Marshall HistoryIn this picture, negotiations are under way between officials of the Army Ballistic Missile Agency (ABMA) and the National Aeronautics...President Dwight D. Eisenhower visited Huntsville to formally dedicate NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center. The center was named in honor...Dr. Wernher von Braun (right) briefs President Dwight D. Eisenhower (center) on a model of the Saturn I vehicle at...In 1964, Ann R. McNair and Mary Jo Smith pose with a model of a Pegasus Satellite.In 1965, technicians at NASA's Kennedy Space Center attached the Pegasus C satellite to the SA-10 Instrument Unit, S-IU-10, following...In 1961, NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center engineers readied the first stage of the Saturn I rocket for checkout in...Dr. Wernher von Braun, Director of the Marshall Space Flight Center, explains the purpose of a thermal curtain in the...In this November 1971 photograph, (from left to right) Astronauts John Young, Eugene Cernan, Charles Duke, Fred Haise, Anthony England,...During the Apollo era, Dr. Alice K. (Joyce) Neighbors was part of the technical staff in the Guidance and Control...This photograph was taken at the Redstone airfield, Huntsville, Alabama, during the unloading of the Saturn V S-IVB stage that...This photograph was taken during testing of an emergency procedure to free jammed solar array panels on the Skylab workshop....In June 1975, Marshall management named Clyde Foster to the position of director of the Equal Opportunity Office where he...This week in 1978, the High Energy Astronomy Observatory 2 was launched from NASA's Kennedy Space Center aboard an Atlas-Centaur...Spacelab-3 launched aboard STS-51B, with the major science objective being to perform engineering tests on two new facilities: the rodent...This close-up of astronaut and mission specialist, Kathryn Thornton, was captured under water in the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)...Launched on June 20, 1996, the STS-78 mission’s primary payload was the Life and Microgravity Spacelab (LMS), which was managed...