1 00:00:01,280 --> 00:00:04,240 Speaker 1: Welcome to Stuff you missed in History Class from how 2 00:00:04,280 --> 00:00:14,080 Speaker 1: Stuff Works dot com. Hello, and welcome to the podcast. 3 00:00:14,360 --> 00:00:18,360 Speaker 1: I'm Polly Fry, I'm Tracy ban Wilson. Uh And two 4 00:00:18,400 --> 00:00:22,560 Speaker 1: hundred years ago, there was a craze sweeping Europe which 5 00:00:22,600 --> 00:00:27,240 Speaker 1: was balloon Nomania. Manned balloon flights were amazing crowds and 6 00:00:27,280 --> 00:00:32,000 Speaker 1: capturing imaginations, and balloons became a popular decorative motif from 7 00:00:32,080 --> 00:00:35,600 Speaker 1: everything from ceramic plates to copper cake tins and even 8 00:00:35,640 --> 00:00:40,120 Speaker 1: integrated into fashion. Uh And, one of the famed figures 9 00:00:40,120 --> 00:00:43,640 Speaker 1: in this whole balloon ing um madness was a woman 10 00:00:43,720 --> 00:00:46,519 Speaker 1: named Sophie Blanchard, and she was the first woman to 11 00:00:46,560 --> 00:00:50,720 Speaker 1: become a professional balloonist. But how did a timid girl, 12 00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:54,120 Speaker 1: which she was according to most people, become a trailblazer 13 00:00:54,160 --> 00:00:57,560 Speaker 1: in what was an extremely dangerous career field. Before we 14 00:00:57,600 --> 00:00:59,800 Speaker 1: get to that story, we need to look a little 15 00:00:59,800 --> 00:01:04,280 Speaker 1: bit how balloons became so popular in the late eighteenth century. 16 00:01:04,600 --> 00:01:07,840 Speaker 1: So in seventeen sixty six there was a scientific thing 17 00:01:07,920 --> 00:01:10,920 Speaker 1: that happened, which is that British philosopher and chemist Henry 18 00:01:10,959 --> 00:01:15,040 Speaker 1: Cavendish made a discovery that really kind of catapulted ballooning 19 00:01:15,080 --> 00:01:18,520 Speaker 1: into the public eye. He isolated hydrogen, which at the 20 00:01:18,560 --> 00:01:23,080 Speaker 1: time he called inflammable air. It wasn't named hydrogen until 21 00:01:23,200 --> 00:01:27,240 Speaker 1: another scientist worked with it, later named Antoine Levoisier. This 22 00:01:27,280 --> 00:01:29,760 Speaker 1: new knowledge of this lighter than air element led to 23 00:01:29,840 --> 00:01:34,480 Speaker 1: experimentations in balloon technology that weren't based on hot air uh, 24 00:01:34,840 --> 00:01:37,319 Speaker 1: and so the invention of the gas balloon, which was 25 00:01:37,360 --> 00:01:42,679 Speaker 1: also known as Charliere or Robertine uh took place. Whereas 26 00:01:42,720 --> 00:01:45,400 Speaker 1: nowadays we're back to hot air. But there's a reason 27 00:01:45,440 --> 00:01:48,080 Speaker 1: for that that comes up in this podcast. Well, and 28 00:01:48,440 --> 00:01:50,600 Speaker 1: you may guess what it is if you have listened 29 00:01:50,680 --> 00:01:53,640 Speaker 1: to our podcast about the Hindenburg. Yeah, it's not a 30 00:01:53,760 --> 00:01:59,240 Speaker 1: super big serret that they called it inflammable air for 31 00:01:59,280 --> 00:02:06,000 Speaker 1: a reason. It caught fire extremely easily. Yes, so spoiler alert, 32 00:02:06,880 --> 00:02:10,720 Speaker 1: there will be fire. Fire will happen. So when Sophie 33 00:02:10,760 --> 00:02:13,480 Speaker 1: was still just a child in the seventeen eighties, two 34 00:02:13,600 --> 00:02:17,120 Speaker 1: brothers by the name of Mongolfy eight were experimenting with 35 00:02:17,200 --> 00:02:22,760 Speaker 1: balloon technology. France's King Louis the sixteenth was intrigued by 36 00:02:22,800 --> 00:02:26,440 Speaker 1: the Mongolfies work, and he proposed that they send two 37 00:02:26,520 --> 00:02:29,639 Speaker 1: criminals up in a manned flight. When the technology had 38 00:02:29,680 --> 00:02:33,760 Speaker 1: reached the appropriate five. Yeah, they had balloons, had started small, 39 00:02:33,800 --> 00:02:36,880 Speaker 1: and we're getting bigger and bigger, and Louis the sixteenth 40 00:02:36,919 --> 00:02:38,560 Speaker 1: is like, we could send up a couple of criminals. 41 00:02:38,600 --> 00:02:42,600 Speaker 1: There's no real risk there. Something happened sort of demonstrates 42 00:02:42,680 --> 00:02:46,280 Speaker 1: the element of danger that was involved here, like not 43 00:02:46,440 --> 00:02:49,360 Speaker 1: quite safe enough for regular people, but in the view 44 00:02:49,600 --> 00:02:52,520 Speaker 1: of the king, criminals would be fine. Yeah. But the 45 00:02:52,600 --> 00:02:56,680 Speaker 1: Mongolfiated brothers did not actually agree their first flight. They 46 00:02:56,720 --> 00:03:00,359 Speaker 1: actually opted to send up farm animals. They arted with 47 00:03:00,400 --> 00:03:03,200 Speaker 1: a duck, a rooster and a sheep, and the animal's 48 00:03:03,200 --> 00:03:05,560 Speaker 1: main history is the first living creatures in flight in 49 00:03:05,639 --> 00:03:09,280 Speaker 1: seventeen eighty three and at ann and A, France, and 50 00:03:09,400 --> 00:03:13,800 Speaker 1: they landed safely on the ground after about ten minutes aloft. 51 00:03:14,440 --> 00:03:16,360 Speaker 1: So the king and his queen, who was of course 52 00:03:16,680 --> 00:03:20,720 Speaker 1: Brie Antoinette, were apparently utterly delighted by this exhibition, as 53 00:03:20,840 --> 00:03:23,240 Speaker 1: was a very large crowd that had gathered to witness 54 00:03:23,280 --> 00:03:26,200 Speaker 1: this event. Sounds like a like the setup to a juke. 55 00:03:27,760 --> 00:03:31,960 Speaker 1: There were get in a balloon and delight the King 56 00:03:32,000 --> 00:03:35,240 Speaker 1: of France. Yes. A few months later, one of the brothers, 57 00:03:35,320 --> 00:03:38,640 Speaker 1: et Tienne, got to be the first human to man 58 00:03:38,640 --> 00:03:41,800 Speaker 1: a balloon flight, so at the end flight was tethered, 59 00:03:42,040 --> 00:03:44,880 Speaker 1: but not long after his controlled foura into the sky. 60 00:03:45,080 --> 00:03:48,880 Speaker 1: An untethered flight carried the French Marquis Francois Laurent, le 61 00:03:49,000 --> 00:03:52,880 Speaker 1: Vie d'arlande and Pila Rosier on a brief flight, which 62 00:03:52,920 --> 00:03:55,800 Speaker 1: was witnessed once again by King Louis the sixteenth as 63 00:03:55,840 --> 00:03:59,440 Speaker 1: well as Benjamin Franklin, and again a sizeable crowd. People 64 00:03:59,440 --> 00:04:03,920 Speaker 1: were really white entranced by these balloon flights. The man 65 00:04:04,080 --> 00:04:08,280 Speaker 1: Sophie would marry was born on July fourth, seventeen fifty three. 66 00:04:08,520 --> 00:04:13,320 Speaker 1: Jean Pierre Francois Blanchard was twenty five years older than 67 00:04:13,360 --> 00:04:16,560 Speaker 1: she was, and Jean Pierre started his own experiments with 68 00:04:16,600 --> 00:04:20,480 Speaker 1: flying machines in the seventeen seventies. His focused on the 69 00:04:20,600 --> 00:04:23,880 Speaker 1: use of a rowing in the air, almost like you 70 00:04:23,920 --> 00:04:26,400 Speaker 1: would have ship, and trying to get air currents to 71 00:04:26,720 --> 00:04:30,800 Speaker 1: lift the vessel. But once the Mongolfie brothers showed the 72 00:04:30,839 --> 00:04:34,600 Speaker 1: success of balloon ing, Jean Pierre switched gears completely and 73 00:04:34,680 --> 00:04:38,200 Speaker 1: joined the ballooning craze. Jean Pierre made his first balloon 74 00:04:38,279 --> 00:04:41,279 Speaker 1: ascent in March of seventeen eighty four. Sophie would have 75 00:04:41,279 --> 00:04:44,560 Speaker 1: been around six at this point, and in January seventeen 76 00:04:44,600 --> 00:04:47,279 Speaker 1: eighty five he made the first manned flight over the 77 00:04:47,320 --> 00:04:51,960 Speaker 1: English Channel with an American doctor, John Jeffries. They started 78 00:04:51,960 --> 00:04:55,880 Speaker 1: in England and landed in France. Yeah. Subsequent attempt to 79 00:04:56,040 --> 00:05:00,520 Speaker 1: cross the Channel in the opposite direction by pelatroge Rosier, 80 00:05:00,680 --> 00:05:03,440 Speaker 1: who was had been in one of those earlier flights, 81 00:05:03,880 --> 00:05:06,960 Speaker 1: did not end so well. Uh. It resulted in the 82 00:05:07,000 --> 00:05:12,160 Speaker 1: first recorded aviation fatality. In his heart, Jean Pierre was 83 00:05:12,520 --> 00:05:15,880 Speaker 1: a showman above anything else, and to make money he 84 00:05:15,920 --> 00:05:20,040 Speaker 1: took his ballooning on tour. During this time, he abandoned 85 00:05:20,040 --> 00:05:22,919 Speaker 1: the wife he had been married to since seventeen seventy four, 86 00:05:23,360 --> 00:05:27,000 Speaker 1: Victoire Lebron, and their four children to poverty while he 87 00:05:27,040 --> 00:05:33,360 Speaker 1: traveled and showed crowds his arenautical skills. Yeah there. Jean 88 00:05:33,400 --> 00:05:35,360 Speaker 1: Pierre is a very interesting character and he could be 89 00:05:35,400 --> 00:05:37,279 Speaker 1: his own whole podcast because there are a lot of 90 00:05:37,320 --> 00:05:40,360 Speaker 1: crazy stories about him, and they are always these little like, oh, 91 00:05:40,400 --> 00:05:42,320 Speaker 1: he was doing these amazing things. By the way, he 92 00:05:42,360 --> 00:05:44,800 Speaker 1: did some really seedy stuff as well, like he left 93 00:05:44,839 --> 00:05:47,200 Speaker 1: his wife. He tried to cheat some business partners along 94 00:05:47,240 --> 00:05:49,279 Speaker 1: the way there there are all of those, so keep 95 00:05:49,320 --> 00:05:53,040 Speaker 1: that in mind. Um. But as he was doing all 96 00:05:53,080 --> 00:05:56,360 Speaker 1: of his showmanship, he decided to add a bit of 97 00:05:56,480 --> 00:05:59,440 Speaker 1: flare to the proceedings, and so he would sometimes drop 98 00:05:59,800 --> 00:06:05,920 Speaker 1: a parachuted dog from the balloon basket or shoot off fireworks. Um. 99 00:06:05,960 --> 00:06:09,159 Speaker 1: And the first dog drop happened on June three five, 100 00:06:09,560 --> 00:06:13,000 Speaker 1: and according to accounts, the dog survived, so Blanchard would 101 00:06:13,080 --> 00:06:16,320 Speaker 1: repeat the experiment on subsequent shows because people were so 102 00:06:16,360 --> 00:06:18,960 Speaker 1: wowed by this idea of a dog being dropped from 103 00:06:18,960 --> 00:06:23,160 Speaker 1: a balloon and surviving. He also tried parachuting himself. He 104 00:06:23,200 --> 00:06:26,200 Speaker 1: was the first person to successfully use a parachute, and 105 00:06:26,240 --> 00:06:28,440 Speaker 1: at one point he added sales to his balloon in 106 00:06:28,480 --> 00:06:32,400 Speaker 1: the hope of improving propulsion and maneuvering. Jean Pierre was 107 00:06:32,680 --> 00:06:35,240 Speaker 1: basically a rock star of the ballooning world and even 108 00:06:35,240 --> 00:06:40,160 Speaker 1: a trendsetter. Balloon enthusiasts copied his hairstyle and the images 109 00:06:40,200 --> 00:06:43,920 Speaker 1: of his balloon appeared on ladies, fans, and other accessories, 110 00:06:44,560 --> 00:06:47,200 Speaker 1: and he also, as one of his business ventures, founded 111 00:06:47,240 --> 00:06:50,920 Speaker 1: a short lived school called the Balloon and Parachute Aristatic Academy, 112 00:06:51,000 --> 00:06:54,520 Speaker 1: but it did not last terribly long. In sevente Jean 113 00:06:54,560 --> 00:06:58,240 Speaker 1: Pierre ascended from a prison yard in Philadelphia aboard a balloon, 114 00:06:58,320 --> 00:07:02,120 Speaker 1: the first North American ass for an audience, which included 115 00:07:02,160 --> 00:07:05,839 Speaker 1: the US founding fathers. It was his forty five ascension, 116 00:07:07,040 --> 00:07:09,560 Speaker 1: and he was doing all of these incredible things. He 117 00:07:09,600 --> 00:07:13,440 Speaker 1: actually still holds records, and he was incredibly popular, and 118 00:07:13,520 --> 00:07:17,160 Speaker 1: he did a lot of theatrical lifts and would sell tickets. 119 00:07:17,200 --> 00:07:19,760 Speaker 1: But Jean Pierre really found himself in some pretty steep 120 00:07:19,800 --> 00:07:22,800 Speaker 1: financial trouble, and to make matters worse, he had angered 121 00:07:22,880 --> 00:07:26,480 Speaker 1: John Jeffries, who had been his primary financial contributor and 122 00:07:26,560 --> 00:07:29,480 Speaker 1: was also his partner in the English crossing, the English 123 00:07:29,520 --> 00:07:32,840 Speaker 1: Channel crossing. But he had always handled his money poorly. 124 00:07:33,480 --> 00:07:35,480 Speaker 1: Even when he was making a lot of money, he 125 00:07:35,560 --> 00:07:38,120 Speaker 1: was spending far more than he was taking in, and 126 00:07:38,160 --> 00:07:40,640 Speaker 1: he was trying to find new ways to reinvigorate the 127 00:07:40,680 --> 00:07:43,280 Speaker 1: interest of spectators and always sell more tickets and book 128 00:07:43,320 --> 00:07:46,560 Speaker 1: more shows. Before we go on, we need to finally 129 00:07:46,560 --> 00:07:52,440 Speaker 1: talk about Sophie. Sophie was born on March. Her birth 130 00:07:52,520 --> 00:07:56,720 Speaker 1: name was Marie Madeleine Sophie Armand one of the bothersome 131 00:07:56,880 --> 00:07:59,440 Speaker 1: aspects of this story is that we just don't have 132 00:07:59,480 --> 00:08:01,480 Speaker 1: a lot of information about what her life was like 133 00:08:01,600 --> 00:08:06,000 Speaker 1: pre Jean Pierre. Yeah, almost any biography you read of her, 134 00:08:06,160 --> 00:08:07,920 Speaker 1: when you look it up in books on the history 135 00:08:07,960 --> 00:08:10,600 Speaker 1: of ballooning, it's literally like she was born and then 136 00:08:10,640 --> 00:08:14,600 Speaker 1: she married this guy, and then she became important. Things 137 00:08:14,760 --> 00:08:16,800 Speaker 1: happened in between. Yeah, there must have been, but it 138 00:08:16,880 --> 00:08:19,280 Speaker 1: really is pretty difficult to find any of them. But 139 00:08:19,360 --> 00:08:21,160 Speaker 1: what we do know is that she was a very 140 00:08:21,280 --> 00:08:25,080 Speaker 1: nervous young woman. People that know who knew her describe 141 00:08:25,080 --> 00:08:28,880 Speaker 1: her as being afraid of even writing in carriages. Uh. 142 00:08:29,040 --> 00:08:32,520 Speaker 1: Physical descriptions of her from multiple sources all describe her 143 00:08:32,520 --> 00:08:36,280 Speaker 1: as very small, with angular features. Sometimes she's described as 144 00:08:36,320 --> 00:08:39,360 Speaker 1: bird like, and most accounts of her appearance are actually 145 00:08:39,400 --> 00:08:43,200 Speaker 1: kind of unflattering. I found one that said she was pretty, 146 00:08:43,320 --> 00:08:46,000 Speaker 1: but the rest were kind of mean. I am sort 147 00:08:46,000 --> 00:08:51,040 Speaker 1: of tired of mean descriptions of ladies personal features in history. Yeah. 148 00:08:51,200 --> 00:08:53,560 Speaker 1: I mean that happens now today too. At some point 149 00:08:53,640 --> 00:08:55,920 Speaker 1: we will be history and people will talk about how 150 00:08:55,920 --> 00:08:59,480 Speaker 1: everyone was, talking about how ugly everybody was. I gets 151 00:08:59,480 --> 00:09:04,120 Speaker 1: on my ner herbs John she had a very interesting life. 152 00:09:04,120 --> 00:09:07,360 Speaker 1: It didn't really matter. I think it matters the focus 153 00:09:07,400 --> 00:09:10,920 Speaker 1: on appearance is what is getting on my nerve. Jean 154 00:09:10,920 --> 00:09:13,720 Speaker 1: Pierre and Sophie were married at some point between seventeen 155 00:09:13,800 --> 00:09:16,520 Speaker 1: nine and eighteen o four, and it kind of varies 156 00:09:16,559 --> 00:09:18,480 Speaker 1: depending on the source you look at, so you might 157 00:09:18,520 --> 00:09:22,200 Speaker 1: see any number of conflicting dates. Yes, some suggest that, 158 00:09:22,520 --> 00:09:26,319 Speaker 1: um there, it's hinted in some biographies that he may 159 00:09:26,320 --> 00:09:31,280 Speaker 1: have married her as a way to propel his show career. Um. 160 00:09:31,320 --> 00:09:33,800 Speaker 1: Others suggest that they had already been married, but and 161 00:09:34,200 --> 00:09:39,080 Speaker 1: what had happened to his old wife? She died in poverty. Yeah, 162 00:09:39,360 --> 00:09:43,720 Speaker 1: thanks Jean Pierre. Sorry Victoire, You're apparently not important enough 163 00:09:43,720 --> 00:09:46,200 Speaker 1: to him to worry about. Uh, he's got to do 164 00:09:46,240 --> 00:09:48,719 Speaker 1: his balloon thing. And as part of his plan to 165 00:09:48,800 --> 00:09:51,280 Speaker 1: drum up new income, Jean Pierre hatched this plan to 166 00:09:51,320 --> 00:09:53,840 Speaker 1: add Sophie to the show to add novelty and attract 167 00:09:53,840 --> 00:09:59,559 Speaker 1: bigger crowds. So again some some books will suggest that, um, 168 00:09:59,640 --> 00:10:01,120 Speaker 1: him to eating her up in a balloon was like 169 00:10:01,160 --> 00:10:03,840 Speaker 1: a honeymoon, and others just say no, no, they were 170 00:10:03,840 --> 00:10:06,600 Speaker 1: already married, but he took his wife, who at this 171 00:10:06,640 --> 00:10:10,080 Speaker 1: point was just aged six, half his age, up in 172 00:10:10,120 --> 00:10:14,320 Speaker 1: their first duo flight together on December four at Marseilles, 173 00:10:15,720 --> 00:10:19,360 Speaker 1: sort of unexpectedly, given everything everybody had said about her 174 00:10:19,360 --> 00:10:22,520 Speaker 1: at this point, Sophie found balloon flight exhilarating, and she 175 00:10:22,559 --> 00:10:25,800 Speaker 1: didn't show any of her timidity that she had shown 176 00:10:25,800 --> 00:10:29,440 Speaker 1: on land while she was aloft, so this attraction to 177 00:10:29,640 --> 00:10:33,559 Speaker 1: traveling was born. She said to have described balloon flight 178 00:10:33,720 --> 00:10:38,280 Speaker 1: as an incomparable sensation. In addition to her as sense 179 00:10:38,360 --> 00:10:41,600 Speaker 1: with Jean Pierre, Sophie also started to make solo balloon 180 00:10:41,640 --> 00:10:45,480 Speaker 1: trips as well, and just as a note, while Sophie 181 00:10:45,520 --> 00:10:48,800 Speaker 1: is often referred to as the first female aeronaut, she 182 00:10:48,960 --> 00:10:52,280 Speaker 1: was not, strictly speaking, the first female balloonist. Several other 183 00:10:52,280 --> 00:10:54,720 Speaker 1: women had made a sense in balloons, both tathered and 184 00:10:54,800 --> 00:10:57,720 Speaker 1: free before her, but she was the first woman to 185 00:10:57,720 --> 00:10:59,800 Speaker 1: fly a balloon solo, and she was certainly the first 186 00:10:59,800 --> 00:11:02,680 Speaker 1: to make a career out of it. During a flight 187 00:11:02,760 --> 00:11:06,360 Speaker 1: over the Hague in February eighteen o eight, Jean Pierre 188 00:11:06,400 --> 00:11:08,760 Speaker 1: had a heart attack and he fell out of the 189 00:11:08,840 --> 00:11:11,560 Speaker 1: basket that he and Sophie were in, and we wound 190 00:11:11,640 --> 00:11:15,840 Speaker 1: up following more than fifty feet or fifteen point two meters, 191 00:11:16,240 --> 00:11:19,120 Speaker 1: and Jean Pierre never recovered from his injuries. From this fall, 192 00:11:19,240 --> 00:11:21,760 Speaker 1: and he hung on for a little more than a year, 193 00:11:21,800 --> 00:11:24,480 Speaker 1: but he died on March seventh of eighteen o nine, 194 00:11:24,520 --> 00:11:27,600 Speaker 1: and he was only fifty six at the time. When 195 00:11:27,720 --> 00:11:31,160 Speaker 1: Jean Pierre died, he left this mountain of debt behind, 196 00:11:31,800 --> 00:11:35,480 Speaker 1: and rather than being a quiet and retiring widow, Sophie, 197 00:11:35,480 --> 00:11:37,640 Speaker 1: he vowed to make good on all of those debts. 198 00:11:37,679 --> 00:11:40,400 Speaker 1: She kept on with her ballooning career to bring in money, 199 00:11:40,720 --> 00:11:43,319 Speaker 1: and she fulfilled her promise to pay back the creditors 200 00:11:43,360 --> 00:11:46,600 Speaker 1: that Jean Pierre owed. That always kind of blows me away, 201 00:11:47,280 --> 00:11:49,679 Speaker 1: Like this woman in the early eighteen hundreds is left 202 00:11:49,800 --> 00:11:52,800 Speaker 1: not just destitute, but deeply in debt by her husband, 203 00:11:52,800 --> 00:11:55,199 Speaker 1: and she's like, Okay, I'll handle it all right, ballooning, 204 00:11:55,559 --> 00:11:58,959 Speaker 1: let's do it. That's pretty impressive. Uh. And she is 205 00:11:58,960 --> 00:12:01,720 Speaker 1: said to have loved ballooning at night in particular, and 206 00:12:01,800 --> 00:12:04,040 Speaker 1: she eventually got into the habit of all night trips. 207 00:12:05,000 --> 00:12:07,880 Speaker 1: There was one biographical article I was reading that suggested 208 00:12:07,920 --> 00:12:10,960 Speaker 1: that part of why she might have its pure speculation, 209 00:12:11,480 --> 00:12:14,199 Speaker 1: enjoyed ballooning even though she was afraid of like everything 210 00:12:14,240 --> 00:12:16,480 Speaker 1: on the ground, was that it was quiet there. And 211 00:12:16,520 --> 00:12:19,520 Speaker 1: what was really scaring her like in of course carriages, 212 00:12:19,640 --> 00:12:21,200 Speaker 1: and you know out on the streets was just the 213 00:12:21,240 --> 00:12:23,800 Speaker 1: noise of it. It is quite noisy to be a 214 00:12:23,880 --> 00:12:27,319 Speaker 1: carriage drawn by horses like cobblestone or whatever. But we 215 00:12:27,360 --> 00:12:28,880 Speaker 1: don't know. But if that was the case, it would 216 00:12:28,880 --> 00:12:30,520 Speaker 1: make sense that she would really find it to be 217 00:12:30,559 --> 00:12:33,679 Speaker 1: a good place to spend the night. Uh and then 218 00:12:33,720 --> 00:12:36,560 Speaker 1: following her to see spouse's lead. She also took on 219 00:12:36,640 --> 00:12:40,120 Speaker 1: some theatrics. She would use these night trips to launch 220 00:12:40,160 --> 00:12:45,120 Speaker 1: fireworks from the balloon to dramatic effect. That is just 221 00:12:45,480 --> 00:12:48,160 Speaker 1: as bad of an idea as it sounds horrible idea. 222 00:12:48,880 --> 00:12:52,560 Speaker 1: These don't ever go up in a helium balloon. This 223 00:12:52,600 --> 00:12:56,319 Speaker 1: was hydrogen. Don't do helium either. Don't set off fireworks 224 00:12:56,679 --> 00:13:01,839 Speaker 1: bullet even if what's inside of it is not an 225 00:13:01,880 --> 00:13:09,760 Speaker 1: immensely flammable gas. On June ten, Sophie made her sixteenth 226 00:13:09,800 --> 00:13:12,440 Speaker 1: ascension as part of a celebration of the marriage of 227 00:13:12,640 --> 00:13:16,559 Speaker 1: Napoleon and Marie Louise, and Napoleon was extremely fond of Sophie. 228 00:13:16,600 --> 00:13:19,880 Speaker 1: He appointed her Chief Air Minister of Ballooning, and in 229 00:13:19,880 --> 00:13:23,520 Speaker 1: this role she actually developed and assessed plans for balloon 230 00:13:23,559 --> 00:13:27,400 Speaker 1: based aerial raids of England for Napoleon, although she eventually 231 00:13:27,400 --> 00:13:29,120 Speaker 1: had to report to him that this really was not 232 00:13:29,200 --> 00:13:31,839 Speaker 1: a feasible way to wage a war, that these were 233 00:13:31,880 --> 00:13:35,280 Speaker 1: not missions that he should plan on doing. They needed 234 00:13:35,360 --> 00:13:38,120 Speaker 1: dragons like in the Terror air books. That's what I think. 235 00:13:39,040 --> 00:13:42,520 Speaker 1: Even after the French monarchy was restored, Sophie stayed in 236 00:13:42,520 --> 00:13:45,640 Speaker 1: the good graces of the nation leaders. As part of 237 00:13:45,720 --> 00:13:49,880 Speaker 1: Louis the eighteenth Restoration celebration, Sophie ascended in a balloon 238 00:13:50,000 --> 00:13:54,040 Speaker 1: from pont Neuf and was eventually named official aeronaut of 239 00:13:54,120 --> 00:13:57,400 Speaker 1: the Restoration by the Bourbon king. And she was also 240 00:13:57,480 --> 00:13:59,520 Speaker 1: something of a daredevil in the air, and she really 241 00:13:59,520 --> 00:14:03,040 Speaker 1: did become quite famous throughout Europe. Uh. What's interesting is 242 00:14:03,080 --> 00:14:05,080 Speaker 1: that she accomplished a lot of feats that her husband 243 00:14:05,120 --> 00:14:08,000 Speaker 1: had only dreamed of, and of course she also got 244 00:14:08,040 --> 00:14:10,920 Speaker 1: herself in a lot of dangerous situations. One of the 245 00:14:10,920 --> 00:14:13,520 Speaker 1: big accomplishments was that she crossed the Alps by balloon, 246 00:14:14,360 --> 00:14:17,840 Speaker 1: which UH Jean Pierre had always said he was interested 247 00:14:17,840 --> 00:14:21,520 Speaker 1: in doing but never achieved. En route to turn in 248 00:14:21,680 --> 00:14:26,440 Speaker 1: April of eighteen twelve, she had nosebleeds and icicles formed 249 00:14:26,440 --> 00:14:29,480 Speaker 1: on her face and hands a little bit dangerous. In 250 00:14:29,560 --> 00:14:32,600 Speaker 1: eighteen seventeen, she had a really weird sort of brush 251 00:14:32,600 --> 00:14:36,560 Speaker 1: with danger. She mistook a flooded field for a meadow 252 00:14:36,600 --> 00:14:39,400 Speaker 1: and she tried to land there and she nearly drowned. 253 00:14:39,440 --> 00:14:41,960 Speaker 1: But fortunately there were horsemen that had been tracking her 254 00:14:42,000 --> 00:14:44,120 Speaker 1: flight and when they saw the balloon go down, they 255 00:14:44,120 --> 00:14:46,480 Speaker 1: were able to get to her and pull her to safety. 256 00:14:46,920 --> 00:14:49,960 Speaker 1: Her night trips would also sometimes last all night, and 257 00:14:50,040 --> 00:14:53,280 Speaker 1: she would occasionally fall asleep in the basket, which isn't 258 00:14:53,400 --> 00:14:58,240 Speaker 1: really maybe the smartest thing doze off while you're conducting 259 00:14:58,240 --> 00:15:01,520 Speaker 1: a vehicle. I'm gonna go with a vehicle that is 260 00:15:01,560 --> 00:15:04,840 Speaker 1: in the sky and also flammable. None of the vehicles 261 00:15:04,840 --> 00:15:07,760 Speaker 1: should you sleep all your but especially if it's in 262 00:15:07,760 --> 00:15:12,280 Speaker 1: the sky and also flammable. Uh so. On July six, 263 00:15:12,520 --> 00:15:16,240 Speaker 1: eight nineteen, Sophie prepared for one of her regular appearances 264 00:15:16,240 --> 00:15:19,600 Speaker 1: over the Tivoli Gardens in Paris, and she normally made 265 00:15:19,600 --> 00:15:22,120 Speaker 1: this ascent twice each week. When she was in Paris, 266 00:15:22,720 --> 00:15:24,960 Speaker 1: she would sell tickets to spectators who would come and 267 00:15:25,000 --> 00:15:27,800 Speaker 1: watch her balloon, and they would also watch her huge 268 00:15:27,920 --> 00:15:31,800 Speaker 1: nighttime fireworks show. On this particular night, she was carrying 269 00:15:31,840 --> 00:15:34,920 Speaker 1: a larger than normal compliment of the fireworks because she 270 00:15:35,000 --> 00:15:38,640 Speaker 1: was preparing what she called her Bengal fire display, and 271 00:15:38,680 --> 00:15:42,120 Speaker 1: this was a slow burning fireworks shoe. She reported to 272 00:15:42,200 --> 00:15:46,440 Speaker 1: have said at all Sister a Pla as she got 273 00:15:46,480 --> 00:15:49,880 Speaker 1: into the basket, which means, let's go for the last time. 274 00:15:51,080 --> 00:15:53,200 Speaker 1: Whether she actually meant for the show to be her 275 00:15:53,280 --> 00:15:55,320 Speaker 1: last one, she was forty one at the time, and 276 00:15:55,360 --> 00:15:58,080 Speaker 1: all she was financially stay stable, but she was not 277 00:15:58,200 --> 00:16:01,080 Speaker 1: exactly rolling in money and ready to tire. It's not 278 00:16:01,200 --> 00:16:04,960 Speaker 1: really clear. We don't have a record or sure of 279 00:16:05,000 --> 00:16:08,400 Speaker 1: whether she really meant for this to be her last show. Yeah, 280 00:16:08,440 --> 00:16:13,560 Speaker 1: there are discussions of it in different books. One is 281 00:16:13,600 --> 00:16:16,440 Speaker 1: just that because she had so many fireworks, there are 282 00:16:16,520 --> 00:16:20,560 Speaker 1: some stories, and again they're unverified that people were like, no, no, 283 00:16:20,680 --> 00:16:23,240 Speaker 1: you shouldn't go. It's it's too much, and others were like, 284 00:16:23,240 --> 00:16:26,320 Speaker 1: come on, let's start the fireworks. And it could be 285 00:16:26,400 --> 00:16:29,560 Speaker 1: that she was just saying for the last time, I'm going, 286 00:16:29,600 --> 00:16:32,440 Speaker 1: we're doing this, just that it didn't have anything to 287 00:16:32,440 --> 00:16:34,040 Speaker 1: do with it being her last time in the air. 288 00:16:34,080 --> 00:16:36,080 Speaker 1: But it did prove to be a little bit prophetic 289 00:16:37,280 --> 00:16:40,400 Speaker 1: because as the show started, the wind shifted, and Uh, 290 00:16:40,480 --> 00:16:43,080 Speaker 1: Sophie would do this thing where she would drop fireworks 291 00:16:43,120 --> 00:16:46,360 Speaker 1: from the basket on parachutes, similar to how they had 292 00:16:46,400 --> 00:16:49,480 Speaker 1: dropped dogs and people after the past ket previously. Uh, 293 00:16:49,520 --> 00:16:52,000 Speaker 1: and they would burn out as they fell to the ground. 294 00:16:52,600 --> 00:16:54,520 Speaker 1: But because of the wind shift, she was being carried 295 00:16:54,560 --> 00:16:57,960 Speaker 1: away from to Voli Gardens. Something went wrong with this 296 00:16:58,000 --> 00:17:01,400 Speaker 1: show and Sophie's balloon on on fire, as you may 297 00:17:01,440 --> 00:17:04,760 Speaker 1: have guessed was going to happen by the abundant foreshadowing 298 00:17:05,920 --> 00:17:09,360 Speaker 1: and just the simple science, like the choice of hydrogen 299 00:17:09,480 --> 00:17:12,040 Speaker 1: is as a gas to inflate the balloon and then 300 00:17:12,080 --> 00:17:16,800 Speaker 1: carry fire and carry fire around those some spectators cheered, 301 00:17:16,920 --> 00:17:19,119 Speaker 1: believing that the flames were part of just a huge 302 00:17:19,240 --> 00:17:22,000 Speaker 1: spectacle that was intentional and part of the show. Yeah, 303 00:17:22,000 --> 00:17:24,240 Speaker 1: she had such a reputation for putting on these amazing 304 00:17:24,240 --> 00:17:26,880 Speaker 1: shows that they were like, wow, she's making it look 305 00:17:26,880 --> 00:17:30,760 Speaker 1: like the balloon's on fire. The balloon was on fire. Uh. 306 00:17:30,800 --> 00:17:32,840 Speaker 1: And she is said to have tried to slow the 307 00:17:32,840 --> 00:17:35,320 Speaker 1: descent of the balloon by cutting ballast as it went 308 00:17:35,359 --> 00:17:37,560 Speaker 1: up in flames. So she's kind of floating over Paris 309 00:17:37,560 --> 00:17:40,520 Speaker 1: at this point, um, and trying to slow things down 310 00:17:40,520 --> 00:17:43,200 Speaker 1: so she doesn't just crash into something. And there are 311 00:17:43,280 --> 00:17:46,479 Speaker 1: some accounts that suggest that spectators thought, even after they 312 00:17:46,520 --> 00:17:48,560 Speaker 1: had realized that this was not part of the show, 313 00:17:49,080 --> 00:17:51,080 Speaker 1: they really thought that she might have a good shot 314 00:17:51,119 --> 00:17:55,080 Speaker 1: at landing safely. But as she was working, the balloon 315 00:17:55,200 --> 00:17:57,520 Speaker 1: hit the roof of a house and she was thrown 316 00:17:57,520 --> 00:18:00,399 Speaker 1: out of it. She was found dead on the street, 317 00:18:00,440 --> 00:18:03,720 Speaker 1: according to newspaper accounts YEA. Some suggests that she broke 318 00:18:03,760 --> 00:18:06,960 Speaker 1: her neck um others simply say that she was dead 319 00:18:06,960 --> 00:18:08,600 Speaker 1: in the street, and they don't go into any detail. 320 00:18:09,760 --> 00:18:13,600 Speaker 1: Sophie was buried in Paris in the Parlasch Cemetery, and 321 00:18:13,640 --> 00:18:17,040 Speaker 1: her monument was paid for through public donations. It features 322 00:18:17,040 --> 00:18:19,639 Speaker 1: a pedestal with a sphere and a flame atop it, 323 00:18:19,800 --> 00:18:23,920 Speaker 1: representing the aeronaut's fiery final voyage. I find that kind 324 00:18:23,960 --> 00:18:26,520 Speaker 1: of morbid. It is a little bit weird to show 325 00:18:26,560 --> 00:18:29,919 Speaker 1: the manner of death on the monuments. There's an apoctable 326 00:18:29,960 --> 00:18:32,439 Speaker 1: story that the funds for the monument were actually the 327 00:18:32,480 --> 00:18:35,760 Speaker 1: profits from ticket sales, which the Tivoli Gardens management had 328 00:18:35,800 --> 00:18:40,040 Speaker 1: initially earmarked for Blanchard's children, but then they realized she 329 00:18:40,119 --> 00:18:44,480 Speaker 1: had no children and reallocated them to the monument. Yeah. 330 00:18:44,480 --> 00:18:46,359 Speaker 1: I couldn't find verification on that one, but it was 331 00:18:46,400 --> 00:18:49,600 Speaker 1: such a fun odd story, like they were like, we 332 00:18:49,680 --> 00:18:52,359 Speaker 1: must give the money to her children, someone knowing she 333 00:18:52,400 --> 00:18:56,560 Speaker 1: doesn't have kids. We must build a monument. It's so 334 00:18:56,600 --> 00:19:01,200 Speaker 1: almost money python esque and it's kind of uh, well 335 00:19:01,280 --> 00:19:05,960 Speaker 1: meaning uh incorrectness, that is. And I don't mean to 336 00:19:06,000 --> 00:19:10,000 Speaker 1: disparage her or using hydrogen for her balloon. That is 337 00:19:10,040 --> 00:19:12,240 Speaker 1: what was available for her to you well, and it 338 00:19:12,359 --> 00:19:15,440 Speaker 1: was an age of excitement, you know, where things were 339 00:19:15,440 --> 00:19:18,720 Speaker 1: being experimented and you know, it had only been about 340 00:19:18,720 --> 00:19:21,520 Speaker 1: fifty years since hydrogen had been identified and these balloons 341 00:19:21,560 --> 00:19:23,840 Speaker 1: kind of represented like a new age of what they 342 00:19:23,880 --> 00:19:25,719 Speaker 1: could do and achieve and how far they could go. 343 00:19:25,880 --> 00:19:29,320 Speaker 1: And we all part of science. And as we've talked about, 344 00:19:29,440 --> 00:19:32,040 Speaker 1: it took a very long time for people to stop 345 00:19:32,080 --> 00:19:37,399 Speaker 1: filling things with hydrogen to then float people around in Yes, 346 00:19:37,880 --> 00:19:41,520 Speaker 1: there is actually an animated documentary that's being directed by 347 00:19:41,560 --> 00:19:45,040 Speaker 1: Jen Sachs titled The Fantastic Flights of Sophie Blanchard that's 348 00:19:45,040 --> 00:19:47,560 Speaker 1: been in production um for a while now, since it's 349 00:19:47,560 --> 00:19:50,879 Speaker 1: successfully funded through an indiego go campaign and as of 350 00:19:50,880 --> 00:19:53,760 Speaker 1: about a month ago. Their last update was that the 351 00:19:53,800 --> 00:19:56,280 Speaker 1: production was working on the final animation sequence, so there 352 00:19:56,320 --> 00:20:02,040 Speaker 1: will very soon theoretically be a new short animated documentary. 353 00:20:02,080 --> 00:20:05,439 Speaker 1: I love those two words together about Sophie Blanchard and 354 00:20:05,520 --> 00:20:10,679 Speaker 1: her life and work and uh, this crazy balloon career 355 00:20:10,760 --> 00:20:16,160 Speaker 1: that she had, which you know, relatively short but quite fascinating. 356 00:20:16,160 --> 00:20:17,720 Speaker 1: I think that sounds like fun and I hope it's 357 00:20:17,720 --> 00:20:21,960 Speaker 1: available for people to to stream or otherwise see. Yeah, 358 00:20:21,960 --> 00:20:24,000 Speaker 1: you can visit the website now and we'll link to 359 00:20:24,040 --> 00:20:26,600 Speaker 1: it in the show notes. Um, and you'll see kind 360 00:20:26,600 --> 00:20:29,560 Speaker 1: of the pitch animation that they did for Indigogo, which 361 00:20:29,600 --> 00:20:32,560 Speaker 1: is quite interesting and it's a fun style, and you'll 362 00:20:32,560 --> 00:20:35,120 Speaker 1: see kind of where it's going. Do you also have 363 00:20:35,160 --> 00:20:38,159 Speaker 1: some listener mail for us? I do. Uh. This is 364 00:20:38,200 --> 00:20:40,959 Speaker 1: from our listener lease uh. And she says, I just 365 00:20:41,000 --> 00:20:43,040 Speaker 1: listened to both of the Bride episodes and I enjoyed 366 00:20:43,080 --> 00:20:45,560 Speaker 1: them overall. But I must say that I was disappointed 367 00:20:45,600 --> 00:20:48,600 Speaker 1: to hear you characterized Charles Lawton as gay. So many 368 00:20:48,680 --> 00:20:51,199 Speaker 1: times I've heard you discuss the issues about labeling someone's 369 00:20:51,200 --> 00:20:54,960 Speaker 1: sexual identity in ways they did not describe themselves. According 370 00:20:54,960 --> 00:20:58,440 Speaker 1: to your quote from Elsa's autobiography, Charles described himself as 371 00:20:58,480 --> 00:21:01,680 Speaker 1: partially homosexual, and he and Elsa did conceive a child. 372 00:21:02,240 --> 00:21:05,040 Speaker 1: Unless there's information you've come across that you did not cite, 373 00:21:05,119 --> 00:21:08,879 Speaker 1: Charles was bisexual. I find a change in terminology problematic 374 00:21:08,920 --> 00:21:11,119 Speaker 1: and hope that you rethink or clarify it. It's a 375 00:21:11,280 --> 00:21:14,720 Speaker 1: very good point and valid. Uh. And he never certainly 376 00:21:14,760 --> 00:21:19,240 Speaker 1: never came out himself publicly. And even when Elsa published 377 00:21:19,240 --> 00:21:23,680 Speaker 1: her autobiography at first and revealed this information, a lot 378 00:21:23,720 --> 00:21:25,560 Speaker 1: of his friends were very angry and said, no, no, no, 379 00:21:26,040 --> 00:21:28,400 Speaker 1: I think you must be making this up. Uh. So 380 00:21:28,720 --> 00:21:32,800 Speaker 1: it's really valid and we should say, like from Elsa's 381 00:21:32,840 --> 00:21:34,480 Speaker 1: point of view, she was married to a gay man, 382 00:21:34,560 --> 00:21:37,720 Speaker 1: because she does talk about throughout the book that even 383 00:21:37,720 --> 00:21:40,440 Speaker 1: when they were together, she realized that like his preference 384 00:21:40,480 --> 00:21:42,400 Speaker 1: for her mode of dress had more to do with 385 00:21:42,440 --> 00:21:45,600 Speaker 1: like her sort of looking boyish, and even her wedding 386 00:21:45,600 --> 00:21:48,280 Speaker 1: outfit was almost like a little uniform kind of thing. 387 00:21:48,359 --> 00:21:51,160 Speaker 1: And and she really felt like he was trying to 388 00:21:51,200 --> 00:21:55,440 Speaker 1: conform to the social norm of, you know, a heterosexual marriage, 389 00:21:55,960 --> 00:21:58,040 Speaker 1: but also trying to make it work for him, like 390 00:21:58,080 --> 00:22:02,080 Speaker 1: what appealed to her about him was probably her traits 391 00:22:02,119 --> 00:22:05,080 Speaker 1: that were very independent and some would characterize as masculine, 392 00:22:05,119 --> 00:22:08,840 Speaker 1: because most women were not quite as independent and self 393 00:22:08,840 --> 00:22:11,040 Speaker 1: sufficient and outspoken as her at the time, at least 394 00:22:11,040 --> 00:22:13,920 Speaker 1: not publicly. And she talks about also as they lived 395 00:22:13,960 --> 00:22:17,000 Speaker 1: their lives together that he's always very unhappy unless he 396 00:22:17,040 --> 00:22:20,240 Speaker 1: had sort of a a male companion with him, Like 397 00:22:20,280 --> 00:22:23,200 Speaker 1: he would become quite mean and angry with her um 398 00:22:23,200 --> 00:22:25,359 Speaker 1: and even cruel at times. But if he, you know, 399 00:22:25,480 --> 00:22:28,119 Speaker 1: had the companionship of a man, it was like he 400 00:22:28,600 --> 00:22:30,400 Speaker 1: that was when he felt right. So from her point 401 00:22:30,400 --> 00:22:33,160 Speaker 1: of view, having just read the reread the autobiography when 402 00:22:33,160 --> 00:22:35,800 Speaker 1: I was working on the show notes, I just sort 403 00:22:35,800 --> 00:22:37,919 Speaker 1: of naturally slip into her POV and go, yes, he 404 00:22:37,960 --> 00:22:40,840 Speaker 1: was gay, but you're absolutely right, we shouldn't say outright 405 00:22:40,880 --> 00:22:43,800 Speaker 1: he was gay. As for whether he was bisexual, I 406 00:22:43,800 --> 00:22:45,720 Speaker 1: mean that sort of gets into a whole other thing 407 00:22:45,760 --> 00:22:47,800 Speaker 1: because there are lots of people that identify as gay 408 00:22:47,840 --> 00:22:52,280 Speaker 1: that have had had her sexual relationships. So there's a 409 00:22:53,240 --> 00:22:56,720 Speaker 1: only tangentially related. There's a really interesting oral history of 410 00:22:56,880 --> 00:23:02,119 Speaker 1: the lesbian bar culture. All boots of leather, slippers of gold, 411 00:23:02,840 --> 00:23:04,960 Speaker 1: and one of the things that the author talks about 412 00:23:05,000 --> 00:23:08,800 Speaker 1: is how much difficulty they had finding women who had 413 00:23:09,400 --> 00:23:12,480 Speaker 1: been in this culture and had been in like more 414 00:23:12,480 --> 00:23:17,720 Speaker 1: of the them stereotype who still identified as lebian. Which 415 00:23:18,160 --> 00:23:21,000 Speaker 1: I sort of put that out there is as one 416 00:23:21,040 --> 00:23:23,959 Speaker 1: of the things about in my in my mind, sexuality 417 00:23:24,000 --> 00:23:26,800 Speaker 1: being a continuum that has all kinds of places on it, 418 00:23:27,119 --> 00:23:30,560 Speaker 1: and a lot of people resist fitting exclusively into a 419 00:23:30,680 --> 00:23:34,720 Speaker 1: label that's a sumhere on that continuum. Yeah. Yeah, so 420 00:23:35,480 --> 00:23:38,040 Speaker 1: that's all tricky, but it was Lee's. I appreciate very 421 00:23:38,080 --> 00:23:39,800 Speaker 1: much you bring it to my attention, because I should 422 00:23:39,800 --> 00:23:41,840 Speaker 1: not have outright I said she's married to a gay man. 423 00:23:41,920 --> 00:23:43,640 Speaker 1: She was married to what she believed was a gay man, 424 00:23:44,320 --> 00:23:48,080 Speaker 1: and she certainly felt through their years of marriage together 425 00:23:48,119 --> 00:23:49,920 Speaker 1: that she was married to a gay man. But it's 426 00:23:49,920 --> 00:23:51,359 Speaker 1: like a point to bring up. I'm just glad this 427 00:23:51,400 --> 00:23:54,760 Speaker 1: conversation continues and is happening and people are thinking about it, 428 00:23:54,800 --> 00:23:58,160 Speaker 1: and not just sexual identity, but just people's identities and 429 00:23:59,119 --> 00:24:02,960 Speaker 1: how they get labeled historically. It's all very um fascinating 430 00:24:03,000 --> 00:24:05,880 Speaker 1: and quick meaningful, and so I appreciate it. Thank you. 431 00:24:06,359 --> 00:24:08,439 Speaker 1: If you would like to write to us about the 432 00:24:08,480 --> 00:24:11,879 Speaker 1: bride or ballooning, or anything else that you have in mind. 433 00:24:12,160 --> 00:24:15,320 Speaker 1: You can do so at History Podcasts at Discovery dot com. 434 00:24:15,400 --> 00:24:17,560 Speaker 1: You can connect with us on Facebook and Facebook dot 435 00:24:17,560 --> 00:24:21,320 Speaker 1: com slash history class stuff, or on Twitter at missed 436 00:24:21,320 --> 00:24:23,960 Speaker 1: in History, and you can also visit our tumbler, which 437 00:24:24,000 --> 00:24:26,560 Speaker 1: is missed in History dot tomsare dot com, and we 438 00:24:26,600 --> 00:24:29,040 Speaker 1: are also on Pinterest pinning away. If you would like 439 00:24:29,080 --> 00:24:31,080 Speaker 1: to learn a little bit more about what we talked 440 00:24:31,080 --> 00:24:33,600 Speaker 1: about today, you can go to our website and do 441 00:24:33,640 --> 00:24:35,840 Speaker 1: a search for the word balloons and you will get 442 00:24:35,880 --> 00:24:38,320 Speaker 1: how hot air balloons work, which are not nearly as 443 00:24:38,400 --> 00:24:43,359 Speaker 1: dangerous as the hydrogen variety. I have different dangers, but 444 00:24:43,600 --> 00:24:45,760 Speaker 1: less so much of Maybe it will catch on fire 445 00:24:45,840 --> 00:24:49,680 Speaker 1: and in a dramatic crash. Yeah, we may have learned 446 00:24:49,680 --> 00:24:52,359 Speaker 1: a bit from all of these bad accidents. Uh. And 447 00:24:52,440 --> 00:24:54,440 Speaker 1: if you would like to research almost anything else your 448 00:24:54,480 --> 00:24:56,560 Speaker 1: mind can conjure, you should do that at our website, 449 00:24:56,600 --> 00:25:02,800 Speaker 1: which is how stuff works dot com. For laralness and 450 00:25:02,920 --> 00:25:16,160 Speaker 1: thousands of other topics, visit how stuff works dot com. 451 00:25:16,160 --> 00:25:18,240 Speaker 1: This episode of Stuff you Missed in History Class is 452 00:25:18,280 --> 00:25:20,400 Speaker 1: brought to you by Linda dot com. You can learn 453 00:25:20,400 --> 00:25:22,639 Speaker 1: it at Linda dot com, an online learning company with 454 00:25:22,680 --> 00:25:25,879 Speaker 1: more than seventy seven thousand video tutorials that teach software, 455 00:25:26,000 --> 00:25:29,159 Speaker 1: creative and business skills. 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