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History Carnival 77

[Cross-posted at Cliopatria.] It’s just short of three years since I last hosted a History Carnival, so it’s about time I did another. And here it is! Herein you will find such diverse topics as: The Maltese dragon of 1608. Anti-vaccinators of the 18th and 19th centuries. The lives of disabled British children around the […]

1900s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Poetry, Post-blogging the 1909 scareships

Tuesday, 1 June 1909

The new Fortnightly Review (actually a monthly, of course) is out today. Each issue opens with a review of ‘Imperial and foreign affairs’, which is usually written by J. L. Garvin, editor of the Observer and a figure of great influence in Conservative politics. Assuming that it is he who penned this Review‘s review, Garvin

1900s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Post-blogging the 1909 scareships

Monday, 31 May 1909

No scareships today. But the Standard carries a short article (p. 3) which shows how the airship menace could lie at the nexus of propaganda, advertising and entertainment. This summer’s weekly Brock’s Benefits, a free fireworks display produced by Brock’s Fireworks at the Crystal Palace, will present ‘a scene of an invasion drama of a

1900s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1909 scareships

Saturday, 29 May 1909

This week’s issue of Flight carries a short piece about ‘Phantom airships and scare headlines’ (p. 318). It’s scornful of the credulity of ‘a certain section of the Press’, since ‘it was evident from the very first that either a practical joke was being played or that a bold advertising scheme was on foot’. The

Acquisitions, Books, Ephemera

Acquisitions

The Duke of Bedford. Total Disarmament or an International Police Force? Glasgow: Strickland Press, 1944. Or false a dichotomy? Bedford was a pacifist and (maybe) a fascist. Here he is the author of a twelve-page pamphlet which originally sold for 2d. and which I bought for … much more than 2d.! If I’d known I

1900s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Post-blogging the 1909 scareships

Friday, 28 May 1909

There was nothing about phantom airships in yesterday’s papers. Nor is there anything in today’s, for that matter. But there is a curious story in the Globe concerning the ‘Wokingham airship’ (p. 11): A mysterious and closely-locked shed near the large public school at Wokingham has for some time past given rise to rumours of

Thesis

And so it ends …

I started this PhD not far off four years ago. Yesterday I received my examiners’ reports, and they both recommended that I ‘be awarded the PhD degree without further examination or amendment’ (though not without criticism, I must add). So now all that remains for me to do is submit two permanent bound copies to

1900s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1909 scareships

Wednesday, 26 May 1909

The mighty Punch weighs in on the phantom airships today. Above is a rather wonderful full-page cartoon by Bernard Partridge, playing on the notion that the stories are part of the annual ‘silly season’ (usually in summer, still a month away): The sea-serpent: “Well, if this sort of thing keeps on, it’ll mean a dull

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