1910s

1910s, Pictures

Captain Mathy leaves his mark

59-61 Farringdon Road in London is also known as the Zeppelin Building. I don’t know when it received this name; possibly only recently. But it owes it to the fact that its predecessor on the site was destroyed during an air raid on the night of 8 September 1915. The most famous of the Zeppelin […]

1910s, Books, Reviews

London 1914-17 and London 1917-18

Ian Castle. London 1914-17: The Zeppelin Menace. Oxford and New York: Osprey Publishing, 2008. Illustrated by Christa Hook. Ian Castle. London 1917-18: The Bomber Blitz. Oxford and Long Island City: Osprey Publishing, 2010. Illustrated by Christa Hook. As the titles suggest, these two entries in Osprey’s long-running Campaign series dovetail nicely. One takes as its

1900s, 1910s, 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, After 1950, Before 1900, Books, Periodicals, Plots and tables, Tools and methods, Words

The rise and fall and rise and fall of the autogyro

Finally, something to justify the existence of the Internet. The Google Ngram Viewer takes the corpus of words formed by the Google Books dataset (i.e. books, journals, magazines, but not newspapers) and lets you plot the changes in frequency of selected ones over time. There are all sorts of interesting questions you could (in principle)

1910s, Books, Pictures

Ocean views (secret)

Someone on the WWI-L mailing list posted a link to a scanned book with the rather excellent title Photographs of H.M. Vessels & Auxiliaries and Other Objects Taken from the Air. This was printed in August 1918 for the Intelligence Department of the Admiralty as CB 848 and was very clearly marked secret, issued in

1910s, 1940s, After 1950, Archives, Contemporary, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Rumours, Space

Churchill and that UFO story

There have been a lot of stories in the press recently with titles like ‘Churchill ordered UFO cover-up, National Archives show’. Actually, the TNA files — part of an ongoing series of releases of UFO-related files — don’t show this at all, as is clear if you read the article more closely. The cover-up is

1910s, Maps, Plots and tables

Finding the target

View Zeppelins over London in a larger map Last year, Londonist gave us a very nifty map of London’s V2 impact sites. Now they’ve come up with an equivalent for Zeppelin raids. Each of the sunbursts represents a bombfall. Clicking on them brings up a popup with information about the site and casualties (but, annoyingly,

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