Yes, I instantly noticed that the video shows a V-2 launch, and it is taking off from New Mexico, since no place in Germany has the topography shown. I recall that the US brought V-2's to New Mexico (White Sands Proving Ground), along with German scientists like Von Braun. In 1959, it would have been nearly impossible for an American newsreel company to obtain real footage of an R-7 launch. Now, we have vivid, close, color footage of Soyuz TMA launches that have become routine. What a change!
I've been reading the declassified CIA documents from around then. It's surprising how little they did know about the R-7 rocket. They interviewed the Germans who had been there, but they were never involved in any of the Russian missile projects after R-1.
It's Luna 2. Luna 1 made a fly-by in early 1959 but didn't hit the moon.
I noticed that even in case of later Soviet rockt launches Western media used V-2 footage although they must have known that the real rockets looked very different. It's only with the beginning of manned flights in 1961 that the Soviets published real footage and Western public got to know what those rockets looked like.
An R-7 looks nothing like the V-2 rocket design they showed in this footage. I guess at this point and time, what information was fit for public consumption was wayyyyy off from the truth anyways, due to the heated and uncertain nature of the cold war at the time.
Yes, I instantly noticed that the video shows a V-2 launch, and it is taking off from New Mexico, since no place in Germany has the topography shown. I recall that the US brought V-2's to New Mexico (White Sands Proving Ground), along with German scientists like Von Braun. In 1959, it would have been nearly impossible for an American newsreel company to obtain real footage of an R-7 launch. Now, we have vivid, close, color footage of Soyuz TMA launches that have become routine. What a change!
bboucharde 2 months ago
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nah nah,,,
V2 cannot going to touch the moon,,,
V2 can hit and destroy on ussr russia land
bestamerica 7 months ago
WTF? the first rocket is a german V2?
VIRIATO1995 7 months ago
I've been reading the declassified CIA documents from around then. It's surprising how little they did know about the R-7 rocket. They interviewed the Germans who had been there, but they were never involved in any of the Russian missile projects after R-1.
DonPMitchell 2 years ago
It's Luna 2. Luna 1 made a fly-by in early 1959 but didn't hit the moon.
I noticed that even in case of later Soviet rockt launches Western media used V-2 footage although they must have known that the real rockets looked very different. It's only with the beginning of manned flights in 1961 that the Soviets published real footage and Western public got to know what those rockets looked like.
plauderonkel 2 years ago 4
An R-7 looks nothing like the V-2 rocket design they showed in this footage. I guess at this point and time, what information was fit for public consumption was wayyyyy off from the truth anyways, due to the heated and uncertain nature of the cold war at the time.
billybobmacguyver 2 years ago
It is about LUNA 1 and not LUNA 2
robsonhahn 2 years ago
Thank you !
Good Video !
vlad5548 3 years ago