16. Max Valier was an early rocketman who died when one of his own machines blew up in his face
The Austrian Max Valier dreamed of traveling between Berlin and New York City in just one hour. What’s more, even though he was born in 1895, as a young man, he even looked forward to the day that mankind would fly a rocket to the moon, or even to Mars. The Austrian himself only ever flew over the battlefields of Belgium, serving as an aerial observer during the First World War. When peace returned to Europe, Valier abandoned his studies and focused his efforts on science journalism. He wanted to bring the wonders of science to the wider public – and he believed rocket-powered cars were a great way of getting attention.
In the late-1920s, Valier teamed up with the automobile tycoon Fritz von Opel. The industrialist allowed the inventor to fit solid-fuel rocket motors onto his cars. Then, in 1930, Valier carried out the first test drive of a rocket car with liquid propulsion. But while he survived the high speeds, he ended up being killed in his laboratory when one of his rockets suddenly exploded. Valier is still remembered as a true scientific pioneer in his native Austria. What’s more, the German ‘Spaceflight Society’ he set up as a young man brought together many of the geniuses who went on to make trips to the moon a reality.