History Daily - The Hot-Air Balloon’s First Flight
Episode Date: June 4, 2025June 4, 1783. The Montgolfier Brothers hold the first public demonstration of their new invention: the hot-air balloon. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more.History Da...ily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's June 4th, 1783 in a town square in Annanay, France.
38-year-old Etienne Montgolfeier strikes a flint and steel together in search of a spark.
After a few tries, a small pile of straw on the ground sets a light.
A meager crowd watches as Etienne adds more fuel to the fire.
He moves quickly because time is of the essence.
Etienne is here with his older brother, Joseph, to demonstrate a new invention.
A large, circular sheet lies on the ground.
and if the Mongolia brothers are right, it'll soon ascend into the sky like a bird.
Etienne signals to Joseph and the two inventors lift the cotton and paper sheet above the fire.
As smoke and heated air enters an opening in the sheet, it gradually expands into a balloon.
Eventually, the sheet is fully inflated, but the Mongolia brothers' balloon remains on the ground.
One or two spectators heckle and laugh, but Etienne ignores them.
He knows it's just a matter of time before the balloon's ready to go.
And after a few more seconds, Etienne feels the balloon tugging at his hands.
He and Joseph exchange a nod, let go at the same time, and the balloon rises into the air.
The small crowd bursts into applause as the balloon soars up toward the clouds.
It climbs and climbs, rising higher even than Etienne expected,
till it's little more than a small speck in the blue sky.
This experiment in Annaé, France, doesn't just launch a balloon into the air.
It also launches Etienne and Joseph Mongofier to fame.
Over the next few years, the Mongofier brothers will become famous pioneers in the new industry of aeronautics,
helping humans take to the sky for the first time.
But tragedy as well as triumph will follow for Etienne and Joseph,
long after they gave the first public demonstration of a hot air balloon on June 4, 1783.
From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is June 4, 1783, the hot air balloon's first flight.
It's November 1782 and Abignon, France, two and half years before the first public demonstration of a hot air balloon.
42-year-old Joseph Montgolfier carries a box shot.
shape cloth-covered contraption through his house and carefully places it on the stone floor of his
kitchen. Joseph smooths the cloth, checks the lightweight wooden frame is intact, and then nods with
satisfaction. His experiment is ready. Joseph has always been a tinkerer and deeply curious about the
ways of the world. A few days ago, while watching clothes dry over a fire, Joseph noticed a shirt
sleeves billowing and lifting up in the air. That gave him the seed of an idea. He wondered whether
smoke might contain a special substance that's more buoyant than regular air. So he's set to work
building a device to test his hypothesis, a lightweight box to capture smoke. And if Joseph's theory is
correct, the box should rise into the air when there's enough smoke inside. So now Joseph crumbles up
some paper on the floor and sets it a light. Then he carefully places the only side of the box that's not
covered by cloth over the top of the small flame. At first, all Joseph sees is a flicker behind the
cloth. But after a moment, the box slowly floats up into the air. Joseph claps his hands in delight
as the box rises up all the way to the ceiling. And then when the fire burns out, the box
drops back to the floor. Joseph repeats his experiments several times, noting that the box rises
only when smoke is trapped inside the chamber. If Joseph blows the smoke away from the box,
it remains on the floor. Excited by this discovery, Joseph writes to his younger brother Etienne
to tell him about his findings.
Joseph explains that smoke must contain something that's lighter than air,
a mysterious substance he dubs Mongolfier gas.
He's already invented a special gadget that captures this gas
and uses it to rise into the air.
But for the next stage of his experiments, Joseph needs Etienne's help.
Etienne runs a paper-making business,
and Joseph wants to make use of his brother's expertise.
He asks Etienne whether paper would be a better material to cover his floating box.
It's lighter than cloth, after all, so in theory, less Mongolia gas should be needed to make it fly.
But of course, paper is flammable.
So what Joseph needs is a paper mix that is both lightweight and fire-resistant.
Over the next few weeks, the two brothers collaborate and build several more experimental contraptions together.
Using Etienne's knowledge of paper manufacturing, they find a blend of cotton and paper that's less prone to tearing or catching on fire.
They also discover it's possible to remove the device.
vices square wooden frame because the smoke itself seems to support the material.
That considerably lowers their gadgets' weight, allowing them to build a bigger test model.
When they release this new, unframed balloon outside, the result is spectacular.
It floats high into the air until the wind catches it, and the balloon threatens to disappear
into the distance. The brothers race after it, trying to keep their precious invention in sight.
The balloon travels for over a mile, but when Joseph and Etienne finally
reached its landing site, their hearts sink. Someone else has gotten to the balloon first and hacked it
to pieces, perhaps thinking it was a bomb sent by France's old enemy, the British. After their test
model is destroyed, the brothers build another balloon, and this one is even bigger. Keen to avoid another
misunderstanding, they make their next launch a public event, and on June 4, 1783, local dignitaries
are invited to a town square in Ananay to watch the balloon go up. Upon release, it reaches
6,000 feet into the air and drifts for a mile before falling back to Earth.
The reaction of the invited guests is so positive that word of the Mongolfier
brother's invention quickly spreads, even reaching the ears of the king.
Three months after unveiling their balloon in its first public test flight, the
Mongolfiers are asked to repeat the demonstration for King Louis XVI.
Joseph and Etienne make the most of the occasion.
They decorate their balloon with royal symbols and attach a basket underneath.
After they fill the balloon with smoke from a fire, it ascends above the palace of Versailles
with a duck, a chicken, and a sheep aboard. The animals become the first live test subjects to
travel by hot air balloon, and King Louis gleefully tracks their progress on horseback.
The three animals survived their adventure through the air, and King Louis realizes that
these balloons may give France an advantage in battle. He requests another flight using
condemned criminals as test pilots. But Joseph and Etienne persuade the
the king that the honor of being the first human to fly should go to French nobleman,
not criminals. So with royal backing, the Mongolpher brothers will embark on the next stage of their
research with a new goal to send a balloon into the sky with a human on board. It's November 21, 1783,
at a chateau in Paris, France, two months after the Mongolia brothers demonstrated their balloon
to King Louis the 16th. Twenty-nine-year-old science tutor Jean-François-Pilatra di Rosier,
walks around the Mongofier brothers' latest balloon,
carefully inspecting the cotton and paper envelope for rips or tears.
After he's done a full circuit of the balloon,
he signals to the brothers that the equipment is good to go.
John Francois wants to ensure that today's flight goes without a hitch,
and not just because it's the latest demonstration of the Montgolpher's invention,
but because for this flight, Jean-Francois will be aboard.
Five months ago, Jean-Francois witnessed the first demonstration of the Mont-Golphe's balloon
at Anonay. Since then, he's followed the brothers' experiments with interest. He's assisted in several
test flights, including the Royal Demonstration at Versailles. And last month, Jean-Francois helped Etienne
Montauphier make the first manned balloon flight, although Etienne only rose 80 feet into the air
since the balloon was tied to the ground. Now, Jean-François has been selected to go up in the first
untethered balloon flight with fellow nobleman Francois Laurent de Land. So after his inspection is complete,
Jean-Francois climbs into the basket and D'Alan joins him.
They watch as the Mongolia brothers light a fire and haul on ropes to pull the balloon over the smoke.
The balloon slowly inflates until the basket lifts off the ground.
John Francois is thrilled by the sensation of rising into the air,
although he notices that D'Lond is finding it less enjoyable.
His knuckles are white from gripping the side of the basket.
The balloon then ascends to 3,000 feet above Paris,
giving Jean-François a view of the French capital that up until now has been reserved for birds.
The balloon drifts in the breeze, floating over the River Sen and far above the towers of the Notre Dame Cathedral, the tallest building in France.
John Francois removes his hat and waves enthusiastically to the tiny figures on the ground.
And since this is the first untethered balloon with a human pilot, the Mongolfier brothers have added a new element to their balloon, an iron brazier slung underneath.
Jean-François has been carefully tending the fire within to keep them in the air,
but after 25 minutes, he thinks they've been up there long enough.
He lets the fire die down, and the balloon descends slowly until it lands in a field five miles from where it took off.
After they land, Jean-François opens a bottle of champagne and toasts the successful flight with D'Laun,
whose color returns, now his feet are back on solid ground.
Over the next year, Jean-François becomes among Galfier's most experienced
pilot. During his pioneering flights, John Francois accompanies the first paying passengers to travel
by balloon, and he ascends through the clouds on another trip going higher than anyone has before.
On that occasion, Jean-François travels more than 30 miles before the freezing winds at 10,000
feet force him back down to Earth. Now secure in the knowledge that balloons can cover long distances,
Jean-Francois' next challenge is to make the first crossing of the English Channel. But he knows that
flying over the sea means that he'll need a bigger balloon with a larger supply of fuel.
Jean-François decides that the Mongolphe's latest balloon isn't up to the task,
so he builds his own with a radical new design.
John Francois's balloon has two chambers.
One captures hot, smoky air like the Mongolvier balloons,
but the second chamber contains a newly discovered gas that's known to be lighter than air, hydrogen.
Jean-François's new balloon sets off from Calais on the north coast of France,
on June 15, 1885.
Jean-François and his companion
hope for a smooth and historic journey
but their trip hits problems almost immediately.
They're at the mercy of the elements
because Jean-Francois has no way to steer the balloon
and partway across the channel,
the wind changes direction
and pushes them back toward France.
When the balloon crosses back over the French coast
just three miles from their launch point,
John Francois decides to abandon his attempt.
But as he starts the descent,
a spark from the brazier ignites the hydrogen in the balloon's second chamber.
A fireball quickly consumes the balloon as Jean-François watches on helplessly.
From 1,500 feet above the ground, the basket plummets back down to earth.
This accident gives Jean-François another ballooning first,
but this one is an unwanted accolade.
He and his companion become the victims of the first fatal balloon accident in history,
but they won't be the last.
Over the next two centuries, balloons will send many more people to their deaths, but the majority won't be passengers,
because less than 10 years after Jean-François's last flight, the hot air balloon would become a weapon of war.
It's the morning of June 26, 1794, outside Fruras, a town in the Netherlands,
nine years after the death of Jean-François-Pilatre de Rosier.
The 28-year-old French general Antoine Marlowe holds a telescope to his eye and examines the position of enemy,
fortifications around the town. It's a familiar task for General Morle, who's commanded troops and several
battles. But he's never had such an impressive view of a battlefield before, because right now,
General Morlo is 100 feet in the air in the wicker basket of a hot air balloon. Five years ago,
in 1789, King Louis XVI was overthrown in the French Revolution, and a Republican government
was set up in his place. Two years later, a coalition of European powers declared war on the new regime,
with the intention of re-establishing the French monarchy.
The outnumbered French army needed every advantage he could get
and turned to the country's brightest minds for health.
So the Mongolvier brothers were asked to turn their balloon into a weapon of war.
Today, the French army is facing an Austrian force occupying the town of Flourouse,
and for the first time, they have a hot air balloon in their arsenal.
After examining the enemy positions, General Moulogh thinks he's seen enough from his high vantage point.
The balloon then descends in the air balloon.
the general passes on instructions to his subordinates. Knowing exactly where the Austrian troops are
coming from and in what numbers allows General Morlo to shuffle his troops to better defend against the
threat. And over the next few hours, the Austrians launch multiple assaults on the French lines.
But General Morle's men hold firm, and when the Austrian advance stalls, the French rally to push
the Austrians back. By the end of the day, the French are in command of the battlefield.
After this success at the Battle of Flourouse, balloons gradually become an important part of 19th century armies.
Over the years that follow, more advanced balloons and then airships rise higher and go further than ever before.
During World War I, hundreds take to the air, deployed either to scout out the enemy or to protect ground targets against an even more deadly weapon of the skies, the airplane.
And in many ways, it's the airplane that makes Mongolia brothers invention obsolete.
But hot air balloons remain in use today for pleasure flights, and some even predict the golden age of ballooning is yet to come.
Gigantic helium-filled hybrid airships may soon be a familiar sight in the skies,
an environmentally friendly form of transportation that can trace its lineage back more than two centuries
to the Mongolia brothers' experimental hot air balloon, which was first unveiled to the French public on June 4, 1783.
Next on History Daily, June 5th, 1968,
Senator Robert F. Kennedy is assassinated,
changing the course of American politics forever.
From Noisor and Ayrship, this is History Daily,
hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham,
audio editing by Mohamed Shazid, sound designed by Matthew Filler,
music by Throne.
This episode is written and research by Scott Reeves,
edited by William Simpson,
managing producer Emily Burke,
Executive producers are William Simpson for air shift
and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
