Father of Canadian rocketry dies

A moment of silence, please, for Albert Fia, father of Canadian rocketry, who developed the still-used Black Brant research rockets in the early 1960s.

Permanent link to this article: https://edwardwillett.com/2004/06/father-of-canadian-rocketry-dies/

1 comments

    • Anonymous on December 7, 2004 at 9:55 pm
    • Reply

    I worked under Al Fia from 1969 to 1974. I was the assistant Vehicle Engineer on Black Brant III’s. It was a great time. We launched Rockets out of Resolute Bay in support of all the manned Apollo flights to the moon. We later flew rockets out of Wallops Island Virgin in support of the Skylab project. This was naturally in addition to all the Upper Atmospheric Research launches out of Churchill, Gillim, Cape Perry not to mention the solar eclipse shots out of East Quoddy Nova Scotia, Hawaii, Australia, etc.

    It was the golden time of Bristol Aerospace (1968) Ltd. They had the best of the best in their Rocket Group and Al Fia was the leader… great man.
    Bryan Reid

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