Modern Balloons and Airships: The History and Legacy of Dirigibles during the 20th Century, Charles River Editors
  • $4.46
    • Facebook Share
    • Twitter Share
    • Pinterest Share

Details

Modern Balloons and Airships: The History and Legacy of Dirigibles during the 20th Century

Author: Charles River Editors

Narrator: David Bernard

Unabridged: 2 hr 16 min

Format: Digital Audiobook

Publisher: Findaway Voices

Published: 08/19/2019

Genre: History - Modern - 20th Century

Synopsis

The Wright Brothers initially underestimated the difficulties involved in flying, and they were apparently surprised by the fact that so many others were working on solving the “problem of human flight” already. Decades before their own historic plane would end up in the National Air & Space Museum, Wilbur and Orville asked the Smithsonian for reading materials and brushed up on everything from the works of their contemporaries to Leonardo Da Vinci. Undeterred by the work, and the fact that several would-be pioneers died in crashes trying to control gliders, the Wright Brothers tested out gliding at Kitty Hawk in North Carolina for several years, working to perfect pilot control before trying powered flight.

In December 1903, the brothers had done enough scientific work with concepts like lift to help their aeronautical designs, and they had the technical know-how to work with engines. On December 17, the brothers took turns making history’s first successful powered flights. The fourth and final flight lasted nearly a minute and covered nearly 900 feet. The Wright Flyer I had just made history, and minutes later it would be permanently damaged after wind gusts tipped it over; it would never fly again.

A decade later, aircraft appeared in the skies over the battlefields of World War I, but they did not represent a complete novelty in warfare either, at least not during the early months of World War I. While airplanes had never before appeared above the field of war, other aerial vehicles had already been in use for decades, and balloons had carried soldiers above the landscape for centuries to provide a high observation point superior to most geological features. The French used a balloon for this purpose at the Battle of Fleurus in 1794, and by the American Civil War, military hydrogen balloons saw frequent use, filled from wagons generating hydrogen from iron filings and sulfuric acid.

Recommended

Global Muckraking 100 Years of Journalism From Around the World
Global Muckraking
by Joseph Stiglitz

Columbia professor and winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics Joseph E. Stiglitz talks to Anya Schiffrin, editor of Global Muckraking: 100 Years of Investigative Journalism From Around the World, about a wide range of global issues from economics to...

Narrator: Michael Massing
Published: 12/02/2014

A Rare Recording of Father Charles Coughlin - Vol. 1
A Rare Recording of Father Charles Coughlin - Vol. 1
by Father Charles Coughlin

Father Charles Coughlin was a controversial Canadian-American Catholic priest based in Michigan. Calling for monetary reforms, the nationalization of major industries and railroads, and protection of the rights of labor, Coughlin used weekly ra...

Narrator: Father Charles Coughlin
Published: 03/13/2018

Famous Dirigibles: The History and Legacy of Lighter than Air Vehicles from the Renaissance to Today
Famous Dirigibles: The History and Legacy of Lighter than Air Vehicles from the Renaissance to Today
by Charles River Editors

Aircraft appeared in the skies over the battlefields of World War I, but they did not represent a complete novelty in warfare either, at least not during the early months of World War I. While airplanes had never before appeared above the field of ...

Narrator: David Bernard
Published: 08/24/2019

The World Health Organization: The History and Legacy of the UN's Top International Public Health Agency
The World Health Organization: The History and Legacy of the UN's Top International Public Health Agency
by Charles River Editors

April 7 is World Health Organization Day, in honor of the day that the World Health Organization held the first World Health Assembly in 1948. International health conferences had been held nearly a century before this date, and international healt...

Narrator: Colin Fluxman
Published: 08/17/2020

Things We Said Today Interviews from The Beatles Press Conferences Around the US in 1964-65
Things We Said Today
by John Lennon

The Beatles shed some light and personal insights in these fantastic- previously unreleased- interviews from 1964/65, at the height of Beatlemania. Featuring John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and George Harrison.A One Media iP production.

Narrator: John Lennon
Published: 11/03/2017

Operation Condor: The History of the Notorious Intelligence Operations Supported by the United States to Combat Communists across South America
Operation Condor: The History of the Notorious Intelligence Operations Supported by the United States to Combat Communists across South America
by Charles River Editors

“Let's say there were 7,000 or 8,000 people who had to die to win the war against subversion... We couldn't execute them by firing squad. Neither could we take them to court... For that reason, so as not to provoke protests inside and outside ...

Narrator: Dan Gallagher
Published: 05/12/2019

Kosmos 954 and Operation Morning Light: The History of Efforts to Contain Radioactive Debris Spread across Canada by a Soviet Satellite
Kosmos 954 and Operation Morning Light: The History of Efforts to Contain Radioactive Debris Spread across Canada by a Soviet Satellite
by Charles River Editors

In the predawn sky of northern Canada on the morning of January 24th, 1978, a long streak of blue fire suddenly rushed across the starry vista northeast of the remote town of Yellowknife. Those out on the bitterly cold night, with a temperature man...

Narrator: Colin Fluxman
Published: 09/14/2019

Weird Radio and Television: A Collection of Spy Transmissions, Unidentified Stations, Paranormal Activities, and other Mysteries across the Media
Weird Radio and Television: A Collection of Spy Transmissions, Unidentified Stations, Paranormal Activities, and other Mysteries across the Media
by Charles River Editors

For more than a century, radio has been a part of people’s lives. No one alive today remembers a time when it hadn't always been there as a familiar, reliable source of information and entertainment. Today, it seems a bit mundane, overtaken b...

Narrator: Jim Johnston
Published: 07/16/2019

Dissolution of Czechoslovakia, The: The History of the Central European Nation from Its Founding to Its Breakup
Dissolution of Czechoslovakia, The: The History of the Central European Nation from Its Founding to Its Breakup
by Charles River Editors

On New Year’s Day 1993, Czechoslovakia broke into two separate countries, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Thus ended one of the creations brought about by the Treaty of Versailles after World War I, and as a country that had existed for just ...

Narrator: Colin Fluxman
Published: 05/12/2019
{"id":"4026373","ean":"9781094206387","abr":"Unabridged","title":"Modern Balloons and Airships: The History and Legacy of Dirigibles during the 20th Century","subtitle":"","author":"Charles River Editors","rating_average":"0","narrator":"David Bernard","ubr_id":"4026373","abr_id":"0","ubr_price":"6.95","abr_price":"0.00","ubr_memprice":"4.17","abr_memprice":"0.00","ubr_narrator":"David Bernard","abr_narrator":"","ubr_length":"Unabridged: 2 hr 16 min","abr_length":"Abridged: "}