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Henry Tracey Coxwell

British aeronaut (1819–1900)

Henry Tracey Coxwell

Summary

British aeronaut (1819–1900)

FieldValue
nameHenry Tracey Coxwell
imageHenry-T-Coxwell.jpg
birth_date
birth_placeWouldham
death_date
death_placeEast Blatchington, East Sussex
occupationBalloonist
[[James Glaisher]] (left) and Henry Tracey Coxwell ballooning in 1864

Henry Tracey Coxwell (2 March 1819 – 5 January 1900) was an English aeronaut and writer about ballooning active over the British Isles and continental Europe in the mid-to late nineteenth century. His achievements included having established and led two military balloon companies in Cologne, Germany at the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, leading the first aerial trip in England for purposes of photography (with Henry Negretti in 1863), piloting a British Association flight from Wolverhampton, England that achieved a record altitude with James Glaisher in 1862, reaching at least 29000 ft, and perhaps as high as 35000 to, as well as founding The Balloon, or Aerostatic Magazine (in 1845) and collecting his experiences in an autobiography, My Life and Balloon Experiences (from 1887 to 1890). He was referred to as the foremost balloonist of the last half of the nineteenth century by the English-language periodical, Illustrated London News, in January 1900.

Life

Henry Tracey Coxwell was born at the parsonage at Wouldham, Kent, on 2 March 1819.

As a boy he had become interested in balloons, and he spared no efforts to witness as many ascents as possible; among the aeronauts he admired and envied as a boy were Mrs Graham, Charles Green, Robert Cocking and the parachutist John Hampton. The successful voyage of Green's balloon from Vauxhall Gardens to Germany stimulated his enthusiasm, but it was not until 19 August 1844, at Pentonville, that he had an opportunity of making an ascent.

In the autumn of 1845 he founded and edited The Balloon, or Aerostatic Magazine, of which about twelve numbers were ultimately printed at irregular intervals. In 1847 he made a night flight from Vauxhall Gardens with Albert Smith during a storm: a 16 ft rent appeared in the envelope, and the balloon fell rapidly to earth, the occupants being saved by the balloon catching on some scaffolding before hitting the ground. Undeterred, Coxwell made another flight the following week.

Coxwell became a professional balloonist in 1848, when he was entrusted with the management of a balloon, the Sylph, in Brussels, and subsequently made ascents at Antwerp, Elberfeld, Cologne, and Johannisberg in Prussia; in 1849 he exhibited his balloon at Kroll's Gardens, Berlin, and demonstrated the ease with which petards could be discharged in the air; in September he made excursions to Stettin, Breslau, and Hamburg. At Hanover, in the summer of 1850, he had a narrow escape, owing to the proximity of lofty trees, and during this year and the next he took up many passengers at Berlin, Prague, Vienna, Leipzig, and elsewhere.

In 1852 he returned to London and made ascents from Cremorne Gardens, the New Globe Gardens in the Mile End Road and the Pavilion Gardens in Woolwich. In September 1854 he made some demonstrations in signalling from a balloon at Surrey Gardens.

The historic flight

In 1862 the British Association for the Advancement of Science determined to make investigations of the upper atmosphere using balloons. Dr. James Glaisher, FRS, was chosen to carry out the experiments, and at the suggestion of Charles Green, Coxwell was employed to fly the balloons. Coxwell constructed a 93000 ft3 capacity balloon named the Mammoth, the largest as of that date. For their third flight, on 5 September 1862, they took off from Wolverhampton, the location of a coal gas manufacturing facility. Coxwell used this type of gas because it was safer than hydrogen, although it provided less lift.

Coxwell and Glaisher reached the greatest height achieved as of that date. Glaisher lost consciousness during the ascent, his last barometer reading indicating an altitude of 29000 ft and Coxwell lost all sensation in his hands. The valve-line had become entangled so he was unable to release the mechanism; he climbed onto the rigging and was finally able to release the vent with his teeth

The balloon dropped nineteen thousand feet in fifteen minutes, landing safely near Ludlow. Later calculations estimated their maximum altitude at 35000 to.

Subsequent years

Between September 1862 and 1866, Coxwell and Glaisher made additional ascents to make scientific measurements.

In 1863 Coxwell made a demonstration of ballooning to the Army at Aldershot. These had little practical outcome, although later the War Office did order a balloon from Coxwell with the intention of shipping it to Ghana for use in the Third Anglo-Ashanti War. However, the practicalities of supplying hydrogen under field conditions resulted in the cancellation of the project.

In 1863, in company with Henry Negretti, Coxwell made the first aerial trip in England for purposes of photography. In 1864–1865, in the Research, he made some very successful ascents in Ireland, and gave some lectures upon aerostation. In 1864 his balloon, Britannia, was destroyed during the Leicester balloon riot. When the Franco-Prussian War broke out in 1870 he went to manage some war-balloons for the Germans. He formed two companies, two officers, and forty-two men, at Cologne, and his assistant went on to Strasbourg, but the town surrendered before much service was rendered.

On 17 June 1885, he made his last ascent in a large balloon, the City of York. He had made an annual display at York for several years, and there he bade farewell to a profession of which he had been one of the most daring exponents for over forty years. His immunity from serious accidents was due to his instinctive prudence, but still more to his thorough knowledge of ballooning tackle. In 1887 he arranged for publication of a book detailing his career, My Life and Balloon Experiences.

Coxwell had a balloon factory in Richmond Road Seaford, Sussex.

After his retirement, Coxwell lived for a time at Tottenham, but later moved to Seaford, East Sussex. He died on 5 January 1900, in Lewes, Sussex, England. He has a memorial at St Peter's Church, East Blatchington, Seaford, and is buried in Seaford Cemetery.

Works

During 1887-1889 Coxwell collected together in two volumes a number of interesting but ill-arranged and confusing chapters upon his career as an aeronaut, to which he gave the title My Life and Balloon Experiences; to vol. i. is added a supplementary chapter on military ballooning. As a frontispiece is a photographic portrait, reproduced in the Illustrated London News (13 January 1900) as that of the foremost balloonist of the last half-century.

He says: :I had hammered away in The Times for little less than a decade before there was a real military trial of ballooning for military purposes at Aldershot.

Bibliography

References

References

  1. link. (25 April 2021 Retrieved 25/4/21.)
  2. {{cite EB1911
  3. (20 January 1988). "The Library of Nineteenth-Century Photography". 19th Century Photos.
  4. (2 March 2018). "Scientist of the Day - Henry Coxwell". Linda Hall Library Kansas.
  5. (6 January 1900). "Mr. Henry Coxwell".
  6. Coxwell 1887, p. 151
  7. Holmes (2013), p. 199
  8. (20 April 2016). "The Victorians who flew as high as jumbo jets". BBC.
  9. (26 June 1909). "Army Aeronautics". [[Flight International.
  10. (9 August 2014). "The great balloon riot of 1864". BBC News.
  11. Malvern, Jack. (August 16, 2018). "Ballooning hero becomes a woman for new Eddie Redmayne film The Aeronauts". [[The Times]].
  12. Henry Bodkin. (2018-08-15). "Ballooning hero 'airbrushed' from history to make way for female character in Eddie Redmayne film". Telegraph.co.uk.
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