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Marshall Space Flight Center

Aerial view of the test area at Marshall Space Flight Center
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Aerial view of the test area at Marshall Space Flight Center

The George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) is a lead NASA center for propulsion, Space Shuttle propulsion, external fuel tank, crew training and payloads, International Space Station (ISS) design and construction, for computers, networks, and information management. The center also contains one of the Shuttle mission operation centers known as the HOSC where some mission and pre-missions operations are controlled.

The Huntsville Operations Support Center (HOSC) is a facility which supports Space Shuttle launch activities at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The HOSC also monitors rocket launches from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station when a Marshall Center payload is on board.

MSFC arose from the U.S. Army's Ballistic Missile Agency (ABMA, later the AOMC) centered at Redstone Arsenal. The transition from military to Civilian space exploration came when President Dwight D. Eisenhower announced on site the formation of the National Aeronautics and Space Agency (NASA) on July 1, 1960. At this time Marshall also received its name and a bronze bust of the General from the President. The center became the civilian base for Dr. Wernher von Braun, his team of German rocket scientists and a large host of military and civilian contractors.

Ceremony of transfer from Army to NASA
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Ceremony of transfer from Army to NASA

Historical projects include the Hermes, an early U.S. adaptation of the German V-2, the Jupiter-C, used to launch the Explorer I satellite, the Redstone rocket, the ABMA/AOMC to NASA transition vehicle used in the ballistic missile program and the Mercury space program, the Juno, the Atlas, with the US Air Force used in the ballistic missile program and the Mercury and Gemini space program, the Titan, also used for Gemini, the Saturn series (I-V), used in the Apollo and Skylab programs. Modern boosters include the Space Shuttle liquid and solid propellant engines and the Delta series, used in satellite and Mars mission launches.

Many vestiges of the early programs are still visible around the center, including engine test stands, several of which are shown in the photo to the right.

Located on the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, the center was named in honor of General George Marshall.

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North Alabama, USA landmarks

Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical UniversityAlabama Music Hall of FameAthens State UniversityBig Spring ParkBraly StadiumBuck's Pocket State ParkCalhoun Community College SystemCathedral Caverns State ParkCooks Natural Science MuseumCotaco Opera HouseCummings Research ParkDancy-Polk HouseDecatur-Courtland-Tuscumbia RailroadDelano ParkFlint CreekHampton CoveHuntsville International AirportHuntsville-Madison County Botanical GardenHuntsville Madison County Public LibraryHuntsville Museum of ArtJ.F. Drake State Community CollegeJoe Davis StadiumJoe Wheeler State ParkLake GuntersvilleMarshall Space Flight CenterMcEntire HouseMonte Sano State ParkOakwood CollegeOld State BankPoint Mallard Aquatic CenterPort of DecaturPrincess TheatrePryor Field Regional AirportRacking Horse World Celebration and ArenaRedstone ArsenalRhodes Ferry ParkTennessee RiverUniversity of Alabama at HuntsvilleUniversity of North AlabamaUS Space and Rocket CenterVon Braun CenterWheeler LakeWheeler National Wildlife RefugeWilson Lake

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