Daily Herald, 14 February 1913, 6
1910s, Air defence, Aircraft, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Friday, 14 February 1913

Yesterday, the Daily Mail said that the Aerial Navigation Bill would be put before the Lords next week. In fact, as today’s issue reveals, the bill already ‘passed through all its stages in the House of Lords late last night‘ (p. 5). Moreover, ‘all the regulations for the enforcement of the Government’s Aerial Navigation Bill […]

Daily Mail, 13 February 1913, 5
1910s, Air defence, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Thursday, 13 February 1913

The Aeroplane today suggests that ‘The visits of the various “scare-ships” have evidently not been without salutary effect’, if they have given rise to the present Aerial Navigation Bill (p. 162). The Daily Mail would tend to agree, but hopes for more. It devotes both its first leading article and nearly a column’s worth of

The Times, 12 February, 7
1910s, International law, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Wednesday, 12 February 1913

The Times hasn’t been ignoring the phantom airships, but neither has it focused its editorial attention on them — until now. The third leading article in today’s issue is in support of the government’s new Aerial Navigation Bill, arguing that ‘This strengthening of existing legislative powers can hardly be thought premature, and may indeed be

1900s, 1910s, 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, After 1950, Archives, Periodicals, Tools and methods

The many minutes of the Royal Aero Club

In May 1909, the three major organisations promoting aviation in Britain, the Aeronautical Society, the Aero Club, and the newly-formed Aerial League, announced that they would henceforth coordinate their efforts. The Aerial League would be recognised as ‘the paramount body for patriotic movements and for education’, the Aeronautical Society ‘the paramount scientific authority on aeronautical

Daily Mail, 11 February 1913, 3
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Tuesday, 11 February 1913

There is little overt mention of phantom airships in today’s newspapers, but quite a few allusions. They all accompany the news, published in all the major papers, that last night the Secretary for War, Colonel Seely, introduced to the House of Commons an Aerial Navigation Bill to amend the 1911 Aerial Navigation Act. The bill

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

Monday, 10 February 1913

Any provincial newspaper with pretensions to quality features a regular column from its (usually anonymous) London correspondent which offers a mixture of political gossip and analysis as well as anecdotes of life in the capital and other, less classifiable tidbits. Today’s ‘Our London correspondence’ column in the Manchester Guardian, for example, previews the coming week

Liverpool Echo, 8 February 1913, 6
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Saturday, 8 February 1913

Two new airship reports today. First, from the Liverpool Echo (p. 6, above): Between eight and half-past eight last night [7 February 1913] at least a dozen people in London-road, Northwich, observed a bright light in the sky, and were emphatically convinced that it proceeded from an airship. Rays seemed distinctly to emanate from the

Western Gazette, 7 February 1913, 2
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Post-blogging the 1913 scareships

Friday, 7 February 1913

The provincial press is still catching up with the South Wales mystery airships today. In fact, most of it still catching with from the sightings from the weekend — the Exeter Western Times (p. 6) and Lichfield Mercury (p. 2) have versions of the article published in the Standard on Monday about the airship seen

Luftkriegsbeute
1910s, Aircraft, Ephemera, Pictures

A little air war booty

While searching for images to illustrate my Wartime article, I came across this German propaganda poster from 1918. It ultimately didn’t make the cut but I think it’s very interesting. The seaplane soaring into the top left of the poster is a Friedrichshafen FF.33; in fact it is the very one which scouted for the

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