Zebulon Vitruvius Pike (
dime_novel_hero) wrote2011-06-12 11:37 am
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Airlift 1870: Book Review

Surrounded and cut off from the rest of France, government and military action hampered by the isolation and a Prussian campaign of propaganda and misinformation, it would take an unlikely collection if hobbyists and amateurs to save Paris and the country:
Balloonists and pigeon fanciers.
John Fisher's 1965 book "Airlift 1870" is a detailed chronicle of the siege of Paris the efforts by balloonists and carrier pigeon trainers to keep the line lines of communication open.
The first air war escalated with the French building balloons as quickly as they could (a new one every 12 days), scrounging what materials they could. The baloons would be launched at night with boxes of pigeons, hoping to avoid German guns. Hopefully landing in unoccupied areas they would endeavor to get their messages to the officials of free France and the pigeons would carry news back to the city. In a starving city living on horses, dogs, cats, rats and zoo animals, the eating of birds of any sort was outlawed to protect the pigeons. The ingenious use of early microphotography allowed many more messages to be sent, with multiple pigeons carrying the same messages and every tenth pigeon carrying all the messages of the previous nine. With redundancy included in the official post, President Trochu in Paris received 5 or 6 copies of every dispatch sent to him from Tours of Bordeaux.
To counter this, the Germans stretched their lines thin, dispersing their forces in an efforts to capture the balloons as they came down. They imported hawks to the front to bring down the French pigeons. Krupp, manufacturer of the new steel siege guns, kludged together the world's first dedicated anti-aircraft guns in an effort to shoot down the balloons. There were rumors at the time, unsubstantiated, of French and Prussian aeronauts shooting it out above the clouds.

John Fisher carefully names them all, the circumstances of their flight, how they survived (or didn't) and the disposition of the messages they carried, all placed in the context of what was happening in Paris and the rest of France.
“As the siege went on, as ascent followed ascent, the balloons, in the eyes of Parisians and in the eyes of the world, came to be regarded not merely as useful carriers but as symbols of French daring and enterprise and success. Each flight accomplished, each letter delivered, was in a sense another little victory over the great German war-machine; a defiance, a gesture made by an individual.”
In the end, however, balloons and pigeons failed to save France. What they did accomplish was the realization that balloons had a real military utility, launching the meteoric growth in dirigible development that had stagnated through the first three quarters of the 19th Century. The siege also lead to the foundation of War Pigeon Corps in the various Western militaries and the huge expansion of a network of pigeon lofts. When unresolved Franco-Prussian hostilities again boiled over in 1914, the heirs to airlift of 1870 again took to the skies.