BUMP!!!
Thanks! There was also the A9-A10 combination, which was a non-nuclear (because the Nazi a-bomb project was stymied) high explosive warhead, which also had stubby wings and a live pilot (because auto-guidance couldn’t be developed in time for that distance), and sat atop the A10 booster. The rocket would have been fired in Germany, done a suborbital arc, the A9 would have kicked the booster loose, and the pilot would have guided it in, target NYC; once the craft was at low enough altitude for the existing guidance to be sufficient, and to be safe enough for ejection, the pilot would have jumped, chuted down, and been recovered by U-boat.
Had they made an earlier start, it might have been built, and a German would have been the first man in space, during WWII. Having no nuke meant it would have only been a terror weapon (like the V2). The resources needed to prototype, test, and deploy were too enormous for the Reich to spare. So, it never made it off the drawing board.