Daily Express, 27 February 1913, 9
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Thursday, 27 February 1913

The Daily Mail carries a bare list of the last few days’ phantom airship sightings with few details, some of which are discussed more fully elsewhere in today’s (or yesterday’s) papers, but some are not: Avonmouth, Bristol, yesterday evening [26 February 1913]. Hull and Grimsby, Tuesday night [25 February 1913]. Dover, Tuesday, 9.20 p.m. Castle […]

Daily Express, 26 February 1913, 1
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Wednesday, 26 February 1913

There’s a slew of new phantom airship reports today. From Hornsea in the East Riding of Yorkshire (Daily Express, p. 1; above): The coastguards at Hornsea first saw a bright light about eight o’clock [on 25 February 1913]. It appeared to be travelling in a westerly direction. They kept it under observation through their glasses,

Standard, 25 February 1913, 9
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Tuesday, 25 February 1913

The phantom airship scare has clearly entered a new phase since the sightings last Friday in Yorkshire and Warwickshire. Several major London dailies — all politically conservative — devote substantial amounts of column space to the mystery; half the main news page, in the case of the Standard. Only it’s not regarded as a mystery

Standard, 24 February 1913, 9
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Monday, 24 February 1913

Last week was a relatively quiet one for the phantom airships, but today they receive the most press coverage yet. The main reason for this is a cluster of sightings reported from Yorkshire on Friday, along with another sighting from Warwickshire about 100 miles inland. In fact, there are so many reports that no one

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

Saturday, 22 February 1913

TO ILLUSTRATE THE SO-CALLED ‘BLACK SHADOW OF THE AIR-SHIP’, A MAP OF JOURNEYS POSSIBLE TO AEROPLANES AND DIRIGIBLES. This week’s issue of the Illustrated London News devotes three whole pages — mostly taken up with illustrations, of course — to an examination of what a headline calls ‘A MENACE THEORY’: ‘IS IT “THE SEA TO

Liverpool Echo, 22 February 1913, 4
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Friday, 21 February 1913

The Liverpool Echo provides some additional information about the Scarborough airship reported yesterday (p. 4; above). It turns out that it was actually seen ‘either once or twice in the early part of the present month’ [February 1913], so why it has only come to light now is unclear. According to the Echo, Miss Hollings

Evening Telegraph, 20 February 1913, 4
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Thursday, 20 February 1913

Although phantom airships have often been in the news lately, none have actually been reported for more than a week. The Dundee Evening Telegraph and Post breaks the drought today with a sighting from Scarborough, on the coast of the North Riding of Yorkshire (p. 4; above). No date is given, unfortunately. At least two

Daily Mirror, 17 February 1913, 5
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Plots and tables, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Monday, 17 February 1913

The Daily Mirror has a curious item today under the headline ‘BRITAIN’S PERIL IN THE AIR’ (p. 5; above). It is apparently a statement made yesterday by an unidentified ‘famous naval tactician’, but instead of setting it out as an article or a letter to the editor it is given as an extended quotation with

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

Saturday, 15 February 1913

The Aerial Navigation Bill, introduced into the House of Commons only a week ago, is now the Aerial Navigation Act, 1913, as the Daily Mail records (p. 5; above): The Aerial Navigation Bill received the Royal Assent yesterday and comes into operation at once. Foreign airships will now cross England at their peril unless their

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Giles MacDonogh. 1938: Hitler’s Gamble. London: Constable, 2010. 1938 was a big year for Germany, with the army purge, the Anschluss of Austria, the Sudeten crisis, and Kristallnacht. It seems that the fate of the Jews in Germany (including those parts absorbed in the course of 1938) is given a relatively large amount of attention

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