Rockets Timeline

  • Jan 1, 1232

    Chinese and gunpowder

    Chinese and gunpowder
    The Chinese were the first to use gunpowder rockets, which they called fire arrows, in military applications. In the battle of Kaifung-fu (1232 CE), for example, fire arrows helped the Chinese repel Mongol invader.
  • Jan 1, 1249

    Arab troops and rockets

    Arab troops and rockets
    In 1249, Arab troops used rockets in their unsuccessful attempt to thwart invading Crusader troops under Louis IX of France, during the siege of Damietta.
  • Galileo

    Galileo
    From 1602 to 1609 Galileo studied the motion of pendulums and other objects as they moved along arcs and inclines. Using inclined planes that he built, he concluded that falling objects accelerate at a constant rate.
  • Sir Isaac Newton

    Sir Isaac Newton
    Three laws of mechanics formulated by Sir Isaac Newton in 1687.
  • William Hale- mid-1800's

    William Hale- mid-1800's
    In the mid-1800s, another British inventor, William Hale, invented a stickless rocket that was spin-stabilized, thus improving accuracy.
  • "rockets' red glare"

    "rockets' red glare"
    The British used both types of military rocket effectively during the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812. Perhaps the most famous application of Congreve's rockets was the British bombardment of the American Fort McHenry, which occurred in the War of 1812. This rocket attack is now immortalized in the "rockets' red glare" phrase heard in "The Star-Spangled Banner."
  • Jules Verne

    Jules Verne
    Starting in the mid-19th century, the French writer and technical visionary Jules Verne (1828–1905) created modern science fiction and along with it the dream of space travel. Perhaps Verne's greatest influence on the development of space travel was his 1865 novel, De la terre à la lune (From the Earth to the Moon).
  • Konstantin Tsiolkovsk

     Konstantin Tsiolkovsk
    In a report Konstantin Tsiolkovsky published in 1903, Tsiolkovsky suggested the use of liquid propellants for rockets in order to achieve greater range.
  • Robert Goddard

    Robert Goddard
    In 1912 Robert Goddard, inspired from an early age by H.G. Wells, began a serious analysis of rockets, concluding that conventional solid-fuel rockets needed to be improved in three ways.
  • German Rocket engineers

    German Rocket  engineers
    The German rocket engineers who developed the V-2 missile and brought advanced rocket engineering to the United States after 1945.
  • Explorer 1

    Explorer 1
    January 31, 1958, with the launching of Explorer 1, the first American satellite
  • first NASA's space shuttle

    first NASA's space shuttle
    The first flight of NASA's space shuttle on April 12, 1981
  • cancel shuttle replacements

    cancel shuttle replacements
    United States cancels shuttle replacements X-33 and X-34 because of space cutbacks
  • Delta IV and Atlas V

    Delta IV and Atlas V
    First launches of United States advanced Delta IV and Atlas V commercial rockets.
  • Mars Exploration Rovers

    Mars Exploration Rovers
    Mars Exploration Rovers, 2004-Present: On January 3, 2004, the “Spirit” rover landed on Mars in Gusev crater.