My father worked at Rocketdyne, and Rockwell international along with NASA He helped put the man on the moon, and also the shuttlecraft into space. I’m not gonna go into all the details, but when he died, he had stacks and stacks and stacks of documents and original schematics from the original shuttlecraft, and the material that they had to create to be able to allow the shuttle to reenter the atmosphere. He did that.
The stuff I found was amazing. All hand typed, because They didn’t have computers back then. You can explain anything away any which way you want to, but I have all of the documentation, and nobody will be able to tell me any different.
Before he worked for Rocketdyne, and NASA, he was in the army and stationed in area 51 White Sands. Also, a sidenote… He retired in a location call Tehachapi, California. It’s about 45 minutes from China Lake. We had some interesting old codgers come bye when we were selling off the machine shop. Some had actually worked at the China Lake facility.
My great grandfather worked on the Manhattan project as well. I didn’t know anything about it until my father died, and I found articles that were in the newspaper, and there were some type of memorial made out of laminate. It had some of that glass sand in it, and stated what it was from. It was from the original blast that they did. The discovery of the atomic bomb!
My great grandfather was also a 3 second° Mason. We found his sword, with some of my dad‘s other personal belongings. I still have it. Same one that worked on the Manhattan project.
My grandmother did a genealogy on our family, and apparently we’re related to George Washington as well. She was the president of the daughters of the American Revolution, DAR, for the studio city California chapter.
So if you wanna go down the conspiracy theory rabbit hole. Look no further. All I had to do was look at my fathers closet!!! Lol!
The kicker is this. When my dad died, my brother came into town. He lives out of the country, so he didn’t wanna take a lot of large items with him, of which we had many. However he took the Manhattan project Memorial laminate with him. Guess where he lives… Drumroll… JAPAN! Yep!
When I go back out to my moms, I’ll take a few pictures and I’ll DM them to you maybe we can figure this out together! I have pictures and pictures and pictures of different rocket engines and divert engines- that they worked on, and some of the little prototypes. The math calculations alone are mind-boggling
One part of the rocket engine I actually took it to a metal recycling location. In Los Angeles. This place was an entire block long. There was all kinds of raw material from his machine shop that we were trying to sell. Anyway I asked the guy if he wanted to test this rocket engine part. They have a special gun that they can point at raw material, and it will tell you what it is. He pointed it at the object, and nothing came up and he looked at me kind of strange. He did it two more times, and he told me I don’t know what it was. I just laughed and told him That my dad was a rocket scientist. And then I left. The look on his face was priceless!
My father worked at Rocketdyne, and Rockwell international along with NASA He helped put the man on the moon, and also the shuttlecraft into space. I’m not gonna go into all the details, but when he died, he had stacks and stacks and stacks of documents and original schematics from the original shuttlecraft, and the material that they had to create to be able to allow the shuttle to reenter the atmosphere. He did that.
The stuff I found was amazing. All hand typed, because They didn’t have computers back then. You can explain anything away any which way you want to, but I have all of the documentation, and nobody will be able to tell me any different.
Before he worked for Rocketdyne, and NASA, he was in the army and stationed in area 51 White Sands. Also, a sidenote… He retired in a location call Tehachapi, California. It’s about 45 minutes from China Lake. We had some interesting old codgers come bye when we were selling off the machine shop. Some had actually worked at the China Lake facility.
My great grandfather worked on the Manhattan project as well. I didn’t know anything about it until my father died, and I found articles that were in the newspaper, and there were some type of memorial made out of laminate. It had some of that glass sand in it, and stated what it was from. It was from the original blast that they did. The discovery of the atomic bomb!
My great grandfather was also a 3 second° Mason. We found his sword, with some of my dad‘s other personal belongings. I still have it. Same one that worked on the Manhattan project.
My grandmother did a genealogy on our family, and apparently we’re related to George Washington as well. She was the president of the daughters of the American Revolution, DAR, for the studio city California chapter.
So if you wanna go down the conspiracy theory rabbit hole. Look no further. All I had to do was look at my fathers closet!!! Lol!
The kicker is this. When my dad died, my brother came into town. He lives out of the country, so he didn’t wanna take a lot of large items with him, of which we had many. However he took the Manhattan project Memorial laminate with him. Guess where he lives… Drumroll… JAPAN! Yep!
This is my family!
Yes I do. Stacks and stacks of them.
And it’s a 32 degree Mason!
And I’m not a boy!
When I go back out to my moms, I’ll take a few pictures and I’ll DM them to you maybe we can figure this out together! I have pictures and pictures and pictures of different rocket engines and divert engines- that they worked on, and some of the little prototypes. The math calculations alone are mind-boggling
One part of the rocket engine I actually took it to a metal recycling location. In Los Angeles. This place was an entire block long. There was all kinds of raw material from his machine shop that we were trying to sell. Anyway I asked the guy if he wanted to test this rocket engine part. They have a special gun that they can point at raw material, and it will tell you what it is. He pointed it at the object, and nothing came up and he looked at me kind of strange. He did it two more times, and he told me I don’t know what it was. I just laughed and told him That my dad was a rocket scientist. And then I left. The look on his face was priceless!