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Both
the Union and Confederate armies used balloons for reconnaissance
during the American Civil War, marking the first time that balloons
were used in the United States for reconnaissance. The professional
aeronaut John Wise was the first to receive orders to build a balloon
for the Union army. However, the balloon never was used because
it escaped its tethers and was shot down to prevent it from falling
into Confederate hands.
Thaddeus
Lowe and John LaMountain both carried out reconnaissance activities
for the Union army during the war. Lowe had foreseen the usefulness
of balloon observations when he had accidentally
landed in South Carolina on a flight from Cincinnati, Ohio,
to the Atlantic Ocean in April 1861. One of his financial supporters,
Murat Halstead, editor of the Cincinnati Daily Commercial,
wrote to U.S. Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase and suggested that
the United States establish a balloon corps under Lowe's command.
This corps would provide aerial reconnaissance for the Union armies.
Secretary
Chase arranged a meeting between Lowe and President Abraham Lincoln
for June 11, 1861. On July 17, 1861, Lowe demonstrated his ideas
for balloon reconnaissance and also for sending telegrams from the
balloon to the commanders below. He used the Enterprise,
attached to tethers and floating 500 feet (152 meters) above Washington,
D.C. President Lincoln was duly impressed. Later that summer, President
Lincoln established the Balloon Corps, a civilian organization under
the authority of the Union's Bureau of Topographical Engineers,
and granted Lowe permission to requisition equipment and personnel.
Lowe
received funds to build a balloon on August 2, 1861. The first U.S.
balloon designed for military use, the Union, was ready for
action on August 28. Because he was forced to inflate the balloon
with gas from municipal lines in Washington, D.C (he had not received
his funds yet for a portable gas generator), the balloon could
not be moved far, which limited operations to the Washington, DC,
area.
On
September 24, 1861, Lowe ascended to more than 1,000 feet (305 meters)
near Arlington, Virginia, across the Potomac River from Washington,
DC, and began telegraphing intelligence on the Confederate troops
located at Falls Church, Virginia, more than three miles (4.8 kilometers)
away. Union guns were aimed and fired accurately at the Confederate
troops without actually being able to see them—a first in
the history of warfare.
This
triumph led the Secretary of War Simon Cameron to direct Lowe to
build four additional balloons. Two more followed shortly. The fleet
now consisted of the Intrepid, Constitution, United
States, Washington, Eagle, Excelsior, and
the original Union. The balloons ranged in size from 32,000
cubic feet (906 cubic meters) down to 15,000 cubic feet (425 cubic
meters). Each had enough cable to climb 5,000 feet (1524 meters).
At
the same time, fellow aeronaut John LaMountain was also attempting
to provide balloon services for the Union. He wrote to Secretary
Cameron in 1861, but, because he had no influential backers, LaMountain
did not receive a reply. However, the commander of the Union Forces
at Fort Monroe, Major General Benjamin F. Butler, contacted him
and asked for a demonstration. Using the
Atlantic,which he had used to attempt to reach the Atlantic
Ocean earlier, he made two successful ascents at Fort Monroe in
July 1861. The New York Times reported that LaMountain could
view the Confederate encampments beyond Newmarket Bridge, Virginia,
and also at the James River north of Newport News. LaMountain had
actually made the first aerial reconnaissance of the Civil War and
also was the first to gather intelligence by free balloon flight
rather than from a tethered balloon.
LaMountain,
however, did not have the Union Army behind him, and he had difficulty
obtaining equipment. He managed to obtain another balloon, the Saratoga.
That balloon, however, was lost on November 16, 1861. He tried to
get some of Lowe's equipment, but Lowe refused to cooperate. Each
man found supporters, and the rivalry between the two grew. Finally,
after accusations and hostilities on both sides, on February 19,
1862, General McClellan dismissed LaMountain from any further service
to the military.
Lowe
continued providing tactical reports to the Union troops. He provided
information during the siege of Yorktown, Virginia, and in late
April 1863, at Fredericksburg, he transmitted hourly reports on
Confederate movements. During the battle of Fair Oaks, Virginia,
Lowe continually transmitted information on enemy troop positions.
Observations made during this battle proved to be crucial to the
Union victory.
The
presence of the balloons forced the Confederates to conceal their
forces. To avoid detection, they blacked out their camps after dark
and also created dummy encampments and gun emplacements, all of
which took valuable time and personnel.
However,
the balloon corps did not last until the end of the war. General
George McClellan was relieved of his command in 1863, and Captain
Cyrus Comstock, who was assigned to oversee the balloon corps, cut
its funding and thus its effectiveness. Lowe was also accused of
financial impropriety, and his pay was reduced. Lowe resigned from
the balloon corps on May 8, 1863. By August 1863, the corps had
disbanded.
As
well as aerial reconnaissance and telegraphy, Lowe and LaMountain
also introduced the use of aircraft carriers. Lowe directed the
construction in 1861 of the first aircraft carrier, George Washington
Parke Custis, a rebuilt coal barge with a flight deck superstructure.
On one occasion, she towed one of Lowe's balloons for 13 miles (21
kilometers) at an altitude of 1,000 feet (305 meters) while Lowe
made continuous observations. On August 3, 1861, LaMountain used
the deck of the small vessel Fanny to launch an observation
balloon 2,000 feet (610 meters) over the James River. He used the
Union tugboat Adriatic for the same purpose. Word
of the Americans' achievements even reached Europe, where the Prussian
army sent Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin to learn
what he could from this kind of warfare.
Some
authorities claim that, although balloon observations contributed
to battle victories, the Union Army's commanding generals did not
use the balloon observations advantageously. Vague reports on Robert
E. Lee's movements issued from the hydrogen balloon Intrepid
during the 1862 Peninsula Campaign apparently served only to panic
General McClellan. The general withdrew his vastly superior forces
and positioned them seven miles (11 kilometers) from Richmond, Virginia,
rather than attacking the sparsely defended Confederate capital
and ending the war three years and tens of thousands of lives sooner.
After McClellan was relieved of his command, Ulysses S. Grant took
over and reorganized the Army of the Potomac. Preferring to rely
more on attrition than on intelligence, he disbanded the Balloon
Corps.
The
Confederate Army also formed a smaller version of the balloon corps.
In the spring of 1862, Captain John Randolph Bryan offered to oversee
the building and deployment of an observation balloon. This balloon
consisted of a cotton envelope coated with varnish. Unlike the hydrogen-filled
Union balloons, it was a Montgolfiérefilled
with hot air—because the Confederacy did not have the equipment
for generating hydrogen in the field.
Bryan
launched the balloon on April 13, 1862, over Yorktown, Virginia.
Even though the balloon was rotating on its single tether while
aloft, Bryan managed to sketch a map of Union positions. On his
next flight, Bryan ended up in free flight after the tether was
cut to free an entangled ground crew member. He was fired upon by
Confederate troops below who thought he was the enemy, but managed
to escape and land safely.
The
second Confederate balloon was constructed of multi-colored silk,
which gave rise to the legend that this Confederate balloon was
made from silk dresses donated by the ladies of the Confederacy.
Although the "Silk Dress Balloon" was constructed from
dress silk, no actual dresses were sacrificed. This balloon was
gas-filled in Richmond, Virginia, and carried to the field by tethering
it to a locomotive. In 1862, when the battle area moved too far
from the railroad, it was attached to a tugboat and carried down
the James River where the tug, unfortunately, ran aground and was
captured.
Another
"Silk Dress Balloon" was constructed and went into service
at Richmond in the fall of 1862. It provided aerial observations
from its post until the summer of 1863 when it escaped in a high
wind and was captured by Union troops.
References:
Hoehling,
Mary Duprey. Thaddeus Lowe, America's One-Man Air Corps.
N.Y.: Messner, 1958.
Rolt,
L.T.C. The Aeronauts: A History of Ballooning - 1783-1903.
N.Y.: Walker and Company, 1966.
On-Line
References:
Evans,
Charles M. "Air War Over Virginia." http://thehistorynet.com/CivilWarTimes/articles/1096_text.htm.
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