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JEAN-PIERRE BLANCHARD IN NEW HAMPSHIRE
1796 Balloon Ride (Continued)
Not everyone was enthusiastic, however. Blanchard had not purchased much advertising
in the Portsmouth Oracle, rival to the Gazette, and the Oracle reporter was disinclined to praise the enterprise that had enriched
a competitor. He reported Blanchard’s audience at only "fifteen hundred" who appeared
to be ----."
This puzzling and slighting notice drew an immediate rejoinder from an enraged
Blanchard. "As the Connoisseurs were satisfied with it," retorted the aeronaut,
"pray get your correspondent to explain the meaning of the points (hyphens) in
the last phrase of his paragraph, and tell him not to be ashamed to put his name
to his production. This superb experiment has been admired by the wise of the
old and the new world, and celebrated by the able poets of our age. . . If this
which has excited the curiosity of all classes of people, both in Europe and America,
appears so trivial in his eyes, do request him to be kind enough to teach me how
to realize Monsieur Bergerac’s novel, which sends his hero to the moon; or else
tell him to shut up his Ebenezer."
Blanchard’s Gallic temper only drew a taunting reply that described the aerial
machine as a "----, I don’t know what it was, some call it a Balloon, others call
it a Contrivance to kill Cats, or at least to frighten them to death." Realizing
the futility of sparring with an anonymous opponent, Blanchard decamped angrily
from Portsmouth. On April 9, 1796, he published in the Providence Gazette the advertisement for his balloon ascent, with an announcement of his intention
to repeat the experiment for the inhabitants of Rhode Island. Soon afterward,
Blanchard appears to have returned to Europe.
Blanchard had good reason to resent his treatment in the columns of the Oracle. The French émigré was one of the true pioneers of "aerostation" as balloon
flight was then called. Born at Les Andelys, near Rouen, in 1753, Blanchard had
demonstrated a precocious mechanical inventiveness and had always been fascinated
with the possibility of human flight. Following the revolutionary hot-air balloon
experiments of the Montgolfier brothers in 1783, Blanchard became a dedicated
balloonist, quickly adopting the principle of filling his aerostat with "inflammable
air" or hydrogen instead of the quickly exhausted "rarefied" (heated) air used
by the Montgolfiers. Blanchard performed his first aerial voyage in March, 1784.
His balloon was 27 feet in diameter and had a parachute suspended beneath it as
a precaution in case it burst.
Having perfected the basic components of his apparatus, Blanchard commenced a
series of aerial experiments that quickly established him as a leader in the new
science of aerostation. On January 7, 1785, Blanchard and Dr. John Jeffries of
Boston, Massachusetts, embarked on a trip that had never before been attempted,
and that many regarded as impossible: a passage across the English Channel.
During the perilous crossing, the balloon dipped dangerously close to the sea
and the two passengers were forced to lighten the craft by throwing overboard
everything they had in the car, including most of their clothing. The balloon
finally gained altitude, soared over the French coast near Calais, to the accompaniment
of a cannon salute from Fort Rouge, and alighted in the Forest of Guines. Instantly,
Blanchard and Jeffries were famous throughout the world.
Continuing his experiments, Blanchard set the world’s record for distance with
a flight of some 300 miles in August, 1785. He began to investigate the reliability
of his parachute, first dropping a dog safely from his balloon, and finally descending
himself on a flight in England—though at the cost of a broken leg. These numerous
trials of the parachute of course enabled the aeronaut to feel confident of the
success of his Portsmouth demonstration.
In the fall of 1792 Blanchard decided to try his fortune in a new country, and
he embarked on a ship Ceres, bound for Philadelphia. Realizing he would have to
live by his wits in his new home, Blanchard brought several balloons with him,
together with the necessary chemicals and apparatus for generating hydrogen gas
and several other inventions certain to draw generous patronage from the mechanically
minded Americans.
Before the performance in Portsmouth, he made a manned ascension in Philadelphia
and in the same city experimented with sending animals aloft.
In the fall of 1795, Blanchard proposed a tour of the northern cities, hoping
to find unjaded Americans who "had as yet only heard of the brilliant triumph
of aerostation," and who were "worthy of enjoying the sublime spectacle that it
affords." Thus originated the Portsmouth flight of February, 1796, as well as
ascensions in Boston and Salem.

Shortly after his New England tour, Blanchard appears to have returned to Europe.
It is doubtful whether his American experience proved profitable; he may have
lost money in many towns. The expense of generating hydrogen gas, then accomplished
by adding sulphuric acid to iron filings in closed barrels, was considerable.
Blanchard himself remarked that he had "brought with me from Europe only 4200
weight of vitriolic acid, the quantity to effect my own ascension, once." He estimated
that a similar amount of acid, if it could be procured in America at all, "would
cost at least 100 guineas" –the equivalent of more than $400.
Whether or not Blanchard profited from his stay in the United States, the American
people never forgot him. In February 1808, he had a heart attack while on a balloon
flight over The Hague in the Netherlands. Blanchard fell more than 50 feet to
the earth and died the following month.
Even after he died on March 7, 1809, American newspapers continued to carry fascinating
accounts of the exploits of his widow, herself an aeronaut with scores of flights
to her credit. Finally, at the end of August, 1819, the New Hampshire Gazette carried one last, tragic dispatch from Paris. Madame Blanchard had attempted
an illuminated nighttime ascension at Tivoli. The fireworks with which she lighted
her flight had ignited the highly flammable hydrogen in the balloon, and she had
plunged to a fiery death. Her tragic end wrote a final chapter to the saga of
the Blanchards, a story that had thrilled Europeans and had once caused all of
America to lift her eyes to the sky.
This article first appeared in NH Profiles, June 1976 and is reprinted by permission
of the author. A former curator at Strawbery Banke Museum, today James L. Garvin
is the NH state architectural historian at the NH Division of Historical Resources.
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