Are stories of Nazis actually getting to space fact or fiction? The internet is awash with stories of Nazi innovations and technological prowess during the Second World War. Some are true, but others like Nazis building a base on the so-called 'Dark Side' of the Moon, are a complete fantasy. 

But, claims about 'Nazis in space' or the existence of a 'Nazi space programme' might be, from a certain point of view, technically correct. Read on to find out more about this fascinating piece of engineering history.

Was there ever a Nazi space programme?

Nazi Germany, despite having what has been described as an incredibly corrupt procurement bureaucracy, was able to develop some of the most advanced weapons of war ever seen.

From the first-ever jet fighter, the Messerschmitt Me 262, to Tiger heavy tanks, IR night sights, and piston-engined fighters like the Focke Wulf FW-190s, they were also able to produce the world's first ballistic missiles – the much-feared V-2. 

The V-2 Vergeltungswaffe 2 ('Vengeance Weapon 2') was the brainchild of one Werner von Braun, who would later prove instrumental during the US space programme during the Cold War. These rockets were built largely by slave labour in underground factories where many would die during the process.

One of several rockets designed under the Aggregat programme of ballistic missile development, the V-2 would change history in more ways than one. 

A surviving V-2 rocket at Peenemünde, Germany. Source: Chmee2/Wikimedia Commons

According to some estimates, between 12,000 and 20,000 forced workers and slaves died during the programme, which built a little more than 6,000 V-2s. 

Powered by liquid ethanol and oxygen, these rockets were able to pump out a staggering 27.5 ton (25 tonnes) of thrust. 

Each one was 46 feet (14 metres long), weighed about 12.3 tons (12,500 kg), and could carry a one-ton (975 kg) warhead. They would quickly reach supersonic speed as well as have a range of up to 195 miles (about 315km) from their launch sites.

The entire programme cost about two billion Reichsmarks, roughly similar to the amount spent by Allied Forces on the atomic bomb. As impressive as these weapons were, they would not prove to be a war-winning innovation.

V-2 test launch from Peenemünde in 1943. Source: Wikimedia Commons

With such potent machines, it is not implausible that the Germans may have realised the potential for using them to exploit space. So, did Nazi Germany ever develop a space programme?

The V-2's inventor, von Braun, actually made some plans to send a German pilot into space. While the rocket couldn't reach orbit, it could, technically, carry a human being into space on a sub-orbital trajectory.

Von Braun, and his team, worked on designs in the early-1940s, for a modified V-2 with wings called the A-9 'Piloted and Guided Missile', the world's first practical design for a transatlantic ballistic missile. While this design extended the rocket's range, to be truly space-worthy, it would need a second-stage – the A9/A10 'Manned ICBM'.

Sadly for von Braun and his team, resources and budget were cut from the programme in 1943 in favour of producing long-range, guided versions of V-2 rockets (the A4) for the war effort. 

Comparison of rocket designs as part of the Nazi Aggregat programme. Source: Spike78/Wikimedia Commons

Von Braun managed to continue some development and flight tests of the A9 under the cover name of A4b (calling it a modification of the A4).

The tide of war offered a new window of opportunity in August of 1944 when Allied advances forced the Germans to relocate their V-2 batteries further East – out of range of most important Allied targets. The A9 programme was hastily re-established. 

Test flights followed soon after, with one disastrous test in December of 1944. A second test was more successful and reached 52 miles (85km) in altitude, and made a successful glide, before one wing fell off and it crashed back to Earth. 

The programme was summarily cancelled once again. That is, until German scientists, including von Braun, surrendered to Allied forces after the defeat of Germany in 1945. 

While never realised, the A9/A10 concept was a two-stage rocket. Source: Spike78/Wikimedia Commons

So, did Nazi Germany have a space programme? Depending on your definition, the answer can be either yes or no.

Did the Nazis ever make it into space?

Yes, they actually did. In fact, Nazi Germany is officially the first nation to ever send a manmade object into space. 

However, this does come with a caveat – it all depends on where you define space. This also determines the year in which Nazi Germany managed this amazing world first.

One official limit for the start of space is called the Kármán line. Named after a Hungarian scientist called Theodore von Kármán, who determined, in the 1900s, that the boundary between Earth's atmosphere and space should be set at 50 miles (80km) above sea level. 

Today, this imaginary boundary is defined by the NOAA at 62 miles (100km) above sea level. This is a figure also agreed upon by the Federation Aeronautique Internationale (FAI).

However, as National Geographic explains, "the Federal Aviation Administration, the US Air Force, NOAA, and NASA generally use 50 miles (80km) as the boundary, with the air force granting astronaut wings to flyers who go higher than this mark.

"At the same time, NASA Mission Control places the line at 76 miles (122km), because that is 'the point at which atmospheric drag becomes noticeable', Bhavya Lal and Emily Nightingale of the Science and Technology Policy Institute write in a 2014 review article".

Using NASA's own figures, the first artificial object to enter space was in fact a piece of Nazi engineering. 

This occurred on the October 3, 1942, when a German V-2 rocket reached an altitude of between 52 and 55 miles (85 to 90km) above the Earth. 

The V2 was launched from a test stand at the Peenemünde Airfield, Germany. Certain German officials were so struck by the event that one, General Walter Dornberger (director of the 'Vengeance Weapons' programme), is claimed to have stated, "Today, the space age is born!".

Captured and repurposed V-2 being launched as part of the "Bumper Project" in 1950. Source: NASA

Impressive, but whether or not you would classify this as reaching space depends on where you define space as starting. If you prefer the 62 miles (100km) limit, then later vertical V-2 tests in June 1944 (notably MW 18014) would claim the accolade.

What role did Germany play in the space race?

After the defeat of German forces in the European theatre, many former German scientists surrendered or were captured by the Allies under various operations, including the famous 'Operation Paperclip'. These scientists, including von Braun, were swiftly ferried to the United States, Soviet Union, and the United Kingdom, to aid in work in similar fields (like the Manhattan Project and the fledgling US and Russian ballistic missile and space programmes). 

Von Braun, in particular, would prove to be a very valuable acquisition for the United States. Both the US and the Soviets immediately took the V-2s apart and began experimenting to improve and recreate them. In 1946 shortly after the war, several captured V-2 rockets were used to make some world-firsts in space exploration.

These included, among others: 

  • The first footage of space in 1947;
  • First animals in space (fruit flies) were sent aboard a V-2 in February of 1947;
  • The first space launch of a rocket not designed as a weapon in 1948;
  • The first primate in space (a macaque) was launched into space onboard a V-2 in 1949.

But, all of these test runs merely touched space. Soon after the Soviet space programme delivered the first orbital spacecraft Sputnik 1 into space, the US would begin ramping up their efforts.

Composite image of V-2 images taken in 1948. Source: Universe History

The space race had officially begun. 

By 1953, von Braun and his team had developed America's first ballistic missile, the Redstone. This rocket could carry a nuclear warhead up to about 250 miles (402km) in range.

Later, the Jupiter-C, a modified version of Redstone, was used to launch the United States' first-ever satellite, Explorer 1, in 1958. Von Braun would later become the director of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center.

It was there, thanks to the labours of other German scientists like Werner Dahm and Konrad Danneberg, that the now-famous Saturn V rocket was eventually developed. 

This is the very same type of rocket that took  America’s first astronaut, Alan Shepard, into space in 1961, and would later take the first astronauts to the Moon, in 1969. A number of former-Nazi scientists, including von Braun and Kurt Heinrich Debus, would prove pivotal in making this mission a success. 

Other former Nazi scientists, like Eberhard Friedrich Michael Rees, would help design and make a reality the Lunar explorer vehicle, while Ernest Stuhlinger helped develop the early stages of the Hubble Space Telescope and pioneered space medicine. 

Source: NASA

While not all of the accomplishments of the United States' space programme were the work of former Nazi Germany scientists, they would prove to be instrumental in getting the programme off the ground, literally and figuratively.

This article was written by  and first appeared in Interesting Engineering.