Drunken Scotsmen were not the
only ones to take an interest in aeronautical matters in 1784 – egotistical
Italians were also up for the challenge too.
Vincenzo Lunardi |
Vincenzo Lunardi – The
Daredevil Aeronaut – was secretary to Prince Caramanico, the Neapolitan
Ambassador to London, and took to the air in a hydrogen balloon on September 15th
of that year at the Artillery Grounds, London before a vast crowd of 200,000
that included, amongst other luminaries, the Prince of Wales.
Lunardi with his dog and cat |
The crowd began
to grow impatient, so Lunardi, a dog, a cat and a pigeon, ascended with a
partially inflated balloon over the fields and began to drift northwards in the
breeze towards Hertfordshire. Stopping briefly to release the dog and the
airsick cat at Welham Green, at a place still called Balloon Corner, Lunardi
continued on to Standon Green End, covering a total of twenty-four miles in two
and a half hours and instantly turning him into a celebrity. The ballooning
craze inspired the fashions of the day, and Lunardi skirts and bonnets became
all the rage.
Lunardi hat |
The next flight was not until June 29th 1785, when
Lunardi, his friend the wealthy Old Etonian Thomas Biggin, a Colonel Hastings
and Mrs Letitia Sage met at St George’s Fields, on the south bank of the
Thames, where ‘very safe’ seats were sold at 2/6d and ‘very best’ seats at
3/6d.
Admittance ticket |
The original plan had been for all four to ascend in the balloon but
Lunardi had not reckoned on the Junoesque Mrs Sage. Letitia Ann Sage (nee
Robinson) was an actress and dresser at Drury Lane theatre, who was married to
a Cheapside haberdasher, and who weighed in at an impressive 200 lbs.
Mrs Sage by an Unknown Artist 1785 |
She
hadn’t thought to mention this to Lunardi, and the gallant Lunardi hadn’t
thought to ask about her weight, but he and Colonel Hastings gave up their
intentions to fly that day, and Mrs Sage and Mr Biggin climbed into the gondola
together.
Lunardi, Biggin and Mrs Sage in the gondola |
Thrown by this new arrangement, Lunardi failed to lace up the door
properly and as the balloon slowly rose into the air the crowd’s last sight was
of Mrs Sage on all-fours attempting to re-lace the door.
A more flattering portrait of Mrs Sage |
Now, in a bid to
reduce wind resistance, Mrs Sage had thoughtfully dressed in a low-cut silk
dress that day, and so at the sight of her, all décolletage and on her hands
and knees, the crowd put two and two together and assumed that she had
‘fainted’ and Mr Biggin was administrating his own improvisational aerial
‘first aid’.
A rude cartoon - Love in a Balloon |
Unaware of the innuendoes that circulated below them, Mr Biggin
and Mrs Sage tucked in to a picnic of cold chicken and Italian wines until the
balloon descended into field at Harrow, cutting a rut through the hay crop. The
farmer, outraged by the ruination of his harvest, approached Biggin with
violence in mind, but he and Mrs Sage were saved by a gang of Harrow
schoolboys, who had seen the flight of the balloon and followed its progress.
They had a whip-round to pay off the angry farmer and carried Mrs Sage on their
shoulders to a nearby pub. She was the first female aviatrix in England (and
maybe, one of the first members of the Mile High Club - Mr Biggin being the other).
Lunardi's balloon at the Pantheon |
The balloon was
displayed at the Pantheon (admittance 5/-), with Mrs Sage in attendance to
answer questions, and as interest waned, she published a letter about the
flight, on sale for 1/-. In October 1785, Lunardi took his balloons to Scotland,
where he met Tytler, and made a total of five flights, the last of which almost
ended in disaster when he crashed into the North Sea off Berwick and had to be
rescued by a fishing boat. Again, he made money by exhibiting the inflated
balloon (admittance 1/-), in the choir of St Mungo’s, Glasgow.
Lunardi's patriotic balloon |
What was to have
been his twelfth flight was scheduled for September 20th 1786, at
Newcastle on Tyne, but things ended in disaster when Lunardi was pouring the
sulphuric acid into the apparatus that produced the hydrogen gas. The strong
effervescence caused some of the acid to spill out of two points at the bottom
of the apparatus, and several of the men holding the ropes that tethered the
balloon panicked and ran. The partly filled balloon rose sharply into the air,
taking with it a Mr Ralph Heron, the twenty-two son of the Under-Sheriff of
Northumberland, whose hand was twisted in a rope attached to the crown of the
inflatable. When the balloon was ‘elevated about the height of St Paul’s
cupola’ it suddenly inverted and the crown separated from it; Heron fell to the
earth, landing on some soft ground, where he spoke to his parents and the
attending doctors before dying from internal injuries an hour and a half later.
Lunardi's balloon |
Lunardi issued a broadside, lamenting the death but pointing out that the
tragedy could have been avoided if all the gentlemen had held onto their ropes,
but the damage had been done. The Daredevil Aeronaut was driven from the
shores of Britain in a hail of criticism, but continued his ballooning exploits
in Portugal, Spain and Italy, where he made an ascent of Mount Vesuvius in
September 1789. He died in 1806.
Once again, the final word goes
to Robert Burns, who mentions a Lunardi hat in his poem To A Louse : - On
Seeing One On A Lady’s Bonnet At Church (1786)
I wad na been surpris'd to spyYou on an auld wife's flainen toy;Or aiblins some bit duddie boy,On 's wyliecoat;But Miss's fine Lunardi! fye !How daur ye do ‘t?
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