The Soviet Union (Russia) was the first country to launch a successful space rocket, the R-7.
On January 31, 1961, the United States launched the Mercury-Redstone 2 rocket into space. A chimp named Ham was aboard the space rocket.
The first Indian rocket launched in space was the Rohini-75, which was launched on August 10, 1979. It marked India's entry into space technology and was a significant milestone for the country's space program.
USSR's Sputnik was the first rocket to go to space successfully probably ade a lot before though.
Germany launched the first rocket into space. This rocket was the first one that actually could "reach space". China was the first one to launch a rocket, but it exploded in midair, lost power and fell, etc... and was more like fireworks or missiles than rockets.Of course, even if it reached space, it didn't get so far.
The first country to launch the first successful manned space flight was Russia. Yuri Gagarin was the first person in space as a result of that achievement.
The Russians put the first satellite into orbit named sputnik.
In 1969, the first rocket went to the moon. The name of the rocket that propelled them into space was the Saturn V rocket.
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Germanylaunched the first rockets into space; the V-2 rockets aimed at England. While they flew through space, they were not "space rockets". The first true space rocket designed to fly in space was Sputnik 1, whichthe Soviet Unionlaunched into space on October 4, 1957. Several earlier attempts by the United States failed to reach orbit.
Goddard did not create a rocket that went into space. He created the first liquid fuel rocket which was which lead to space rockets and for this is known as the father of modern rocketry. The first rocket to reach space was the V2 rocket made by the Germans during World War 2 as a weapon to deliver bombs.
The first rocket to launch into space was the V-2 rocket, developed by Nazi Germany during World War II. The V-2 crossed the boundary between Earth's atmosphere and space on June 20, 1944. It laid the foundation for future space exploration.