The WAC Corporal was the first sounding rocket developed in the United States and the first vehicle to achieve hypersonic speeds. It was an offshoot of the Corporal program, that was started by a partnership between the United States Army Ordnance Corps and the California Institute of Technology in June 1944 with the ultimate goal of developing a military ballistic missile.
JPL director Frank Malina with a WAC Corporal rocket (minus the solid-fuel boosters)
WAC Corporal on display at the White Sands Missile Range Museum
WAC Corporal on display at the National Air and Space Museum
The MGM-5 Corporal missile was a nuclear-armed tactical surface-to-surface missile. It was the first guided weapon authorized by the United States to carry a nuclear warhead. A guided tactical ballistic missile, the Corporal could deliver either a nuclear fission, high-explosive, fragmentation or chemical warhead up to a range of 75 nautical miles (139 km).
Corporal field artillery missile at Cape Canaveral, Florida, the Air Force Space & Missile Museum
Corporal of the Royal Artillery in West Germany
Tracking radar antenna on South Uist 1962