Dr. Werner von Braun
From 1961 to 1972 the United States space program had one main goal, land men on the moon and return them back to the Earth safely. The stories of the men and their missions are well known. The images they took while in space and on the moon are some of the most spectacular photo's ever taken. But what got them there and who designed it? Without the Saturn V rocket those men would have never made it out of Earth orbit.

Saturn V, including the Apollo spacecraft was 363 feet tall and fully loaded, the vehicle weighed more then 6 million pounds.
If you car gets 15 miles to the gallon, you could drive 18 million miles or around the world about 400 times on the propellants required for the Apollo/Saturn lunar landing mission. The Saturn V launch vehicle contains 5.6 million pounds of propellant (or 960,000 gallons).
The engines of the Saturn V launch vehicle that will propel the Apollo spacecraft to the moon have combined horsepower equivalent to 543 jet fighters.
The first stage has five F-1 engines, each one of which will produce 1.5 million pounds of thrust for a combined thrust of 7.5 million pounds. The F-1's fuel pumps push fuel with the force of 30 diesel locomotives.
The five F-1 engines equal 160,000,000 horsepower, about double the amount of potential hydroelectric power that would be available at any given moment if all the moving waters of North America were channeled through turbines.
The tanks which hold the cryogenic (ultra-cold) liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen on the Apollo spacecraft come close to being the only leak-free vessels ever built. If an automobile tire leaked at the same rate that these tanks do, it would take the tire 32,400,000 years to go flat.
Who created this massive rocket? Dr. Werner von Braun.

QUOTE
Wernher von Braun (1912–1977) 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, and from the science fact writings of Hermann Oberth, whose 1923 classic study, Die Rakete zu den Planetenräumen (By Rocket to Space), prompted young von Braun to master calculus and trigonometry so he could understand the physics of rocketry. 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 aerospace engineering on July 27, 1934.
The photo below shows Dr. von Braun with a broken arm surrendering to U.S. Army intelligence officers at the end of World War II.

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Saturn V photos and information from http://www.apollosaturn.com/
