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1 - Prelude to space, 1953–1957

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2009

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Summary

And gazing burns with unallow'd desires.

Erasmus Darwin, The Loves of the Plants

It was in 1953 that the metamorphosis of missiles into satellites began. One important new start was the prospect of rockets for upper-atmosphere research. The impetus came from a group of scientists belonging to the Royal Society's Gassiot Committee, particularly Professor Harrie Massey of University College London, and Professor David Bates of the Queen's University, Belfast. The existence of the Gassiot Committee was an extraordinary stroke of luck for space science, as I came to realize much later. The Royal Society covers all science, and until 1935 the one exception to this rule was the Gassiot Committee, the Society's only specialized ‘inhouse’ committee: it had been formed in 1871, to oversee Kew Observatory, and was expanded during the Second World War to cover atmospheric physics in general. The Gassiot Committee was vitally important for two reasons: first, it was a preconstructed official pathway into space; second, the Royal Society was fully committed from the outset, thus making respectable a subject dismissed by many as ‘utter bilge’.

The Gassiot Committee organized an Anglo-American conference on rocket exploration of the upper atmosphere, at Oxford in August 1953, and this can now be seen as the first British step on the ladder into space which we climbed for nearly twenty years. I cannot remember much about the meeting, except that it was held in a dark medieval lecture-room, lit by a few light bulbs with dusty white shades: it seemed paradoxical that these new ventures into space were being planned in such antiquated surroundings.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1992

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