Wernher Magnus Maximilian Freiherr von Braun

12th Great-Grandparent of Donald D. Erwin

14th Great-Grandparent of Vernher von Braun

Robert Keith

(1483-1514)

William Keith (1506-1581) Robert Keith (1508-1551)
Elizabeth Keith (1535-1585) John Keith (1528-1555)
John Irvine (1564-1635) George Keith (1553-1623)
James Irvine (1615-1675) James Keith (1600-1650)
James Irvine (1642-1703) Elizabeth Keith (1620-1643)
Alexander Irvine (1675-1744) Margaret Primrose (1641-1690)
James N. Irvine (1706-1770) Elizabeth Foulis (1675-1720)
Joseph Erwin (1729-1793) Archibald Gibson (1700-1750)
Joseph Erwin (1769-1846) Helen Gibson (1730-1770)
Joseph Erwin (1794-1879) Otto A. von Keyserlingk (1765-1820)
Thomas Johnston Erwin (1822-1892) Friederike C. von Keyserlingk (1800-1856)
Michael Ransellaer Erwin (1867-1953) Gustav Friederich von Below (1791-1852)
Odes Herman Erwin (1888-1966) Karl Emil von Below (1821-1871)
Donald Dean Erwin (1933-) Marie Eleonore von Below (1861-1903)
  Emmy Melitta von Quistorp (1886-1959)
  Vernher Magnus von Braun (1612-1977)

 Dr. Wernher von Braun was one of the most important rocket developers and champions of space exploration during the period between the 1930s and the 1970s. As a youth he became enamored with the possibilities of space exploration by reading the science fiction of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells. From his teenage years, von Braun had held a keen interest in space flight, becoming involved in the German rocket society, Verein fur Raumschiffarht (VfR), as early as 1929. As a means of furthering his desire to build large and capable rockets, in 1932 he went to work for the German army to develop ballistic missiles. While engaged in this work, von Braun received a Ph.D. in physics on July 27, 1934.

Von Braun is well known as the leader of what has been called the “rocket team” which developed the V–2 ballistic missile for the Nazis during World War II. The brainchild of von Braun’s rocket team operating at a secret laboratory at Peenemünde on the Baltic coast, the V–2 rocket was the immediate antecedent of those used in space exploration programs in the United States and the Soviet Union.

Before the Allied capture of the V–2 rocket complex, von Braun engineered the surrender of 500 of his top rocket scientists, along with plans and test vehicles, to the Americans. For fifteen years after World War II, von Braun worked with the U.S. Army in the development of ballistic missiles. As part of a military operation called Project Paperclip, he and his rocket team were scooped up from defeated Germany and sent to America where they were installed at Fort Bliss, Texas. There they worked on rockets for the U.S. Army, launching them at White Sands Proving Ground, New Mexico. In 1950 von Braun’s team moved to the Redstone Arsenal near Huntsville, Ala., where they built the Army’s Jupiter ballistic missile.

In 1960, his rocket development center transferred from the Army to the newly established NASA and received a mandate to build the giant Saturn rockets. Accordingly, von Braun became director of NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center and the chief architect of the Saturn V launch vehicle, the super-booster that would propel Americans to the Moon.

Von Braun also became one of the most prominent spokesmen of space exploration in the United States during the 1950s. In 1970, NASA leadership asked von Braun to move to Washington, D.C., to head up the strategic planning effort for the agency. He left his home in Huntsville, Ala., but in 1972 he decided to retire from NASA and work for Fairchild Industries of Germantown, Md.

Von Braun died in Alexandria, Va., on June 16, 1977, but he had become a U.S. citizen April 15, 1955.

Vernher Maximillian von Braun