Author name: Brett Holman

Brett Holman is a historian who lives in Armidale, Australia.

Australia, Tools and methods, Videos

The accidents of aviation history

Last Friday I was privileged to be at the Airways Museum for the world premiere of Out of the Blue? How Aviation Accidents Shaped Safer Skies: Centred on accidents in the vicinity of Sydney’s Mascot Aerodrome, this movie outlines developments in Australian aviation safety from the 1920s to the 1970s. It combines original research, interviews, […]

Berliner Illustrierte Zeitung, 23 January 1941
1940s, After 1950, Books, Nuclear, biological, chemical, Pictures, Reviews

The Blitz Companion

Mark Clapson. The Blitz Companion: Aerial Warfare, Civilians and the City Since 1911. London: University of Westminster Press, 2019, https://doi.org/10.16997/book26. Open access has had its travails, but one welcome recent development, particularly in the UK, seems to be the rise of open access monographs and textbooks. An example of the former is Gabriel Moshenska’s Material

Ratio of articles in the British Newspaper Archive containing the phrase ‘Le Queux’ to total number of issues, 1890–1932
1900s, 1910s, 1920s, 1930s, Before 1900, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Plots and tables, Publications

Publication: ‘William Le Queux, the Zeppelin menace and the Invisible Hand’

Critical Survey has just published an early access version of my peer-reviewed article ‘William Le Queux, the Zeppelin menace and the Invisible Hand’ — that’s right, no subtitle! — here. Here’s the abstract: In contrast to William Le Queux’s pre-1914 novels about German spies and invasion, his wartime writing is much less well known. Analysis

Sea, Land and Air, February 1920, 765
1910s, 1920s, Archives, Australia, Civil aviation, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures

Alien airmen and will-o’-the-wisp bridges

Although the war had been over for more than a year by this point, in 1920 the editor of Sea, Land and Air issued a rather hysterical warning of the danger of foreign pilots being allowed to fly in Australia.1 The passenger-‘plane of to-day may be the bomber of to-morrow. It depends on the man

Sphere, 12 December 1936, 496
1930s, Air defence, Books, Civil defence, Collective security, Maps, Periodicals, Pictures, Publications

It’s that quote again — III

After the drama of 1934, ‘the bomber will always get through’ appears less frequently in the British Newspaper Archive (BNA) in 1935 (though still at about twice the level than in 1932 or 1933). But it is still mostly being used in a very political way. This is not surprising, with the general election contested

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