Empires of the Sky: Zeppelins, Airplanes, and Two Men's Epic Duel to Rule the World

Empires of the Sky: Zeppelins, Airplanes, and Two Men's Epic Duel to Rule the World

by Alexander Rose

Narrated by Jason Culp

Unabridged — 22 hours, 43 minutes

Empires of the Sky: Zeppelins, Airplanes, and Two Men's Epic Duel to Rule the World

Empires of the Sky: Zeppelins, Airplanes, and Two Men's Epic Duel to Rule the World

by Alexander Rose

Narrated by Jason Culp

Unabridged — 22 hours, 43 minutes

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Overview

The Golden Age of Aviation is brought to life in this story of the giant Zeppelin airships that once roamed the sky-a story that ended with the fiery destruction of the Hindenburg.

“Genius . . . a definitive tale of an incredible time when mere mortals learned to fly.”-Keith O'Brien, The New York Times

At the dawn of the twentieth century, when human flight was still considered an impossibility, Germany's Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin vied with the Wright Brothers to build the world's first successful flying machine. As the Wrights labored to invent the airplane, Zeppelin fathered the remarkable airship, sparking a bitter rivalry between the two types of aircraft and their innovators that would last for decades, in the quest to control one of humanity's most inspiring achievements.

And it was the airship-not the airplane-that led the way. In the glittery 1920s, the count's brilliant protégé, Hugo Eckener, achieved undreamed-of feats of daring and skill, including the extraordinary Round-the-World voyage of the Graf Zeppelin.  At a time when America's airplanes-rickety deathtraps held together by glue, screws, and luck-could barely make it from New York to Washington, D.C., Eckener's airships serenely traversed oceans without a single crash, fatality, or injury. What Charles Lindbergh almost died doing-crossing the Atlantic in 1927-Eckener had effortlessly accomplished three years before the Spirit of St. Louis even took off.

Even as the Nazis sought to exploit Zeppelins for their own nefarious purposes, Eckener built his masterwork, the behemoth Hindenburg-a marvel of design and engineering. Determined to forge an airline empire under the new flagship, Eckener met his match in Juan Trippe, the ruthlessly ambitious king of Pan American Airways, who believed his fleet of next-generation planes would vanquish Eckener's coming airship armada.

It was a fight only one man-and one technology-could win. Countering each other's moves on the global chessboard, each seeking to wrest the advantage from his rival, the struggle for mastery of the air was a clash not only of technologies but of business, diplomacy, politics, personalities, and the two men's vastly different dreams of the future.

Empires of the Sky is the sweeping, untold tale of the duel that transfixed the world and helped create our modern age.

Editorial Reviews

The New York Times Book Review - Keith O'Brien

…to say that Rose's new book, Empires of the Sky, is about the Hindenburg is to diminish the genius of the narrative Rose has crafted here. Instead of writing about a single moment in time…Rose has built a sweeping narrative, taking us all the way back to the 1800s…At its heart, this book isn't about a rivalry. It is a love letter to the airship. And even though we know how the story ends…I read with great urgency all the way to the final page, captivated by what might have been and marveling at what humans can accomplish with the help of engineering, physics, facts.

Publishers Weekly

01/27/2020

Historian Rose (Men at War) chronicles the early 20th century rivalry between airships and airplanes for the future of commercial air travel in this exhaustive account. Building toward the 1930s showdown between Hugo Eckener, head of Germany’s Zeppelin Company, and Juan Terry Trippe, leader of Pan American Airways, Rose tracks the development of the zeppelin airships and Eckener’s promotion of them as “the silvery herald of global travel” after he took charge of the company from Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin in 1917. Meanwhile, Trippe, a former U.S. Navy pilot, realized that in order to stimulate enough demand to fuel the technological advancements needed to make transatlantic passenger flights possible, an airline needed “to own the exclusive right to operate between given destinations.” He acquired sole landing rights in Cuba, and the first Pan Am flight took off from Key West to Havana in 1927, launching a competition between the industries to win the political and popular support necessary to build fleets and open routes throughout the world. In Rose’s retelling, the fate of the zeppelin was sealed by the rise of the Nazi Party and the 1936 Hindenburg crash, which shifted international interest from airships to airlines. Rose wades deep into minutiae, but maintains a buoyant energy throughout. The result is a dense yet exhilarating history of the dawn of modern air travel. (Apr.)

From the Publisher

[An] exhilarating history of the dawn of modern air travel.”Publishers Weekly

“To say that [Alexander] Rose’s new book, Empires of the Sky, is about the Hindenburg is to diminish the genius of the narrative Rose has crafted here.”—Keith O’Brien, The New York Times

“An obsessive, decades-long struggle between two equally matched people is always fascinating, and especially when the prize they are fighting for is nothing less than the future of flight. We take the airplane’s defeat of the Zeppelin for granted, but in the Roaring Twenties and Dark Thirties it was anything but, and now, in a world aiming for carbon neutrality, we might even regret who won. Alex Rose is a historian with a scintillating prose style and an eye for the insightful, and often amusing, detail. Whereas dirigibles were heavy, ponderous, and full of gas, this book is the precise opposite.”—Andrew Roberts, author of Leadership in War

Library Journal

03/01/2020

In the early days of the 20th century, humans first took to the skies in mechanically powered airships. Based on rapidly developing innovations in engineering, the new field of aerodynamics was born, as was the intense competition among the makers of machines capable of flight. Early innovators Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin in Germany and the Wright brothers in the United States were at the center of this rivalry, with each vying for funding, government contracts, local and transatlantic routes, cargo, and passengers. In this fascinating and readable history, author and historian Rose (Washington's Spies; Men of War) recounts the development, growth, and ultimate failures and successes of the two competing technologies, and the business models each spawned. The story is filled not only with myriad facts and figures but also with the well-researched stories of those who participated in the most significant events of the past 100 years. These magnificent men in their flying machines helped to write that history. VERDICT Recommended for general readers who enjoy aviation, technology, and business histories. [See Prepub Alert, 10/7/19.]—Linda Frederiksen, formerly with Washington State Univ. Lib., Vancouver

Kirkus Reviews

2019-12-26
A history of the obsessive pioneers of flight.

Bestselling historian Rose (Men of War: The American Soldier in Combat at Bunker Hill, Gettysburg, and Iwo Jima, 2015) emphasizes that when the Wright brothers made the first heavier-than-air flight in 1903, airships had been carrying passengers since the Montgolfier brothers first launched their balloon in 1783. Until well into the 1930s, many entrepreneurs believed that dirigibles—spacious, quiet, capable of flying long distances—were the wave of the future compared with cramped, noisy, accident-prone propeller-driven craft. After a brief account of a successful 1936 flight of the Hindenburg, "the ultimate transoceanic cruiser" that would be destroyed in a spectacular crash just a year later, Rose rewinds the clock to 1863, when German Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin (1838-1917) first flew in a balloon and was inspired. After retirement, he devoted himself to building powered airships, immense craft lifted by flammable hydrogen (helium, much safer, was wildly expensive). He created the world's first commercial airline in 1909. The difficulty of control in bad weather and the danger of hydrogen proved to be insoluble problems. Airships suffered a dismal safety record, although Zeppelin's passenger airline, under his successor, led a charmed life until the Hindenburg disaster. Rose's intriguing second subject does not appear until the author reaches the 1920s, when Juan Trippe (1889-1981) joined other businessmen investing in the first airlines. As the author shows, the competition in the U.S. was already cutthroat, but few airlines existed south of the border, and he began acquiring exclusive rights to fly to the Caribbean and later South America. Flush with profits—from airmail contracts; passengers came later—he persuaded Boeing to develop a flying boat capable of crossing the ocean. The resulting "clippers" became the epitome of glamorous air travel during the 1930s. By 1940, when the book ends, Trippe's Pan American World Airways was the world's largest international carrier, and the Zeppelin was history. Technical and business details dominate the narrative, but the primary story is often riveting.

An overlong but still worthy aviation history.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177531052
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 04/28/2020
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

1. The Aeronaut

On August 17, 1863, America was engulfed in civil war. The battles of Gettysburg and Vicksburg had been fought just six weeks earlier, but Mr. Belote, the manager of the International Hotel, the finest in the city of Saint Paul, Minnesota, didn’t care about the Blue and the Gray. That night, he was more concerned about the brown—the brown mud, that is—being tracked into his establishment by the hollow-­cheeked, rough-­whiskered frontiersman claiming to be a “Graf von Zeppelin.”

He certainly didn’t look like one of the fancy European aristocrats Mr. Belote had read about. Yet he sounded courtly, even if he spoke En­glish, haltingly, with a strong German accent. Upon closer inspection, his clothes, too, were tailored, though torn and ragged and not altogether suited to the backwoods; he was evidently a man who purchased rather than shot what he wore. Still, at the International Hotel, they didn’t let rooms to riff-­raff or charlatans.

The man, sensing the manager’s reluctance, explained that he had spent the last three weeks roaming the wilderness. Fueled by the romantic fantasies of deerslayers exploring primeval American forests he had picked up from reading too many James Fenimore Cooper novels, he had elected to travel along an abandoned fur-­trade trail. It was a wonder he hadn’t died. Having quickly run out of food and ammunition and beset by mosquitoes and heat, he had been saved by some Chippewa Indians who showed him how to hunt ducks, build a shelter, and gather eggs.

It had been quite an adventure, but he was ready for a comfortable bed, a bath, and a hearty dinner—and had the money at hand. Once he saw the dollars, Mr. Belote relented: He’d be only too pleased to offer such a distinguished gentleman his best accommodations. Due to return east on the next day’s train, the man paid for a single night’s stay.

The following morning, August 18, woken by a commotion outside, Zeppelin drew the curtains and surveyed the open lot across the street. And there he spied a large silken balloon, gaily painted and patchworked, and fitted with a small wicker basket. He’d heard of these legendary, magical things, of course—everyone knew of them—but never had he encountered one.

Right there and then, Zeppelin decided to postpone his trip back home.

Zeppelin was indeed a fancy European aristocrat and not a charlatan, but how he ended up in Saint Paul, Minnesota, is something of a roundabout story.

He could trace his ancestry back to a minor thirteenth-­century baron named Heynrikus de Zepelin from Mecklenburg in northern Germany whose kinsmen served as mercenaries in the Swedish, Danish, and Prussian armies that occupied their time ravaging and ravishing their way across Europe. For the next five hundred years, successive Zepelins did little other than demonstrate a prodigious talent for drunkenly gambling away the family’s estates, ultimately obliging an impecunious, teenaged Ferdinand Ludwig to roam far south and enter the military service of Duke Frederick of Württemberg in the late eighteenth century.

When all-­conquering Napoleon upgraded the duchy of Württemberg into a kingdom in 1806, Ferdinand was promoted to count and changed his name to “Zeppelin” (the Württembergers preferred a double p). In 1834, his son Friedrich did very well, marrying Amélie Macaire d’Hogguer, the daughter of a wealthy Franco-­Swiss cotton manufacturer, and Ferdinand—our count—came along four years later.

He was born into a world of international nobility, where a title served as passport to the elites in Saint Petersburg, Vienna, London, and Paris—or even, in a pinch, Berlin, a backwater. Following the family’s martial tradition, Zeppelin entered the Royal Army College at Ludwigsburg in October 1855 and emerged as a lieutenant with one of Württemberg’s most swagger regiments, the 8th, based in Stuttgart, the kingdom’s capital, in September 1858. During the Franco-­Austrian War of 1859 (Württemberg was an Austrian ally), he saw no action while serving on the staff of the quartermaster-­general as a specialist in topography and logistics.

That Zeppelin, a curious mix of the unconventional and the traditional, was even in the quartermaster-­general’s office rather than serving on the higher-­status front lines marked him as quirky. Since boyhood, Zeppelin had been fascinated by mechanics, by making machinery work, by practical invention. Before being admitted to the Royal Army College, Zeppelin had attended the prestigious polytechnic school in Stuttgart. Such institutions were in the vanguard of imparting a technical, scientific, and engineering education to smart middle-­class boys and ambitious working-class lads. Rich young nobles like Zeppelin were few and far between. Still stranger, during his time with the quartermaster-­general, Zeppelin took temporary leave to enroll at the University of Tübingen to study (though he did not take a degree) mechanical sciences—again, a field rather déclassé for a man of his pedigree.

It was a fashion of the era for young officers to tour the armies of foreign nations and report on their armaments and tactics; for those of Zeppelin’s breeding, of course, these semi-­official visits also allowed them to forge connections with their upper-­class counterparts. In 1861–­62, the young count visited Vienna, where he was introduced to the Habsburg emperor Franz Joseph I and watched army exercises. Then he was off to Trieste, to visit the fleet, and then the well-­known fleshpots of Genoa, Marseille, and Paris, to visit the girls (as he explained to his morally upright, purse-­strings-­holding father, “In order to know the different people better, I have had to devote some of my time to women”). At Compiègne in northern France he was a guest of Emperor Napoleon III, whose mother had, small world, once been the Zeppelins’ neighbor. Later he traveled to Belgium and Denmark before going to England, where he hobnobbed at the Army and Navy Club and the Athenaeum before being invited to watch the Grenadier Guards go through their paces.

America, then enduring its Civil War, beckoned. How could one miss the clash of those gargantuan armies clanking through the Virginia hinterland? Needing permission from his king for yet another furlough, Zeppelin explained that “the Americans are especially inventive in the adaptation of technical developments for military purposes” and pledged to seek information useful for the Württemberg army.

That was pro forma, of course. His real hope, as he confided to his sister, was that, as he had missed all the fun during the Franco-­Austrian War, combat “might be revealed to me in its bloody truth and that the phantom [of experiencing real fighting], before which I had hitherto quailed, might become a living reality.”

To his father, who was unenthusiastic about the idea, he laid out a rather more elevated motive. He wished to discover the extraordinary vibrancy of American democracy, he said, but Zeppelin senior nevertheless forbade him, saying that the existence of slavery and the fact that commoners could vote—he was unclear as to which was worse—“exclude[d] them from playing a worthy part in civilization.” His son persisted, and in the end the paterfamilias gave way, as Zeppelin knew he would. In April 1863, Zeppelin boarded the Cunard ship Australasia for the long voyage to America.

After docking in New York on May 6, Zeppelin traveled to Washington, D.C., checking into the posh Willard Hotel near the White House. His title, as usual, opened doors—even in the great republic. (Zeppelin noticed that “America is definitely a land of contrasts. Everything aristocratic is in opposition to its fundamental ideas, yet nowhere is so much fuss made about a simple traveling count.”) The Prussian ambassador, Baron von Gerolt, introduced him to Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase, who in turn arranged an audience with President Abraham Lincoln, who took time out of a busy day running a war to meet with an obscure junior officer from a small faraway kingdom.

Lincoln was unlike anyone else Zeppelin had ever met in his limited social circle. When the count turned up, dressed to the nines in the traditional frock coat and top hat, he was surprised by the president’s utter absence of pretense. When Zeppelin entered the room, “a very tall spare figure with a large head and long untidy hair and beard, exceptionally prominent cheek-­bones, but wise and kindly eyes” rose like a specter from behind the desk. When Zeppelin asked for a pass allowing him to travel freely among the Northern armies as an observer, pompously adding that his military credentials included being descended from half a millennium’s worth of knights and counts, Lincoln, a commoner born penniless and landless, remarked that he certainly wouldn’t hold that against him. A puzzled Zeppelin got his pass.

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