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    • Robert was their only child

      • Goddard was born in Worcester, Massachusetts to Nahum Danford Goddard (1859–1928) and Fannie Louise Hoyt (1864–1920). Robert was their only child to survive; a younger son, Richard Henry, was born with a spinal deformity and died before his first birthday.
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  2. Goddard was born in Worcester, Massachusetts to Nahum Danford Goddard (1859–1928) and Fannie Louise Hoyt (1864–1920). Robert was their only child to survive; a younger son, Richard Henry, was born with a spinal deformity and died before his first birthday.

  3. Goddard was born in 1882 in Worcester, Massachusetts, to Nahum Danford Goddard (1859–1928) and Fannie Louise Hoyt (1864–1920). Robert was their only child to survive; a younger son, Richard Henry, was born with a spinal deformity, and died before his first birthday.

  4. Jan 7, 2020 · Robert H. Goddard was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, on 5th October 1882. His parents were Nahum Danford Goddard and Fannie Louise Hoyt. They also had another child who unfortunately passed away due to a spinal deformity before his first birthday.

  5. Robert Goddard was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, the only child of Nahum Danford Goddard and Fannie Louise Hoyt. As the age of electric power began to take shape in U.S. cities in the 1880s, the young Goddard became interested in science.

    • Was Robert H Goddard an only child?1
    • Was Robert H Goddard an only child?2
    • Was Robert H Goddard an only child?3
    • Was Robert H Goddard an only child?4
    • Early Life
    • Research with Rockets
    • Goddard and The Press
    • Later Career
    • Death and Legacy
    • Honors
    • Sources

    Robert Goddard was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, on October 5, 1882, to farmer Nahum Goddard and Fannie Louise Hoyt. He was sickly as a child, but had a telescope and often spent time studying the sky. He eventually became interested in science, particularly the mechanics of flight. His discovery of Smithsonianmagazine and articles by flight ex...

    Robert Goddard began writing about rockets while he was still an undergraduate. After getting his Ph.D., he focused on studying the atmosphere using rockets to lift instruments high enough to take temperature and pressure readings. His desire to study the upper atmosphere drove him to experiment with rockets as a possible delivery technology. Godda...

    Although Goddard's groundbreaking work garnered scientific interest, his early experiments were criticized by the press as being too fanciful. Notably, however, much of this press coverage contained scientific inaccuracies. The most famous example appeared on January 20, 1920, in The New York Times. The article mocked Goddard's predictions that roc...

    Goddard continued his work on rockets throughout the 1920s and 30s, still fighting for recognition of the potential of his work by the U.S. government. Eventually, he moved his operations to Roswell, NM, and with financial backing from the Guggenheim family, he was able to carry out more rocket research. In 1942, Goddard and his team moved to Annap...

    Throughout his life, Robert H. Goddard remained on the research faculty at Clark University. After World War II, he joined the American Rocket Society and its board of directors. However, his health was deteriorating, and he died on August 10, 1945. He was buried in Worcester, Massachusetts. Goddard's wife, Esther Christine Kisk, gathered his paper...

    Robert H. Goddard may not have been honored fully during his lifetime, but his legacy lives on in many places. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) is named after him, as are several schools across the U.S. He amassed 214 patents for his work during his lifetime, with 131 being awarded after he died. There are streets and a park that bear his ...

    “Robert Hutchings Goddard Biographical Note." Archives and Special Collections, Clark University. www2.clarku.edu/research/archives/goddard/bio_note.cfm.
    Garner, Rob. “Dr. Robert H. Goddard, American Rocketry Pioneer.” NASA, NASA, 11 Feb. 2015,www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/about/history/dr_goddard.html.
    "Lemelson-MIT Program.” Edmund Cartwright | Lemelson-MIT Program, lemelson.mit.edu/resources/robert-h-goddard.
    Petersen, Carolyn Collins. Space Exploration: Past, Present, Future. Amberley, 2017.
    • Carolyn Collins Petersen
  6. Goddard was the only child of a bookkeeper, salesman, and machine-shop owner of modest means. The boy had a genteel upbringing and in early youth felt the excitement of the post-Civil War Industrial Revolution when Worcester factories were producing machinery and goods for the burgeoning country.

  7. Here Goddard spent his youth, an only child in a home with an invalid mother suffering from tuberculosis. He himself was often sickly, and his schooling was seriously impeded as a result. Robert was seventeen when the family returned to Worcester.

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