Sergei Korolev

Sergei Pavlovich Korolev (Russian: Сергей Павлович Королёв, Ukrainian: Сергі́й Па́влович Корольо́в) (12 January 1907 – 14 January 1966) was a lead Soviet rocket engineer and spacecraft designer during the Space Race between the United States and the Soviet Union in the 1950s and 1960s. He is regarded by many as the father of practical astronautics. He was involved in the development of the R-7 Rocket, Sputnik 1, launching Laika, Sputnik 3, Belka and Strelka, and the first human being, Yuri Gagarin, into space.

Quotes

 * Why congratulate me? We are miners, no one knows our names, we work underground.
 * Response when congratulated with the fifth anniversary of Yuri Gagarin's flight
 * "The Soviet space engineer, Sergey Korolev, who inspires Elon Musk" in ''ABC News (17 October 2021)


 * The further conquest of space will make it possible, for example, to create systems of satellites making daily revolutions around our planet at an altitude of some 40,000 kilometers, and to assure universal communications and the relaying of radio and television transmissions. There is no such thing as an unsolvable problem.
 * "Sputnik 1: Top 10 Things You Should Know"


 * The time will come when a spacecraft carrying human beings will leave the earth and set out on a voyage to distant planets to remote worlds. Today this may seem only an enticing fantasy, but such in fact is not the case. The launching of the first two Soviet Sputniks has already thrown a sturdy bridge from the earth into space, and the way to the stars is open.
 * Abbreviated Lives Tragic Tales of Artists Scientists and Writers, pg. 128 (2022)


 * Anyone can build complicated. Our actions are determined by simplicity.
 * SOS im All. Pannen, Probleme und Katastrophen der bemannten Raumfahrt [SOS in Space. Breakdowns, Problems and Disasters in Manned Spaceflight], pg. 163 (2000)


 * Today the dreams of the best sons of mankind have come true. The assault on space has begun.
 * As quoted in 1957, Red Star in Orbit by James Oberg (1981)











About Sergei Korolev

 * He was one of the very best.
 * Elon Musk, "Elon Musk Invites Family Of Famed Soviet Rocket Scientist To Tour SpaceX" in RFE/RL (11 July 2020)


 * The Soviets deliberately created their own geographic confusion, trying to conceal the location of their manned space center. By 1957, CIA spy planes had spotted the pad near the Central Asian railway station of Tyura-Tam, which CIA analysts proceeded to misspell forever after as "Tyuratam." In 1961, the Soviets, in a vain attempt at ex post facto geographic disinformation, named their launch site "Baikonur," which was itself a clumsy transliteration of Baikonyr, a small mining village hundreds of miles from the space base. When Kazakhstan became autonomous in 1991 and took nominal sovereignty over the spaceport, its leaders began referring to it as "Baikonyr." Perhaps someday the Russians can drop the now- admitted fraud once and for all and name the space base for the man who founded it, Sergei Korolev; then all the world's maps could carry a single -- and honorable -- designation.
 * James Oberg, "OMNI magazine, Pg.38" (May 1993)


 * He was very positive; it was inside him. He tried to attract different people of all levels beginning from the worker. In his work place there was everybody. I worked in the competitive design bureau, but I met with him many times. I have nothing against him, but I had this feeling, which was bringing me to him, because he was the person who could make everybody work for him, and not really pressing them for it.
 * Sergei Khrushchev, "Interview with Dr. Sergei N. Khrushchev" in PBS