberger. Officially activated in 1937, the center expanded rapidly after the successful 1937 tests of the Aggregat series, attracting significant funding from the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht and personal interest from Adolf Hitler after a 1939 demonstration.

Research and development

The center's primary mission was the creation of long-range ballistic missiles. Its most famous project was the A4 rocket, later propagandistically renamed the V-2 rocket. Research encompassed advanced propellant chemistry, gyroscope-based guidance systems, and supersonic aerodynamics. Parallel development included the Wasserfall surface-to-air missile, the Rheintochter anti-aircraft rocket, and early concepts for the A9/A10 intercontinental missile. The site also conducted pioneering work on pulsejet engines for the V-1 flying bomb, though its main development occurred at Peenemünde Airfield under the Luftwaffe.

Key personnel and organization

The technical director was the young engineer Wernher von Braun, leading a team of brilliant scientists like Helmut Gröttrup, Ernst Stuhlinger, and Kurt H. Debus. Military command rested with Walter Dornberger, who reported to the Army Ordnance Office and later the SS Main Economic and Administrative Office. Other notable figures included propulsion specialist Walter Thiel, guidance expert Ernst Steinhoff, and aerodynamicist Hermann H. Kurzweg. The facility's administration became increasingly intertwined with the SS, with Hans Kammler eventually assuming control of production.

Facilities and infrastructure

The sprawling complex was divided into the Heeresversuchsanstalt (Army Research Center) and the adjacent Erprobungsstelle der Luftwaffe (Luftwaffe Test Site). Key installations included the massive Test Stand VII for A4 static firing, the Peenemünde Wind Tunnel (one of the world's largest), and the Elektromechanische Werke assembly hall. The site featured its own power station, a forced labor camp known as Karlshagen I, and a railway connection to the mainland. The nearby village of Karlshagen housed German staff and their families.

Wartime operations and production

Following the Battle of Britain, the center's work was prioritized as part of the Vergeltungswaffen (retaliation weapons) program. The first successful V-2 rocket launch to target occurred in October 1942. The Allies, alerted by Polish intelligence and other sources, targeted the facility in the massive Operation Hydra bombing raid by the Royal Air Force in August 1943. This raid, which killed engineer Walter Thiel and many others, forced the dispersal of production to the underground Mittelwerk factory using POW and concentration camp labor from Buchenwald.

Post-war impact and legacy

In the final days of the Eastern Front, key personnel, including Wernher von Braun and Walter Dornberger, surrendered to American forces during Operation Paperclip. The advancing Red Army captured the physical remains of the facility. This division led directly to the postwar rocket programs of both superpowers: the American program at Redstone Arsenal and NASA, and the Soviet program under Sergei Korolev that launched Sputnik 1. The site later fell within the German Democratic Republic and today houses the Historisch-Technisches Museum Peenemünde.

Category:Nazi Germany Category:Rocket launch sites Category:Military research facilities Category:World War II sites in Germany