THE WEIRD WORLD OF AIRSHIPS
How It Works UK|Issue 176
Pioneering aircraft that captured the imagination of a generation, airships have a brief but action-packed history
PETER WOLFGANG PRICE
THE WEIRD WORLD OF AIRSHIPS

The accepted future of air travel today is firmly in the hands of planes, but at the end of the 19th century it was airships that held the keys to the sky. Floating leisurely above the clouds, the story of these craft has often been forgotten and sidelined in favour of fixed-wing aviation achievements, but remains a key part of humanity's history of flight.

BALLOONMANIA STRIKES EUROPE

1784

Jean Pierre Blanchard was a Frenchman who dreamed of flight. The owner of an inquisitive mind, he unsuccessfully attempted to develop manual-powered aeroplanes and helicopters before finding fame with another aviation idea: hot-air balloons. In March 1784, Blanchard first took to the skies in a homemade balloon, a year after the first successful balloon flight by the Montgolfier brothers. In 1785 he teamed up with an American physician, Dr John Jeffries, and lifting off from Dover Castle flew over the English Channel to France. The journey took a leisurely two-and-a-half hours and was a world first. Blanchard's flights triggered 'balloonmania' among the public, with all manner of balloon memorabilia being produced. However, Blanchard would suffer an unfortunate end when he had a heart attack mid-air in 1808. Plummeting 15 metres to the ground caused massive injury that he would never recover from, and he died the next year.

A CHANGE IN DIRECTION

1852

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