
Jean-Pierre Blanchard.
'Jean-Pierre Blanchard' (aka Jean Pierre François Blanchard) (
7 July 1753 –
7 March 1809) was a
French inventor, most remembered a pioneer in
aviation and
ballooning.
Blanchard made his first successful balloon flight in
Paris on
2 March 1784, in a
hydrogen gas balloon launched from the
Champ de Mars. The first successful manned balloon flight took place only a few months earlier, on
21 November 1783, when
Pilâtre de Rozier and the
Marquis d'Arlandes took off at the
Palace of Versailles in a tethered
hot air balloon constructed by the
Montgolfier brothers. The flight nearly ended in disaster, when one spectator - Dupont de Chambon, a contemporary of
Napoleon at the
École militaire de Brienne - slashed at the balloon's mooring ropes and oars with his sword after being refused a place on board. Blanchard intended to "row" northeast to
La Villette but the balloon was pushed by the wind across the
Seine to
Billancourt and back again, landing in the rue de Sèvres. Blanchard adopted the
Latin tag ''
Sic itur ad astra'' as his
motto.
The early balloon flights triggered a phase of public "balloonmania", with all manner of objectes decorated with images of balloons or styled ''au ballon'', from ceramics to fans and hats. Clothing ''au ballon'' was produced with exaggerated puffed sleeves and rounded skirts, or with printed images of balloons. Hair was coiffed ''Ã la montgolfier'', ''au globe volant'', ''au demi-ballon'', or ''Ã la Blanchard''.
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Blanchard moved to London in August 1784, where he took part in a flight on
16 October 1784 with
John Sheldon, just a few weeks after the first flight in Britain (and the first outside France), when Italian
Vincenzo Lunardi flew from
Moorfields to
Ware on
15 September 1784. Blanchard's propulsion mechanisms - flapping wings and a windmill - again proved ineffective, but the balloon flew some 115&mnsp;km, from the military academy in
Chelsea, landing in
Sunbury and then taking off again to end in
Romsey. Blanchard took a second flight on
30 November 1784, taking off with an American, Dr
John Jeffries, from
Rhedarium Garden west of
Grosvenor Square in
London to
Ingress in
Kent. A third flight, again with Jeffries, was the first flight over the
English Channel, taking about 2½ hours to travel from England to France on
7 January 1785, flying from
Dover Castle to
Guînes. Blanchard was awarded a substantial pension by Louis XVI.
Pilâtre de Rozier had been attempting the same feat, in the opposite direction, but had been delayed by bad weather; he was killed in another attempt that June.
Blanchard toured Europe, demonstrating his balloons. Blanchard holds the record of first balloon flights in
Belgium,
Germany, the
Netherlands, and
Poland.
Following the invention of the modern parachute in 1783 by
Sébastien Lenormand in
France, in 1785 Jean-Pierre Blanchard demonstrated it as a means of safely disembarking from a
hot air balloon. While Blanchard's first parachute demonstrations were conducted with a dog as the passenger, he later had the opportunity to try it himself when in 1793 his hot air balloon ruptured and he used a parachute to escape. Subsequent development of the parachute focused on it becoming more compact. While the early parachutes were made of
linen stretched over a wooden frame, in the late 1790s, Blanchard began making parachutes from folded
silk, taking advantage of silk's strength and light
weight.
On
9 January 1793, Blanchard conducted the first balloon flight in
North America, ascending from
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania and landing in
Deptford,
Gloucester County,
New Jersey. One of the flight's witnesses that day was President
George Washington, and the future presidents
John Adams,
Thomas Jefferson,
James Madison, and
James Monroe. Blanchard left the United States in 1797.
He married Marie Madéleine-Sophie Armant (better known as
Sophie Blanchard) in 1804. In 1809, Blanchard had a heart attack while in his balloon at the
Hague. He fell from his balloon and died some weeks later from his severe injuries. His widow continued to support herself with ballooning demonstrations until it also killed her. On
6 July 1819,
Norwich Duff, an Edinburgh born naval officer then undertaking a tour of western Europe, recorded in his travel log how he:
Notes
External links and references
★
History of Hot Air Ballooning
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Journal of Jean-Pierre Blanchard's forty-fifth ascension, being the first performed in America, on the ninth of January, 1793 (1918)
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