Founders
Episode 164 #164 Robert Goddard (Rocket Man)
Founders

Episode 164: #164 Robert Goddard (Rocket Man)

Founders

Episode 164

#164 Robert Goddard (Rocket Man)

David Senra is the host of Founders, where he studies history's greatest entrepreneurs. This is what he learned from reading Rocket Man: Robert Goddard and the Birth of the Space Age by David A. Clary.

What I learned from reading Rocket Man: Robert Goddard and the Birth of the Space Age by David A. Clary. 

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[18:16] For even though I reasoned with myself that the thing was impossible, there was something inside me which simply would not stop working.  

[20:08] Anything is possible with the man who makes the best use of every minute of his time. 

[20:18] There are limitless opportunities open to the man who appreciates the fact that his own mind is the sole key that unlocks them.  

[32:55] It’s appalling how short life is and how much there is to do. We have to be sports, take chances, and do what we can. 

[35:57] There were limits to Goddard’s ability as a salesman, beginning with his failure to determine the interests of his potential customers.  

[44:18] Goddard must be given his due. The first flight of a liquid-propelled rocket may not have looked like much but nothing like it had ever happened on Earth before.  

[50:28] He explained his work was aimed at high-altitude research, not outer space. The Wright Brothers, he reminded his audience, did not try to cross The Atlantic the first time up.  

[52:32] Emerson says, “If a man paint a better picture, preach a better sermon, or build a better mousetrap than anyone else, the world will make a beaten path to his door.” I have had the misfortune not to be an artist, a preacher, or a manufacturer of mousetraps. I have never had any great talent for selling ideas.  

[59:27]  A boy of exceptional brilliance, of humble origins and poor health, who dreamed great dreams and pursued them throughout a dedicated life. He was a distinguished but absentminded professor, a saintly man of rich humor, an enthusiastic piano player and painter, loved by everybody who knew him. Although his own country failed to appreciate the importance of what he did, he continued in his work despite widespread ridicule and the attempts of others to steal it. He never complained, never evinced discouragement or frustration. Above all, he never gave up. 

[1:04:04]  Goddard was a complex and inscrutable individual. He had many admirable qualities, chief among them the patience, persistence, and iron will that helped him to overcome tuberculosis, then to pursue rocketry for three decades. Seldom expressing frustration or discouragement, he accepted failure as part of invention, and kept on working. 

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#164 Robert Goddard (Rocket Man)

Introduction

"Frank Browning ceased to exist at 6:43 p.m. on Friday, September 8, 1944. The Street erupted as he walked down Staveley Road in London, smashing the houses on both sides and killing him instantly. Rescue squads found one other dead and 20 injured in the rubble of their houses, which surrounded a crater 30-feet wide and 10-feet deep in the center of the concrete roadway."

"So began Nazi Germany's V-2 campaign, a barrage of stratospheric ballistic missiles bearing one-ton bombs. They dropped without warning. They were remarkably sophisticated machines, powered by liquid fuel rockets and guided by gyroscopes and tail fins. How had America's enemy develop such a monstrous contraption? The answer was not long in coming."

"On January 19, 1945, the new service of the National Geographic Society in Washington, D.C. told the world that the fiendish Germans had stolen the whole idea from an American. The V-2 was a larger copy of designs worked out before the war by Dr. Robert H. Goddard, a physicist working in isolation near Roswell, New Mexico. So closely do the mechanical features of the V-2 parallel the American projectile, that some physicists think that Germans may have actually copied most of the design, said the report. Most of these features were patented by Dr. Goddard between 1914 and 1932."

"It was a perfect wartime picture: strutting Nazis contrasted with a modest American inventor, pilfering his peaceful efforts to explore the upper atmosphere in order to bring death and terror to innocent Allied civilians. The story spread far and wide, and it endured. Goddard himself did not; dying the following August. His obituaries credited him with inventing nearly everything to do with rocketry, and with being the real inventor of the V-2."

"He had been supported in his labors by Charles Lindbergh, perhaps the most famous human on the planet. He participated in Allied examination of the German aviation and rocket programs after the Germans surrendered in May 1945 and co-authored a scathing report claiming that with weapons such as the V-2, the Nazis had come close to winning the war. It was time for the American government to stop neglecting visionary geniuses like Goddard and start embracing the technology of the future."

"To that end, Lindbergh secured a consultant's position to advise the government in rocketry and space research. When the Chief of the Air Force asked Lindbergh what he hoped to gain? Lindbergh pointed out that while the Army was preparing to steal the Nazi missile systems, it should acknowledge that many vital features of them were of American origin. Lindbergh wanted only one thing in return for his work: justice for Bob Goddard." "Who was Goddard? And what justice was owed to him?"

That was an excerpt from the book that I'm going to talk to you about today, which is Rocket Man: Robert H. Goddard and the Birth of the Space Age, and it was written by David A. Clary. And this is another example of a book that I only found because a listener recommended that I read it. I want to put it into context with the larger discussion we have, and I want to tie this to another entrepreneur that we've studied extensively in this podcast, and that's Jeff Bezos all the way back, I think it might be Founders 38, somewhere in there. I read the book called The Space Barons. And that book, what I focused on in doing that podcast was mainly the differing strategies that Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos were using to accomplish similar goals. And it's in that book that we hear of Jeff Bezos' admiration for Goddard, so I want to read an excerpt from that book before I jump back into this one.

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