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Madame Elisabeth Thible is the First Women to Ride in a Free Floating Balloon

PictureMontgolfier Balloon

Madame Elisabeth Thible of Lyons, France, had a brave spirit and a voice that soared in high enough registers for her to be an opera singer. On June 4. 1784, the opera singer and the wife of a worker in wax and her partner Monsieur Fleurant literally soared into the heavens in a free floating hot air balloon. . On May 20, 1784,  the Marchioness and Countess of Montalembert, the Countess of Podenas and a Miss de Lagarde had taken a trip on a tethered balloon in Paris, but Elisabeth Thible was the first woman in the world to free float in a hot air balloon.

Four Women Rode a Teethered Balloon, but Elisabeth Thible Floated Freely

On June 4, 1784, Elisabeth Thible, wearing a lace trimmed dress and a feathered hat and her pilot Monsieur Fleurant ascended in a Montgolfiere hot air balloon with a burning chafing dish hanging beneath it. The balloon was christened La Gustave to honor King Gustav III who was visiting Lyon. Both King Gustav III and the royal family of France including King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette observed La Gustave’s voyage.

Sometimes Elisabeth Thible’s achievement is overshadowed by the fame of Citoyenne Henri, who often is credited with being the first female aeronaut, although she went up fourteen years after Elisabeth Thible.  Citoyenne Henri, often called Citizen Henry in English, accompanied Andre Jacques Garnerin on a balloon trip on July 8, 1798 from the Parc Monceau in Paris.

The Count Refuses Monsieur Fleurant

Originally, Monsieur Fleurant had prepared to travel with Count Jean Baptiste de Laurencin who had been one of the six passengers on the flight of the large, experimental Montgolfier balloon called the Flesselles on January 19, 1784.  Joseph Montgolfier piloted the twelve minute flight that ended dramatically when the balloon began to tear and burn. All six passengers and the pilot escaped unhurt. Some people, possibly including Monsieur Fleurant, speculated that Count de Laurencin didn’t want to attempt another balloon flight so quickly and that is why he gave Elisabeth Thible his spot on the La Gustave.

Out of her spirit of courage and adventure , Elisabeth Thible offered to ascend on La Gustave with  Monsieur Fleurant and to share the fate of the voyage. He gratefully accepted.

Elisabeth Thible and Monsieur Fleurant Sing Opera in the Air

As soon as La Gustave left the ground Monsieur Fleurant and Elisabeth Thible who was dressed as the Roman goddess Minerva sang two duets from Monsigny’s La Belle Arsene, a famous opera of the time. A crowd witnessed the lift off of La Gustave, and many of them helped with the ascent of the balloon.

The balloon flight lasted 45 minutes, with La Gustave travelling about three miles and reaching a height of 8,500 feet. La Gustave’s landing turned out to be typically bumpy and when its basket hit the ground, Elisabeth Thible turned her ankle. According to a newspaper account of the adventure, Monsier Fleurant credited Elisabeth with the successful flight. He commended her both for feeding the balloon’s fire box and for her extraordinary courage.

 Joseph Michel Montgolfier and Jacques Etienne Montgolfier Invent Hot Air Balloons

Often in hot air balloon historical discussions Elisabeth Thible’s name is overshadowed by the names of Joseph Michel Montgolfier and Jacques Etienne Montgolfier who created La Gustave, the balloon that she and Monsieur Fleurant rode in to the heavens. Only seven months before Elisabeth Thible’s voyage as the first woman to voyage in a free floating hot air balloon, Pilatre de Rozier and the Marquis D’Arlandes had established a record for the first manned free flight in a Montgolfier balloon on November 21, 1783.

Joseph Michel Montgolfier and Jacques Etienne Montgolfier invented the Montgolfier style hot air balloon and launched the first hot air balloon carrying Etienne. According to a story in Popular Science Monthly, Joseph Montgolfier got the idea for a hot air balloon when he and his wife were airing her dresses in front of the fire in preparation for going to a ball.  He noticed how the hot air currents swirled the material in the dresses and made them float. Why, he wondered, couldn’t material be used to float a basket into the sky using a fire source?

Joseph and Jacques Montgolfier were two of the sixteen children born into a family of paper manufacturers in Annonay, in Ardeche, France. Joseph, was a dreamer and impractical in terms of business and personal affairs. Etienne had a more even and businesslike disposition. On September 19, 1783, the Montgolfier brothers flew their experimental balloon in front of a crowd at the royal palace in Versailles. The crowd included King Louis XVI of France and Queen Marie Antoinette. The balloon had a basket attached to it and it carried the first living beings sent up in a balloon.. The basket carried a sheep which was believed to resemble human anatomy, a duck to test the effects of high altitude, and a rooster to further test altitude.

. Etienne was the first human to lift off  the earth in a balloon on October 15, 1783, making a tethered flight from the yard of the Reveillon workshop in the Faubourg Saint-Antoine. On the same day Pilatre de Rozier became the second human to ascend into the air, reaching an altitude of 80 feet, the length of the tether.

On November 21, 1783, Pilatre de Rozier and an army officer, the Marquis d’Arlandes made the first free flight by humans. They started from the grounds of the Chateau de la Muette on the western outskirts of Paris and flew about 3,000 feet above Paris for a distance of about six miles. After about 25 minutes, the machine landed between the windmills outside of the city walls.  The balloon Le Flesselles, ascended over Lyon, France, on January 1, 1784, carrying seven people. Joseph Montgolfier piloted the twelve minute flight that ended dramatically when the balloon began to tear and burn. All six passengers and the pilot escaped unhurt.

Five months later, Madame Elisabeth Thible and her partner Monsieur Fleurant became the first women to ascend into the heavens in a balloon and sing an aria while she floated above the earth.

 

References

Gillispie, Chares. The Montgolfier Brothers and the Invention of Aviation. Princeton Universtiy Press, 1983

Kalakuka, Christine. Hot Air Ballloons. Friedman/Fairfax Publishing, 1998

Spindlar, Alisa. Hot Air Balloons. New Line books, 2005

 

 

 


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  • Home
  • Women's Rooms
    • Womens Rooms-Anne
    • Womens Rooms-Abigail
    • The Dead Baby in a Blue Blanket: The
    • Rena Rides the Raindrops
  • Women at Work-Blog
  • E Books and Print Books for Sale
  • Women of Historical Complexion
  • Rachel and Elizabeth Knaggs
  • Elizabeth Stiles, President Lincoln's Spy
  • Loyalist Lucy Flucker Meets Patriot Henry Knox at a Boston Parade
  • Queen Maria Amelia, the Last Queen of Portugal, Stood Her Ground
  • The Lady and the Patriot: Theodosia Burr Alston's Fateful Voyage
  • Margaret Agnew Blennerhassett - More Character Than Riches
  • Florence Nightingale- Nurse, Feminist, Statistician, Author
  • Mary Todd Lincoln Considered April Her "Season of Sadness"
  • Mrs. Santa Claus - A Strong and Supportive Woman for All Seasons
  • Elizabeth Turner McCormick, Woman Voyager
  • Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Fought for Human Rights
  • Mary Fields, Stage Coach Mail Driver, Sharp Shooter, Faithful Friend
  • Lucy Parsons, "More Dangerous Than A Thousand Rioters"
  • Lydia Maria Francis Child Travels 'Over the River and Through the Wood'
  • Anti-Suffragists Believed Women Didn't Need the Right to Vote
  • Finland's Alexandra Gripenberg Sought Universal Women's Rights
  • From Frances Slocum to Little Bear Woman and Back Again
  • Madame Elisabeth Thible is the First Woman to Ride in a Free Floating Balloon
  • Veronica Kerler Frank Pined for Germany, But Made Milwaukee Her Home
  • Mary Humphreys Stamps, Undefeated Rebel with An Educational Cause
  • Sister Monica Is One of Milwaukee, Wisconsin's Early Pioneers
  • A Love Story for St. Valentine's Day - Marie Antoinette and Count Axel von Fersen
  • Three Wisconsin Women of the Waves
  • Margaret Fox Kane and her Victorian Love Story
  • Francoise Marie Jacquelin, Lioness of La Tour, Lioness of Acadia, Woman in Her Own Right
  • Mary Breckinridge, Circuit Riding Nurse and Founder of the Frontier Nursing Service
  • Women Bicyclists Break Their Glass Cages and Ride into Liberation
  • Maria Mitchell, America's First Woman Astronomer Demonstrated Female Scientific Aptitude
  • Queen Alexandra of Great Britain-Queen Victoria's Daughter-in-Law, Bertie's Patient Wife, and Her Own Person!
  • Chicagoan Kate Kellogg Meets a Ghost on a Train
  • Isobel Lillian Steele Went to a Party and Ended Up in a Nazi Jail
  • Madam Sophie Blanchard - "Official Aeronaut of the Restoration"
  • Women of Their Time and Place
    • Nadine Turchin Fights Alongside Her Husband in the Civil War
    • War Stories Along Lake Erie: Ordinary Women Experience the War of 1812
    • Katie Walker Tends Robbins Reef Light Near the Statue of Liberty
    • Maria Gulovich Joined the Czech Resistance
    • Pirate Fanny Campbell Freed Her Fiance and Fought the British
    • SOE Agent Andree Borrel Lived Several Lifetimes in Her 24 Years
    • Lydia Latrobe Roosevelt and the First Mississippi River Steamboat
    • Sophie Kwiatkowski Served as a New Guinea Nurse in World War II
    • Clara Zetkin Spoke Against Hitler in the German Reichstag
    • Gertrud Scholtz-Klink, Female Fuhrer, Breathed Her Nazi Beliefs
    • Nancy Leo , the Only Woman Buried in Luxembourg American Cemetery
    • Dickey Chapelle, Journalist and War Correspondent
    • Lucena Brockway Adapts to Life in the Keweenaw Copper Mining Country of Lake Superior
    • Does Mary Surrat's Ghost Haunt the Senate Chambers Seeking Justice?
    • The Ghostly Cyclist in Brooklyn's Prospect Park
  • Women of Contemporary 20th and 21st Century Complexion
    • Clara Ward Chimay, Gilded Age Princess
    • Ruth Becker's Faith Helps Her Survive the Titanic and Beyond
    • Mildred Beltmann , Wartime Wife
    • The Courage of their Cultural Convictions - Women Missionaries in China
    • Light and Radiance - Laurence Owen and Her Sabena Fellow Travelers
    • Edna St. Vincent Millay, Passionate Poet, Candle-Lit Feminist
    • Fascinating Footnote: The Goose Down Divorce
    • Olive Higgins Prouty Juggles to Balance Home and Career
    • Mother and Daughter Journalists Agnes Meyer and Katharine Graham Shaped Journalism
    • Rose Friedman and the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
    • Katharine Meyer Graham Leaves Her Mark on the Washington Post
    • Ida M. Tarbell, "Bachelor Soul," Transitional Woman, or Both?
    • Nurse Edith Cavell, the Courage to Die for Her Country
    • Sigrid Schultz Outsmarted Hermann Goering
    • Martha Dickie Sharp Saves Jewish Refugees from the Nazi Death Machine
    • Virginia Graham Pioneered in Early Television and Survived Cancer
    • Rose Conway, President Harry Truman's Secret Weapon
    • Nancy Green, Talented Entrepreneur, Transitional Symbol
    • "Surrender on Demand:" The Friendship of Mary Jayne Gold and Miriam Ebel
    • Julia K. Tibbitts - Closet Environmentalist
    • Lee Lawrence Ansberry Reconquers the World and Reshapes Her Life
  • Christmas Cheer