Periodicals

Liverpool Echo, 18 March 1913, 3
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Tuesday, 18 March 1913

The Liberal Daily Chronicle‘s parliamentary correspondent, as reported in today’s Liverpool Echo (above; p. 3), has used the phantom airship scare to attack the Conservative press in the harshest terms, on the basis that they have made the British people look ridiculous in the eyes of Europe: A distinguished private member [of Parliament], who has […]

1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Sunday, 16 March 1913

The Observer‘s aeronautical correspondent, Charles C. Turner, C. Av., appears to be unpersuaded that the phantom airships aren’t real (p. 15): While the rumours of airship visits were discredited and unsupported, it was amusing to follow the elaborate arguments put forward to show how impossible it was for airships to cross the North Sea to

Aberdeen Daily Journal, 15 March 1913, 5
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Saturday, 15 March 1913

A few more details have emerged about the mystery airship crash near Caputh in Germany, thanks to the report of the Daily Telegraph‘s Berlin correspondent (reprinted in the Aberdeen Daily Journal, p. 5; above): It was shortly after nightfall that two women returned from work in the fields to Caputh, a large village some miles

Times, 14 March 1913, 7
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Friday, 14 March 1913

Yesterday’s report of an airship seen crashing in flames near Potsdam in Germany has been picked up by a number of newspapers, including the Aberdeen Daily Journal, the Dundee Courier, the Evening Telegraph, the Liverpool Echo, the Manchester Courier, the Manchester Guardian, the Standard, and the Western Times — most of which don’t say anything

After 1950, Books, Contemporary, Film, Periodicals

Border patrol — II

[Cross-posted at Society for Military History Blog.] Previously I argued that two books by Frank Joseph, Mussolini’s War: Fascist Italy’s Military Struggles from Africa and Western Europe to the Mediterranean and Soviet Union 1935-45 (Helion & Company, 2010) and The Axis Air Forces: Flying in Support of the German Luftwaffe (Praeger, 2011), were at the

Dundee Courier, 8 March 1913, 5
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Saturday, 8 March 1913

For the first time, a phantom airship has been seen over the very heart of London, ‘A full week behind the provinces’, as the Daily Express says (p. 1). Previously, no reports came from closer than Croydon (South London) or Hendon (North London), about a month ago. Yet relatively few newspapers seem to be interested

Daily Express, 7 March 1913, 4
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Friday, 7 March 1913

Phantom airships attract relatively little attention in the press today. For the first time in more than a week there are no new sightings to report. Stale (and slightly garbled) news about the Grimsby box kite and the City of Leeds and Othello sightings appear in the Aberdeen Daily Journal and the Western Gazette, while

Manchester Courier, 6 March 1913, 7
1910s, Maps, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Thursday, 6 March 1913

Press coverage of mystery airships hasn’t quite fallen off a cliff, but it is perhaps scrabbling down a rocky slope. Only a handful of newspapers mention them today, and not even yesterday’s startling report from the trawler Othello rates a mention. While there is still considerable (mostly negative) discussion of the new aerial navigation regulations,

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