Will Launch Lifeboats and Trust to You
Tuesday, October 18, 1910
At four A.M. Murray Simon was woken from a deep sleep by Lewis Loud, and for a few moments Simon did nothing but “growl like a demon” at being turned out of his hammock. He got scant sympathy from Loud, who told him it was his turn on watch, alongside the skipper.
Simon and Walter Wellman made themselves snug in the lifeboat, lit up a cigarette each, and nattered. The captain of the America was old enough to be the father of the twenty-nine-year-old Englishman, but in the chilly night air they were without rank or restriction; they discussed food, weather, future attempts, and the probable whereabouts of the steamer from Bermuda. Then Wellman scanned the night sky and predicted another fine day. “As soon as the sun comes out today, the America will go up again well aloft,” he said to Simon. “We’ll have to let out some more of our gas, which will mean we’re about done by sundown.” Simon took a long, deep, satisfying drag on his cigarette, then asked, “Why not draw water and fill one of the tanks as ballast so we can keep down during the day?” Wellman liked the sound of that: “Good idea, we’ll try it.”
Simon finished his cigarette and with a “Cheerio” climbed the ladder into the car and positioned himself in his navigator’s seat, still marveling at the sensation of floating in midair in profound silence. Suddenly he heard a shout from below. “Why, there’s a ship!” cried Wellman. Simon jumped up and peered through the two holes he’d cut in the canvas. At first he saw nothing and yelled down to Wellman, “Ship be blowed!” But Well-man was adamant, so Simon looked again, and this time he made out the lights of a ship about six miles to their east. All hands were raised, and Irwin tore down the ladder, jumping the last couple of rungs into the lifeboat and unbalancing Wellman, who was in the bow waving his arms frantically in the direction of the ship.
Able seaman Stanley Angel was shivering in the crow’s nest of the SS Trent when he spotted what he thought was the morning star away to the northwest. The eighteen-year-old Londoner nudged his pal, able seaman George Sangster, and pointed out the “white light up in the sky.” The two squinted through the gloom, and suddenly a red light blinked twice to either side of their “star.” “So help me God,” exclaimed Angel, “it’s an airship!” The red lights flashed again, and the lookouts read the Morse code for “Help, Help, Help.” Sangster ran aft and breathlessly informed Mr. Fitzgerald, the fourth officer, that an airship was off the port side. If you’re being “nutty,” he was warned, they’ll be hell to pay. Sangster promised he wasn’t being nutty, and in a few moments Fitzgerald was wearing his lookout’s expression of childlike amazement. Chief Officer Lainson was summoned to see the “phenomenon,” and he in turn sent orders to rouse Captain Down, and to fetch signalman Albert Leach. They waited on deck, watching the signals for help that “continued to come from beneath the black blur that was dancing low across the northern sky.” Leach arrived with his Morse lamp and was instructed to ask if they had wireless. “Yes,” flashed the red lights in reply. Captain Down was now present and, on seeing the affirmative response, dispatched someone to wake Louis Ginsberg, the ship’s wireless officer. In the meantime, Leach asked his counterpart where he was from. “The Wellman airship America, from Atlantic City, bound for Bermuda,” answered the red lights.
With his electric blinker, Irwin identified himself, then asked a question of his own: “Who are you?” Back came the reply: “We are the Trent of the Royal Mail Steamship Company, bound from Bermuda to New York.” The six men in the lifeboat punched their fists in the air. Simon threw back his head and roared, “We do love our airship, but, oh, you Trent!”
Through his earphones Irwin was serenaded by a symphony of dots and dashes from the hand of Louis Ginsberg:
“Do you want our assistance?”
“Yes. Come at once,” Irwin carefully tapped out in response. “In distress. We are drifting. Not under control.”
“What do you want us to do?” asked Ginsberg.
Irwin imagined the captain of the Trent standing over the shoulder of the wireless operator whispering instructions, much as Wellman was doing in the lifeboat.
“Come ahead full speed, but keep astern, as we have heavy tail dragging.”
“Okay,” replied Ginsberg. “Am standing by the wireless in case of trouble.”
“You will pick us up at daylight. You will be better able to see us then.”
“Okay.”
As Irwin communicated with the Trent, the rest of America’s crew were having what Simon described in his log as a “lively debate” about how best to abandon the airship. Their speed was fifteen knots per hour and they were some eighty feet above the ocean with the equilibrator still lurking ominously close. Simon advised dropping into the sea without delay and launching the lifeboat. Vaniman disagreed, saying it was too dangerous, that it would be safer to slide down a rope onto the deck of the Trent. Simon rubbished the idea and in urging his plan “used more sailor language than he had used in years past.” The outburst failed to win him the day, however, and Wellman told Irwin to radio the following message to the Trent: “Come in close and put the bow of your ship under us. We will drop you a line, but do not stop your ship, as you will capsize us.”
“Okay,” replied Ginsberg.
A more congenial atmosphere prevailed on board the Trent. Captain Down thought the passengers might like to see the extraordinary sight, so he sent a steward to knock at their cabin doors. Within half an hour nearly all the ship’s 150 passengers were crowded on deck, their nightclothes hidden under heavy coats, gaping in amazement at the sight before them.
As dawn broke, the Trent was feet away from the America, and Captain Down had “every man in the crew at work now, from stokehole to crow’s nest maneuvering about under the airship. Sometimes we had to drive full speed astern to get out of the way of the car and then, as the wind would catch the airship again, we would have to put about and chase her with all the power we could get up.”
By seven o’clock the wind had strengthened and was pushing the America west at a rate of twelve knots, with the Trent in hot pursuit. It was a “crazy chase,” Down told his officers, and he began to despair of ever effecting a successful rescue by means of a line. He had been struck by another thought, too: what if, in the Trent passing under the airship, some gasoline should drop down the vessel’s funnel into its fires? A message was sent to Wellman—launch the lifeboat.
Irwin received the message and passed it to Wellman. Neither he nor anyone else protested; they just wanted the refuge of the Trent. “Keep close as possible. Will launch lifeboat and trust to you,” replied Irwin. Vaniman trailed a cord from the gas valve down into the lifeboat, and when he was settled inside the vessel, he pulled on the cord and released the gas. Simon and Loud stood at either end of the lifeboat with their hands on the safety clutches, watching the airship begin to lose its shape and waiting for the right moment to spring free.
The Trent had taken up a position 150 feet astern of the airship, and Captain Down issued orders for two small launches to be readied. As crewmen prepared the rescue craft, they silently cursed the passengers, who, with their mugs of coffee and their squeals of excitement, clogged the decks. The America sent another message, which Ginsberg scribbled down and passed to his skipper: “We have a motor going above. We can’t hear your signals now. Will say when I can. We are pumping air into the airship ready to bring her down to the level.” Down looked across at the airship and saw that its body had started to sag so that it resembled an animal brought to its knees by a hunter’s bullet. The lifeboat was feet above the waves, and two men were fiddling with its cables. Ginsberg pressed a hand to his earpads as another message stuttered across the water: “We are going to launch the boat, stand by to pick us up.”
The moment the gas valve was opened, the taut hide of the America began to wither. Vaniman scooped up the cat in his arms as the lifeboat dropped slowly toward the ocean. Irwin tapped out his final message, whipped off his earpads, and locked the wireless in the lifeboat’s compartment. Then he cut the aerial wires and the earth wires and slipped a life preserver over his head.
Simon looked at Loud, nodded, and yelled, “Let her go!” The pair snapped open the safety clutches, and the boat hit the water with a mighty splash and lurched gunwale under. The six men clung to the lashings of the lifeboat as a wave caught them side on and spun them round. The lifeboat righted herself as the balloon soared skyward. Simon was just about to let out a triumphant roar when the equilibrator rose out of the waves like the terrible sea serpent they had all imagined and smashed into the port bow, “knocking a hole in the forward air chamber and nearly knocking Loud’s head off.”
Loud had seen the beast lunging at him out of the corner of his eye at the last second and ducked, catching a glancing blow on his shoulder. Irwin cushioned his fall, and the pair lay sprawled at the bottom of the boat for several seconds, until they heard a strangled cry from one of their shipmates. Looking up, they saw the prow of the Trent “as high as a church,” bearing down on them. There seemed no escape, yet the passengers watching from the rail seemed oblivious of what was about to happen; Simon could hear them cheering. One or two were leaning over the side taking a souvenir snapshot. Simon looked from the rail to the giant propellers whisking the Atlantic Ocean into a welter of white foam. Irwin jumped up onto a seat and prepared to leap overboard as the sound of the propellers grew louder. Then, with a terrifying noise, the port quarter of the Trent scraped the length of the lifeboat, peeling off its white paint. For a few seconds they surfed the whirl pool of the ship’s propellers, then were clear, though for a few seconds none of them could quite believe it.
The crew of the America were treated as heroes when they were finally pulled on board the Trent, but they were interested only in a hot breakfast and a hot bath. After both had been taken, the men fell into some bunks, pulled clean blankets over their heads, and slept for several hours. When they emerged in the afternoon, they had the luxury of wearing clean clothes supplied by the Trent’s crew, and for over an hour they happily signed autographs and discussed their adventure with the passengers. Captain Down told Wellman he had last seen the airship drifting west toward Cape Hatteras with its nose close to the water. Then Down invited him to give a short talk on their adventure that evening, after the minstrel show.
There wasn’t a seat to be had in the concert room when Wellman took the stage to a standing ovation. He gave a brief account of their voyage, in layman’s terms, then thanked his comrades for their faithfulness and bravery. He wrapped up his lecture with a tribute to the airship, wherever she might now be: “Good old America, farewell,” he said, turning from his audience and addressing the ocean. “You played your part in the game of progress. In the years to come many aircraft will cross the Atlantic; and you will be honored as the ship that showed the way.”
Also headed for New York, but a day ahead of the SS Trent, was the transatlantic liner Kronprinz Wilhelm, and on board was a black-haired Frenchman with “a liquid eye and an olive skin.” Once or twice during the crossing from Europe, Roland Garros had sat at the piano and dazzled his fellow passengers with his talent. They asked if he was a professional, and Garros had shaken his head, smiled, and explained that he was an aviator on his way to Belmont Park.
It had never been the twenty-two-year-old’s intention to fly when he arrived in Paris in 1908 from his birthplace on the Indian Ocean island of Réunion, but an outing to the Rheims Air Show the following year led Garros to send a letter home advising his family of a change of plan.
In March 1910 Garros had his first flying lesson and in July received his aviation license; for the rest of the summer he appeared in numerous European air shows in a Demoiselle, a monoplane made of bamboo and silk. Cortlandt Bishop, president of the Aero Club of America, had signed Garros to appear at Belmont Park the moment he first clapped eyes on his extraordinary machine. The small Frenchman would be the clown of the show, thought Bishop, twirling his small mustache with his index finger, as was his custom; he’d be the flier to put a smile on the face of New Yorkers. Certainly the Demoiselle had caused much amusement in Britain when Garros had flown in a show at Bournemouth on the south coast of England in August. “Nothing so excruciatingly funny as the action of this machine has even been seen,” wrote the correspondent of Aero magazine, wiping a tear from his eye. “The little two-cylinder engine pops away with a sound like the frantic drawing of ginger beer corks; the machine scuttles along the ground with its tail well up; then down comes the tail suddenly and seems to slap the ground while the front jumps up, and all the spectators rock with laughter. The whole attitude and jerky action of the machine suggest a grasshopper in a furious rage.”
Word of Garros’s “hummingbird” had been brought to America by returning aviators, and a flock of reporters were in attendance when the Kronprinz Wilhelm docked on Tuesday. The Frenchman graciously fielded all questions, ignoring the odd snicker as he explained that his machine weighed 250 pounds and was, as he spoke, being unloaded from the ship’s hold in four separate crates. “I will demonstrate the efficiency of my Demoiselle as soon as I get it together and run it out upon the course at Belmont Park,” he said. “It rises into the air quickly and, when in the air, can be easily maneuvered. There is no trouble about turning to right or left in this machine. In the matter of speed the Demoiselle can equal any of the heavier type of fliers.”
When the newsmen returned to their offices from the quayside to write about Roland Garros, they found waiting for them on their desks a facsimile of a statement telegraphed by Glenn Curtiss from his manufacturing headquarters in Hammondsport, New York, to J. C. McCoy, chairman of the Belmont Park Aviation Committee. The characteristically laconic announcement stated simply that two of his fliers would be operating new racing machines, monoplanes, during the forthcoming meet.* Tantalized by the brevity of the exciting revelation, the New York Herald telephoned Jerome Fanciulli, manager of Curtiss’s New York office, and charmed some further details from him. “In the lines and the chassis they [the new machines] are essentially Curtiss airplanes,” explained Fanciulli, “though the lower plane surfaces are practically eliminated and the surfaces of the upper planes greatly reduced.” Yes, yes, said the Herald reporter impatiently, but what are the machine’s chances of winning the International Aviation Cup for America? “It should be much faster than the racer used by Mr. Curtiss at the Boston meet,” reckoned Fanciulli, “which found him somewhat unprepared to compete with Mr. Grahame-White’s speedy Blériot. Since the meet, Mr. Curtiss has concentrated his energies on perfecting the new fliers.” In conclusion, said Fanciulli, Mr. Curtiss was confident of putting up a good show.
Most of the ten balloons in the International Balloon race had stayed low on Monday night, sometimes skimming no more than two hundred feet above the ground in the cool night air. None thought of jettisoning some of their valuable ballast bags to increase their height; that tactic could be employed later, if they encountered sudden pockets of cooler air during the day (when normally the sun’s heat would be expected to expand the gasbags) or if they lost height because of gas seeping out through the stitching of their balloons.
Seven of the crews were confident their balloons were leakproof; these were the ones made from silk and treated with rubber. Hugo Von Abercron had gone even further with his balloon, Germania, covering its rubber surface with aluminum dust so that, in the words of the New York Herald, “it glistened like silver.” Trials in Germany had convinced the forty-one-year-old Abercron that the sheen of metal better deflected the sun’s rays. The balloons that hadn’t been reinforced with rubber were the French Condor and two of the American entrants, St. Louis No. 4 and Million Population Club. They had just a thin layer of varnish covering the silk envelope of their balloons, which was inefficient at preventing gas from escaping but efficient at absorbing rain or dew—just what a balloonist didn’t want.
To add to the Americans’ woes their balloons had been attacked by St. Louis’s grasshoppers during Sunday night, and it had quickly become evident to Louis Von Phul and Joseph O’Reilly in Million Population Club that though they had laboriously patched up as many holes as they could on Monday, gas was escaping at an alarming rate. Throughout Monday night the pair had off-loaded nearly two thirds of their ballast as they headed northeast, and at half past five on Tuesday morning they had only fourteen sandbags remaining. As dawn broke, they could see to their east Lake Michigan, its flat surface the color of marble. So tempting. Younger, rasher, more inexperienced balloonists might have taken on the lake, their common sense giving way to their pride, but Von Phul and O’Reilly knew that to do so would be reckless to the point of suicidal. They’d scrutinized the map by flashlight and cursed when they calculated that they would have to cross Lake Michigan at its widest point—eighty miles from shore to shore. Eighty miles with now just ten bags of ballast. If the weather turned, if the temperature dropped, or if it began to rain, they no longer had enough ballast to prevent the balloon from plunging into the lake.
At seven A.M. they passed north over the lakeside town of Racine, dispensing with another couple of sandbags to ensure they didn’t become entangled with a church spire. A few miles farther on was open country, and Von Phul brought down Million Population Club within sight of Lake Michigan. The land belonged to John Tramball, not a man who frightened easily, and instead of a shotgun blast he welcomed them with an invitation to his breakfast table. Having demolished a plate of ham and eggs, Von Phul telephoned the race organizers in St. Louis to tell them he’d come down six and a half miles north of Racine, Wisconsin, giving him an estimated distance of 320 miles.
The early hours of Tuesday had also been a little trying for Jacques Faure and Ernest Schmolck in the Condor. Progress had been swift at first, and the Frenchmen’s hearts began to pump a little quicker when they saw the southern shores of Lake Michigan beneath them. Despite the accoutrements on board—the mattress, stool, cologne, Brie, roast beef, and one dozen bottles of champagne—the balloon soared to ten thousand feet. The pair slipped on their fur-lined gloves and turned up the collars of their coats and congratulated themselves on their impressive start.
Then came the hours of terror, dread, and pain, the effect of which were all too visible when Ernest Schmolck sat before reporters in a Chicago hotel the following evening. With his right arm in a sling and his face heavily bruised, the Frenchman told how “we suddenly struck a zone of air where the temperature was close to zero. The gas in the balloon began to condense rapidly and we started falling.”
They fell quickly, and silently. One thousand feet . . . two thousand feet . . . three thousand feet. They cut away bags of ballast, threw out the cologne, the Brie, the roast beef, bottles of champagne one by one, but still they fell . . . four thousand feet . . . five thousand feet. “After a sheer drop of six thousand feet there came a brief halt,” explained Schmolck, “and we thought we were safe, but the relief was only for a moment. Again the balloon began to drop.” Over the side went some more sandbags and the last of the champagne and the twelve bottles of mineral water. They heard the splash as each hit the black waters of Lake Michigan. Faure told Schmolck it was no good, they were doomed. All they could do was hope to swim to safety. “We were within a hundred feet of the surface of the great lake when we discarded our shoes and coats and clasped our life preservers to our bodies,” said Schmolck. And then, he said, shaking his head at the reporters in merry disbelief, “Just when we thought ourselves lost, the balloon was halted in its downward flight.” They were forty-five feet above the lake, saved only by the drag rope that hung from the basket and had touched the water, reducing their weight and arresting their descent. If there had been any champagne left, they might have opened a bottle, but instead they breathed a deep sigh of relief and put their faith in the thin length of rope that dangled beneath the basket. And then a stroke of luck: the wind picked up and pushed them southwest, back across the lake, until they sighted land. And the arm, the reporters asked Schmolck, was it injured during the descent? Oh, no, he explained, that came later, after a further mishap. “Our attempt to land was fraught with new perils. The balloon sailed three miles over the rough country at express-train speed, dragging the basket in its wake. The basket was dashed against fences, farm houses, and three chimneys fell during the onslaught. Fences were bowled over and small trees knocked down. Finally a stout barbed-wire fence caught us and held long enough to throw Monsieur Faure and myself headlong into a marsh filled with muddy water. We half swam and half waded to terrafirma.”
Schmolck’s arm had been lacerated during the landing but fortunately not broken. He and Faure had taken a while to gather their senses before setting off on foot to find help. The Condor had come to rest just outside the Wisconsin lakeside town of Two Rivers, forty miles southeast of Green Bay. They’d covered little more than four hundred miles, but neither Schmolck nor Faure cared. They were alive.
During the first night in the America II, Alan Hawley and Augustus Post had quickly settled back into the familiar routine that had served them well during the 1907 race. They ushered in Tuesday with a can of hot mutton broth, “heated by putting water upon lime packed about the tin which, in slacking, produced heat enough to bring the soup to a palatable temperature.” Once they’d wolfed down the broth, the pair put the cans under their coats and warmed their chill bodies for a few pleasurable minutes.
Hawley and Post drank water from their quart bottles at regular intervals and played a game of animal identification as they passed over endless pastures. The horses, they discovered, chased after the balloon, but chickens and pigs “exhibited their usual panic with noisy sounds and frantic rushing in all directions to escape the great hawk which, no doubt, they thought was going to get them.” A little before three A.M. they exchanged greetings with a man on the porch of his isolated house, who told them they were in Whiteside County, Illinois. Hawley decided to turn in for the night and curled up on the bottom of the basket. Post took the first watch, standing on the forward side of the basket and keeping a constant eye on the statiscopes, aneroids, and other instruments. He made the occasional remark in the logbook, noting at four forty A.M. that they were in Stephenson County, Illinois, traveling north by east at an altitude of seven hundred feet. The America II was now in perfect equilibrium, and they hadn’t needed to add or remove any sand from their ballast tray since eight o’clock on Monday evening. The tray, containing a tin scoop, hung in a corner against the side of the basket, with a fresh sack of ballast underneath in case of a sudden disturbance. Post and Hawley knew not to play idly with the tray, for “in a state of equilibrium, the ballast is put out by the spoonful and even a small piece of paper thrown out will change the delicate balance.”
Hawley was on his feet to greet the sunrise at six eleven A.M., just as they crossed the state line into Wisconsin below Newark in Rock County. Forty minutes later they were three miles south of Janesville, Wisconsin, and a ten-year-old girl was shaken awake by her mother and told to get outside quick, something special was happening. The balloon passed low enough for the little girl to make out the red flag of the Aero Club of America on the yellow envelope and the words America II.
With the heat of the sun the balloon rose rapidly to two thousand five hundred feet, and at nine forty A.M. Lake Michigan came into sight. They approached the water between Milwaukee and Port Washington, but once they were over the lake the temperature dropped and so did the America II. Neither man was concerned about the steady descent as they came to within two hundred feet of the lake. Post threw out the drag rope and for a while they drifted sedately northeast. Soon, however, the wind changed and they were pushed back over the western shore.
They tried again, this time ridding their basket of some ballast and rising to nearly six thousand feet with the strength of the sun aiding their elevation. Out of reach of the cooling influence of the water and with the return of a northeasterly wind, America II traversed Lake Michigan without incident and passed over Ludington, Michigan, a settlement on the eastern shore, at two P.M. Fifty miles farther on, Hawley dropped a handwritten message near a farmstead in Thompsonville, addressed to Albert Lambert, president of the Aero Club of St. Louis:
America II passed over this place Tuesday. Course due north. HAWLEY & POST.
Soon it was twilight, then darkness, and Hawley and Post spent some time scooping out sand from the ballast tray to establish an equilibrium now that their gas had contracted with the night air. At four thousand five hundred feet they had to their northeast an invigorating view of WILL LAUNCH LIFEBOATS AND TRUST TO YOU 81 Lake Huron sparkling in the bright moonlight, one of those vistas that makes a man feel privileged. Inspired by the sight, neither Post nor Hawley jibbed at the idea of crossing the water in the dark. They’d had a grand run to date, and they trusted their luck to hold.
* On October 15 Curtiss had informed the Belmont Park organizers that he wouldn’t personally be appearing to defend the International Aviation Cup, which he had won in Rheims in 1909, but he promised nevertheless to send a team to compete. The World reported that in the future Curtiss “intends giving up flying except for experimental purposes.”