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The Long Space Age




  THE LONG SPACE AGE

  THE LONG SPACE AGE

  The Economic Origins of Space Exploration from Colonial America to the Cold War

  Alexander MacDonald

  Published with assistance from the foundation established in memory of James Wesley Cooper of the Class of 1865, Yale College.

  Copyright © 2017 by Alexander MacDonald.

  All rights reserved.

  This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, including illustrations, in any form (beyond that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publishers.

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  Set in Galliard Old Style and Copperplate 33 BC types by Westchester Publishing Services.

  Printed in the United States of America.

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2016952701

  ISBN 978-0-300-21932-6 (cloth : alk. paper)

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  This paper meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (Permanence of Paper).

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  FOR THOMAS AND SUSAN MACDONALD

  CONTENTS

  Acknowledgments

  Introduction

  1 Piety, Pioneers, and Patriots: The First American Observatories

  2 Public Spirit and Patronage: American Observatories

  3 Spaceflight, Millionaires, and National Defense: Robert Goddard’s Fund-Raising Program

  4 In the Eyes of the World: The Signaling Value of Space Exploration

  The Next Space Patrons

  Notes

  Index

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Although short compared to the journeys undertaken by some of the explorers of the heavens covered in this book, the path to the finished product here has included its fair share of wandering and exploration. The work for this book—begun in Canada, furthered in the United Kingdom, and finished in the United States—has been conducted at more libraries, coffee shops, cabins, hotel rooms, and apartments than I can remember. I have been fortunate, however, to have been propelled along the way by the support of a large number of mentors, friends, and colleagues, and I would like to hereby acknowledge their indispensable assistance.

  I first and foremost acknowledge the support of General Pete Worden, who shaped and encouraged my nascent interest in this subject from our first meeting in Vancouver, Canada, over a decade ago and later allowed me an opportunity to experience the complexities of American space exploration firsthand. I cannot thank him enough for his support, kindness, and friendship. I am also forever indebted to Professor Avner Offer for his sage advice over many years, which helped structure my investigation and argument. Whether because of or in spite of his view that space exploration is an example of resource misallocation from a public-choice perspective, his advice was particularly insightful, and I am thankful to have been able to benefit from his wisdom and wit.

  Discussions with Professors Knick Harley, Roy MacLeod, Charles Fox, Robert Grant, Jane Humphries, Allan Chapman, David Edgerton, Nicholas Dimsdale, and Keith Mason helped set the mold into which this effort was ultimately poured. For Alan Green a special thanks is reserved, for it was his lectures, insight, and dedicated mentorship that initially drew me to the field of economic history. He was also the first—and very nearly the only—economic historian who supported the idea of investigating the economic history of the space program. Thanks are due to Frank Lewis, Marvin McGuinness, Ian Keay at Queen’s University in Ontario, and Mauricio Drelichman at the University of British Columbia, who all helped guide my early interest in economic history. The support and encouragement provided by Tom Reilly, Jackie and Mike Bezos, and the TED Fellows program have also been truly incomparable.

  I would especially like to acknowledge the many friends and colleagues that have sharpened thought and provided new avenues for research over the years through our conversations. Jacob Foster, Sean Gourley, John Karcz, Pete Klupar, Creon Levit, and Kevin Parkin all stand out as having provided particularly valuable insights and critique. Special thanks go to Holly Loubert for providing helpful feedback and early inspiration. I am also especially grateful for the companionship, encouragement, and enthusiastic editorial pen of Morgan Matson.

  The quick wit and friendship of Susan MacTavish Best has also provided much support, including the use of her fine cabin in Mill Valley, which was the scene of a critical writing phase. For Eric Berlow I am also thankful, as he kindly allowed me the use of his peaceful retreats, both in Wawona and Swall Meadows, where the book picked up its final momentum.

  Another major debt of gratitude is also owed to the many librarians and scholars who have helped make this work possible. Librarians who have helped with this research include Fordyce Williams of the Clark University Archives and Special Collections, the staff of the Caltech Archives, the staff at the NASA Headquarters Archives, and the staff at the NASA Ames Research Center Library. Advice and encouragement from a number of NASA historians has also been helpful, most especially that of Bill Barry, Glenn Bugos, Steven Dick, Christian Geltzer, and Roger Launius. I am also immensely grateful for and humbled by the foundation of scholarship produced by the many scholars of economic history and the histories of astronomy, technology, and spaceflight on which this work has been built.

  Wholehearted thanks go to Joe Calamia for his enthusiasm and encouragement of the project as editor, to Kate Davis for her indefatigable copyediting and fact-checking, as well as to the rest of the staff of Yale University Press who helped transform the initial manuscript into the final product.

  Finally, I am forever indebted to my parents, Tom MacDonald and Susan MacDonald, for having taught me so much—including a love of history and exploration—and for having provided such unsurpassed support for so many years.

  THE LONG SPACE AGE

  INTRODUCTION

  And what would be the purpose of all this? For those who have never known the relentless urge to explore and discover, there is no answer. For those who have felt this urge, the answer is self-evident.

  —Hermann Oberth, Man into Space, 1957

  The rise of private-sector spaceflight and American billionaires pursuing their ambitions in space seems to be a new phenomenon. After the origin of space exploration as a government enterprise during the Cold War Space Age, entrepreneurs and individuals have become a new force on the scene and are increasingly the drivers behind some of the most prominent space activities. In the Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union developed intercontinental ballistic missiles to deliver their nuclear warheads, creating the technology for satellites and spaceflight vehicles. The race into space then became an important dimension of the Cold War as the two superpowers competed vigorously to be the first to claim prestigious spaceflight achievements, culminating in an American victory with the successful expedition of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to the surface of the Moon. After the unmatched success of the Apollo program, with no political need for further spectaculars, NASA was downsized, spaceflight was confined to low-Earth orbit, and further exploration was confined to robots. Since then, NASA spaceflight projects have continued to advance our knowledge of the solar system and the universe but have also become associated with cost overruns, expensive failures, and the deaths of fourteen American astronauts in the space shuttle Challenger and space shuttle Columbia accidents. With the Cold War over, the space shuttle retired, and no political urgency for major new space exploration activities, the momentum
of the Space Age appears to have run its course, and we are entering a new era in which space exploration may become for the first time the domain of private individuals.

  This is the conventional narrative of American space history in the media, as well as in historical scholarship.1 It is also a narrative that results from an almost exclusive focus on governmental activities and thus misleadingly equates their relative rise and fall over time with the long-run history of American space exploration as a whole. There are indications that space exploration may be undergoing a period of revitalization, driven in part by the investments and motivations of wealthy Americans and entrepreneurs and in part by institutional transformations within government space programs. Investments by prominent contemporary American billionaires, such as Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos—each of whom has established his own privately held spaceflight company—have created new space capabilities, often in coordination with governmental programs and ambitions but also driven by their personal capital and motivations. Although these efforts are too recent to be subjected to historical analysis, it was from an interest in understanding the historical origins of private-sector space exploration that this book originated, and it is in hopes of better understanding the potential and pitfalls of those activities that it aims to provide a long-run historical perspective. These private-sector initiatives have been deeply contentious within the American space community, and the argument continues over their relative importance and appropriate role in the formation of national space policy. Regardless of one’s personal views on the desirability of private-sector spaceflight capabilities, if we want to understand their emergence within their broader historical context, we need to examine the long-run economic history and relative importance of private funding in the development of American space exploration.

  Again, according to the conventional narrative, it was public investment that created the Space Age, with private companies serving principally as government contractors and with private investment largely eschewing space exploration activities in favor of communications and remote sensing satellite applications. Although several billionaires, entrepreneurs, and private equity investors have, since the 1980s, devoted their intellectual efforts and money to the development of private spaceflight capabilities, their investments pale in comparison to NASA’s billions of dollars of public expenditures on similar endeavors over the same period of time. The overwhelmingly governmental history of the Space Age within the context of the conventional narrative thus seems to confirm that private-sector space efforts are a novel and marginal phenomenon in the American space enterprise.

  In this book, I will argue that this typical narrative is misleading; if we look at the history of American space exploration on a longer timescale, a very different history emerges—one in which personal initiative and private funding is the dominant trend and government funding is a recent one. The long-run history thus turns the conventional wisdom on its head: it is the governmental leadership of space exploration that is the more recent phenomenon, while the resurgence of private-sector space efforts in the early twenty-first century represents a return to an earlier pattern. This is the perspective that emerges when we frame the conventional mid-twentieth-century Space Age as only one phase of a Long Space Age that stretches back to the discovery of the telescope.

  From one perspective, this book continues work by people such as science writer Willy Ley, who, in his seminal 1950 The Conquest of Space, made astronomy and spaceflight part of a unified narrative, with the spaceship presented as the next logical step in the progress of astronomy.2 But within the context of the analytical literature on space history and space policy, this book is unique in both its long-run view and economic perspective. I believe this perspective is justified: the American astronomical observatories of the nineteenth century are considered as projects from an earlier phase of American space exploration, effectively equivalent in motivation and purpose—and in relative economic importance within their respective historical contexts—to robotic space missions to the planets in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Although the technology involved is different, they are each relatively complex, capital-intensive projects motivated by desires to explore the heavens. The telescope and the spaceship are thus, in this view, both instruments of space exploration. Examining these endeavors together as part of a continuum of space exploration activities—and using a consistent set of metrics to compare the costs of these space exploration instruments and projects—allows us to identify the underlying economic patterns and trends that remain obscure in space histories that are confined only to spaceflight during the unique circumstances of the Cold War and its aftermath.

  A comprehensive history of the Long Space Age would be the work of a lifetime, so I emphasize three pivotal moments and movements in the development of American space exploration that are spread across two centuries. I chose the subjects to be specific enough to allow for contributions to be made to existing literatures but also important enough in the overall historical narrative that, when considered together, they present a new perspective on the long-run history of American space exploration.

  The first of these subjects is the development of astronomical observatories—the first instruments of American space exploration—from the beginning of the nineteenth century to the middle of the twentieth. This subject, as with the broader history of American astronomy, is a critical part of the story, and its integration in economic terms provides empirical meaning to the concept of the Long Space Age. In the first half of the nineteenth century, American astronomical observatories were instruments for the personal exploration of the planets and the stars and were as well monuments of civic development. Their value was often more symbolic than scientific, and they represented significant expenditures for the individuals and communities that undertook them. Their costs were equivalent, in modern terms, to small robotic NASA probes. The cost of these facilities grew in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, with the Lick, Mount Wilson, and Palomar Observatories representing major, billion-dollar equivalent investments in space exploration capabilities. These early American observatories were predominantly privately funded. Of the over forty observatories investigated, only two were built with significant government support. The motivations that dominated the financing of these “light-houses of the sky” were personal ones: intrinsic interest in the heavens and scientific curiosity, or the desire to signal status through monuments and legacies. This earliest period of American space exploration was thus one with an overridingly private context, with social entrepreneurs like Ormsby MacKnight Mitchel and George Ellery Hale selling the mystique and adventure of the heavens to the wealthy elite and the general public.

  The second subject, Robert Goddard, is a case study for the interplay between private and public fund-raising and between spaceflight for scientific exploration and national defense. The American “father of liquid-fuel rocketry,” Goddard had a career that constituted the world’s first spaceflight development program. This book will provide an economic analysis of Goddard’s life and I hope provide new insight into Goddard’s motivations and financial strategy for long-run space development. Goddard was not only the first to achieve flight with a liquid-fuel rocket, he was the first to earn significant funding for spaceflight research. As with the earliest American astronomical observatories, the majority of his over $70 million (2015 GDP-ratio equivalent) funding was raised from private and semipublic sources—from the philanthropic funds provided by James Smithson, Thomas Hodgkins, Frederick Cottrell, Andrew Carnegie, Daniel Guggenheim, and Harry Guggenheim. Goddard’s largest single source of support was the result of the patronage of individuals—Harry Guggenheim and Charles Abbot—who shared in his vision of a future of space travel. Though it was largely private funding that allowed Goddard to make the substantial progress that he did, he also believed that the resources required to develop the first orbital launch vehicles would vastly exceed what private individuals were li
kely to provide. As a result, Goddard shared with his contemporaries, Wernher von Braun in Germany and Sergei Korolev in Russia, a belief that military funding provided the key to the development of spaceflight, and he enthusiastically and persistently pursued U.S. military funding throughout his life. He was so committed to transacting this Faustian bargain that he would work with the Chemical Warfare Service on gas warfare applications and would later leave the security and long-standing patronage of the Guggenheim family in pursuit of a major military rocket development contract in the Second World War. An economic analysis of Goddard’s career thus situates the motivating force of space history at the level of the individual, with the spaceflight developer willing and able to manipulate external demands, particularly in the military, in order to achieve his interplanetary objectives.

  The third subject is the recent Space Age itself (circa 1950 onward). Unlike the earlier privately led phase of space exploration, it was the large-scale political demand for spaceflight that provided the driving economic force of the Cold War space race. The political history of this period has dominated the history of spaceflight and has given it an overwhelming governmental and public-sector focus, relegating the earlier history of private-sector support to the footnotes and sidelines. However, as with the largest privately funded observatories in the nineteenth century, the driving motivation for the provision of funds was a desire to signal status and capability through monumental achievement—this time at a national scale rather than the city or individual level at which earlier space exploration projects had operated. This vantage of signaling status and capability places pursuits such as the space shuttle, Space Station Freedom, and the International Space Station in the same tradition that dictated America’s desire to go to the Moon.