This richly illustrated book chronicles lighter-than-air flight
from Archimedes' discovery of the principle of buoyancy to the
latest in sport balloons and plans for future airships. Far more
than a timeline of events, "Lighter Than Air" focuses on the
people--flamboyant and daring, heroes and scoundrels--who made
history in the sky. Here are the eighteenth-century pioneers who
first took to the skies, the peripatetic aeronauts who
criss-crossed two continents a century later, the airmen who manned
the great rigid airships, and the intrepid balloonists who flew
their craft across oceans and continents in the years following
World War II.
The first half of the volume recounts the invention of the
balloon, the golden age of the professional aerial showmen in
Europe and America, the use of balloons for aerial reconnaissance,
and the key role of balloons in scientific research. The second
half presents the rich tale of the airship from eighteenth-century
dreams to twentieth-century reality. These chapters describe the
early development of the pressure airship, the emergence of the
rigid airship and its golden age in the first half of the twentieth
century, and the military and civil applications of these aerial
behemoths. The author concludes by discussing modern blimps, sport
balloons, and dreams of a future for airships.
The highly accessible text is complemented with a wealth of
prints and photos from the National Air and Space Museum in
Washington, D.C., the Musee de l'Air et de l'Espace at Le Bourget,
the Zepplin-Museum at Zepplinheim, and the Imperial War Museum in
London. Written by award-winning aeronautical historian Tom D.
Crouch, "Lighter Than Air" brings to life the color and excitement
of buoyant flight.
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