The credit of the first aerial voyage
made in Great Britain has usually been given to Vincenzo
Lunardi, an Italian. There is ground for believing,
however, that the first balloon voyage was performed
by a Scotchman, as the following extract from Chamber’s
Book of Days will show:-
“It is generally supposed that
Lunardi was the first person who ascended by means
of a balloon in Great Britain, but he certainly was
not. A very poor man, named James Tytler, who
then lived in Edinburgh, supporting himself and family
in the humblest style of garret or cottage life by
the exercise of his pen, had this honour. He
had effected an ascent at Edinburgh on the 27th of
August 1784, just nineteen days previous to Lunardi.
Tytler’s ascent, however, was almost a failure,
by his employing the dangerous and unmanageable Montgolfier
principle. After several ineffectual attempts,
Tytler, finding that he could not carry up his fire-stove
with him, determined, in the maddening desperation
of disappointment, to go without this his sole sustaining
power. Jumping into his car, which was no other
than a common crate used for packing earthenware,
he and the balloon ascended from Comely Garden, and
immediately afterwards fell in the Restalrig Road.
For a wonder, Tytler was uninjured; and though he
did not reach a greater altitude than 300 feet, nor
traverse a greater distance than half a mile, yet
his name must ever be mentioned as that of the first
Briton who ascended with a balloon, and the first
man who ascended in Britain.
“Tytler was the son of a clergyman
of the Church of Scotland, and had been educated as
a surgeon; but being of an eccentric and erratic genius,
he adopted literature as a profession, and was the
principal editor of the first edition of the Encyclopædia
Britannica. Becoming embroiled in politics,
he published a handbill of a seditious tendency, and
consequently was compelled to seek a refuge in America,
where he died in 1805, after conducting a newspaper
at Salem, in New England, for several years.”
The voyage of Vincenzo Lunardi was
made in September 1784. His letters to a friend,
in which he comments on the manners and customs of
the English, are very amusing. His balloon was
of the ordinary spherical shape, made of the best
oiled silk, about 520 yards of which were used in
its construction. It was filled with hydrogen
gas, and provided with car, oars, and wings.
The car consisted simply of a wooden platform surrounded
by a breast high railing, and the oars and wings were
intended, the one to check, by a vertical motion, the
rapidity of descent, and the other to act as sails
when becalmed in the upper regions of cloudland.
He requested permission to make Chelsea Hospital
the scene of his first aerial exploit, and the Governor,
Sir George Howard, with the full approval of His Majesty
King George the Third, gave his consent. He
accordingly made all necessary arrangements for an
ascent, and his fondest expectations seemed about to
be realised. He was, however, doomed to disappointment,
owing to the failure of a rival balloon. Writing
to a friend at this time he says, “The events
of this extraordinary island are as variable as its
climate. It was but lately everything relating
to my undertaking wore a favourable and pleasing appearance,
but I am at this moment overwhelmed with anxiety, vexation,
and despair.”
This rival balloon was constructed
by a Frenchman named De Moret, who, having succeeded
in attracting a concourse of fifty or sixty thousand
people to see his ascent, failed in the primary part
of his undertaking,-that of filling his
balloon. The people, after waiting patiently
for three hours, and supposing “the whole affair
an imposture, rushed in and tore it to pieces.”
In consequence of this failure, and the riots with
which it was followed, the Governor forbade Signor
Lunardi to make his ascent from Chelsea Hospital grounds.
He writes again to his friend, “The national
prejudice of the English against France is supposed
to have its full effect on a subject, from which the
literati of England expect to derive but little
honour. An unsuccessful attempt has been made
by a Frenchman, and my name being that of a foreigner,
a very excusable ignorance in the people may place
me among the adventurers of that nation, who are said
to have sometimes distinguished themselves here by
ingenious impositions.” In vain did he
try to obtain another place to launch his aerial ship;
he was laughed at and ridiculed as an impostor, and
the colleague of De Moret. At length, after
much exertion, he obtained leave to ascend from the
ground of the Honourable Artillery Company.
By twelve o’clock on the day fixed for the ascension,
an immense mass of people had assembled, including
the Prince of Wales. The filling of the balloon
caused some delay, but, in order to keep the patience
of the populace within control, it was only partially
filled. At five minutes past two the balloon
ascended amid the loud acclamations of the assembled
multitudes, and Signor Lunardi had proved himself
no impostor. He writes to his friend, “The
stillness, extent, and magnificence of the scene rendered
it highly awful. My horizon seemed a perfect
circle, the terminating line several hundred miles
in circumference; this I conjectured from the view
of London, the extreme points of which formed an angle
only a few degrees. It was so reduced on the
great scale before me that I can find no simile to
convey an idea of it. I could distinguish Saint
Paul’s and other churches from the houses; I
saw the streets as lines, all animated with beings
whom I knew to be men and women, but which otherwise
I should have had a difficulty in describing.
It was an enormous bee-hive, but the industry of
it was suspended. All the moving mass seemed
to have no object but myself, and the transition from
the suspicion, perhaps contempt, of the preceding
hour, to the affectionate transport, admiration, and
glory of the present moment, was not without its effect
on my mind. It seemed as if I had left below
all the cares and passions that molest mankind.
I had not the slightest sense of motion in the machine;
I knew not whether it went swiftly or slowly, whether
it ascended or descended, whether it was agitated
or tranquil, but by the appearance or disappearance
of objects on the earth. The height had not
the effect which a much less degree of it has near
the earth, that of producing giddiness. The
gradual diminution of objects, and the masses of light
and shade, are intelligible in oblique and common prospects,
but here everything wore a new appearance and had a
new effect. The face of the country had a mild
and permanent verdure, to which Italy is a stranger.
The variety of cultivation and the accuracy with which
property is divided give the idea, ever present to
the stranger in England, of good civil laws and an
equitable administration. The rivulets meandering;
the immense districts beneath me spotted with cities,
towns, villages, and houses, pouring out their inhabitants
to hail my appearance. You will allow me some
merit in not having been exceedingly intoxicated with
my situation.” He descended at North Mimms
about half-past three-o’clock, but wishing to
obtain a second triumph, he threw out the remainder
of his ballast and provisions, landed a cat which
he had taken up with him, and which had suffered severely
from the cold, and again ascended to the regions above.
This time his ascent was more rapid, the thermometer
quickly fell to 29 degrees, and icicles were soon
formed all round his machine. He descended at
twenty minutes past four near Ware in Hertfordshire,
and the balloon being properly secured, the gas was
let out and “nearly poisoned the whole neighbourhood
by the disagreeable stench emitted.” The
success and triumph of this first attempt in aerial
navigation in English air exceeded Signor Lunardi’s
utmost expectations. Everywhere he was received
with marks of approbation, and treated as a hero.
“My fame,” he writes, “has not been
sparingly diffused by the newspapers (which in England
are the barometers of public opinion; often erroneous,
as other instruments are, in their particular information,
but yielding the best that can be obtained).
You will imagine the importance of these vehicles
of knowledge when you learn that in London alone there
are printed no less than 160,000 papers weekly, which,
by a stamp on each paper, and a duty on advertisements,
brings into the treasury of the nation upwards of
80,000 pounds a year. They are to the English
constitution what the Censors were to those of ancient
Rome. Ministers of State are checked and kept
in awe by them, and they freely, and often judiciously,
expose the pretensions of those who would harass Government
merely to be taken into its service.”
There were many other aeronauts who
distinguished themselves after this period.
In 1785, Monsieur Blanchard, with
Dr J. Jeffries, an American, crossed the channel between
England and France in a balloon-starting
from Dover, and descending in safety in the Forest
of Guiennes. They had, however, a narrow escape,
having been compelled to throw out all their ballast,
and everything they could dispense with, to prevent
their balloon from falling into the sea.
The first ascents for scientific purposes
were made about the beginning of the present century.
In 1803, Mr Robertson ascended from Saint Petersburg,
for the purpose of making electrical, magnetical, and
physiological experiments. Messieurs Gay-Lussac
and Biot followed his example from Paris, in 1804.
Gay-Lussac was an enthusiastic and celebrated aeronaut.
He made several interesting ascents.
Two years afterwards, Brioschi, the
Astronomer-Royal at Naples, endeavoured to ascend
to a higher elevation than had been reached by Monsieur
Gay-Lussac-namely, 22,977 feet. He
was accompanied by Signor Andreani, the first Italian
aeronaut. The balloon burst when at a great
height, but the remnants were sufficient to check the
descent so much that both gentlemen escaped with their
lives. Brioschi, however, received injuries
which afterwards resulted in his death.
In England one of the most famous
aeronauts was Mr Green, who introduced coal gas for
balloons, and made many hundreds of ascents.
In the year 1836 he ascended from London in a coal-gas
balloon, and with two other gentlemen made an aerial
voyage to Weilburg in the grand Duchy of Nassau.
It lasted eighteen hours, and extended over 500 miles.