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 book cover

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

Hardcover – April 28, 2020

Price
$17.14
Format
Hardcover
Pages
624
Publisher
Random House
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0812989977
Dimensions
6.35 x 1.55 x 9.53 inches
Weight
1.85 pounds

Description

“[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 Alexander Rose ’s previous books include Men of War , American Rifle , Kings in the North , and Washington’sxa0Spies , recently adapted into the AMC drama series Turn: Washington’s Spies , for which he served as a writer/producer. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1.u2002The 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—xadthe brown mud, that is—xadbeing tracked into his establishment by the hollow-xadcheeked, rough-xadwhiskered frontiersman claiming to be a “Graf von Zeppelin.”He certainly didn’t look like one of the fancy European aristocrats Mr.xa0Belote had read about. Yet he sounded courtly, even if he spoke Enxadglish, 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-xadraff 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-xadtrade 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-xadcentury 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-xadconquering 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-xadSwiss cotton manufacturer, and Ferdinand—xadour count—xadcame 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—xador 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-xadAustrian War of 1859 (Württemberg was an Austrian ally), he saw no action while serving on the staff of the quartermaster-xadgeneral as a specialist in topography and logistics.That Zeppelin, a curious mix of the unconventional and the traditional, was even in the quartermaster-xadgeneral’s office rather than serving on the higher-xadstatus 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-xadclass boys and ambitious working-class lads. Rich young nobles like Zeppelin were few and far between. Still stranger, during his time with the quartermaster-xadgeneral, 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-xadofficial visits also allowed them to forge connections with their upper-xadclass counterparts. In 1861–xad62, 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-xadknown fleshpots of Genoa, Marseille, and Paris, to visit the girls (as he explained to his morally upright, purse-xadstrings-xadholding 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-xadAustrian 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—xadeven 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-xadbones, 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. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The Golden Age of Aviation is brought to life by the story of the giant Zeppelin airships that once roamed the sky and ended with the fiery destruction of the
  • Hindenburg
  • .
  • At the dawn of the twentieth century, when human flight was still considered an impossibility, Germany's Count 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 wondrous
  • 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 would lead the way. In the glittery 1920s, the count's brilliant protégé, Hugo Eckener, achieved undreamt-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, 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 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 two men's struggle for mastery of the air was not only the clash of technologies, but of business, diplomacy, politics, personalities, and their 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.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(218)
★★★★
25%
(91)
★★★
15%
(55)
★★
7%
(25)
-7%
(-25)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Real tale of competing industry standards: the airplane vs the blimp!

Those of us born into the jumbo jet age will find it hard to believe that in the early, post WW1 era, the Zeppelin was viewed as the odds on favorite for safe and comfortable airborne passenger transportation as scale. But when one considers the small, exposed, rickety, and short-range biplanes of that era, one can see the point.

This is a story of corporate and national ambition and espionage as different technologies vied for dominance... and the Great Powers viewed the mastery of the air as the new strategic frontier. Think the space race but with canvas, baling wire, and noble gases. Not to mention the oversized egos of the prevailing tech pioneers of the day. (Any resemblance to the driven narcissism of Steve Jobs or Elon Musk entirely co-incidental??) A very interesting and ultimately poignant read that ends in the flaming inferno in New Jersey.
4 people found this helpful
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Fascinating if you are interested in early aviation history

I very much enjoyed reading this rather lengthy book about the duelling efforts of Juan Tripp of Pan Am and the Zeppelin Company to dominate world aviation. If all you want is to read about the crash of the Hindenberg this isn't the book for you. It is long, highly detailed, and gets deeply into the background of the competing forms of aviation and the personalities that drove the first 50 years of flight.
4 people found this helpful
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Intensely Informative, Also One of the Best Histories of Modern Germany that I Have Ever Read

Empires of the Sky: Zeppelins, Airplanes, and Two Men's Epic Duel to Rule the World by Alexander Rose, whose previous books include Men of War, American Rifle, Kings in the North, and Washington’s Spies, which was recently adapted into the AMC drama series Turn: Washington’s Spies, for which he served as a writer/producer. (And I saw this one on Netflix). Rose here gives us a magically deep and wide recounting of the Golden Age of Aviation, with the story of the lengthy competition between the American airplane and the giant German Zeppelin airships that once roamed the skies, which ended with the fiery destruction of the Zeppelin Hindenburg in Lakehurst, New Jersey, in the years between the first and second world wars.

The author goes way back to the first 18th century balloons, which gave people the idea that true flight might someday be possible. Yet at the dawn of the twentieth century, when human flight was still considered next to impossible, Germany's Count von Zeppelin vied with the Wright Brothers to build the world's first successful flying machine. Zeppelin fathered the wondrous airship, as the Wrights labored to invent the airplane, sparking a bitter rivalry between the two types of aircraft and their innovators that would last for decades. And it was the airship -- not the airplane -- that would lead the way. In the glittery 1920s, the count's brilliant protégé, Hugo Eckener, achieved undreamt-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, Eckener's airships serenely traversed oceans without a single crash, fatality, or injury. Charles Lindbergh, who later worked for Pan Am, almost died crossing the Atlantic in a small plane in 1927; Eckener effortlessly accomplished the journey three years before the Spirit of St. Louis even took flight.

Even as the Nazis sought to exploit Zeppelins for their own nefarious purposes in the war clearly to come, Eckener built his masterwork, the behemoth Hindenburg , a marvel of design and engineering. Determined as he was to forge an airline empire under the new flagship, Eckener met his match in the American Juan Trippe, well-born, well-connected graduate of Yale University, ruthless 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, one technology, could win. Countering each other's moves on the global chessboard, each seeking to wrest advantage from the other, the men's struggle for mastery of the air was not only the clash of technologies, but of business, diplomacy, politics, personalities, their vastly different dreams of the future, their native countries.

Empires of the Sky is the well-written, sweeping, untold tale of the duel that transfixed the world, helped create our modern age: it has been researched obviously deep and wide. The level of detail is satisfyingly dense. Mind you, it is 500 pages long, too detailed for a quick read by most: I found it intensely informative, but still could not do much more than 50 pages a day. It is also, by the way, one of the best histories of modern Germany that I have ever read. Highly recommended if it’s of interest to you.
4 people found this helpful
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Well-researched look into two technologies competing for air travel dominance in the early 20thC.

My headline is a bit misleading ng, because this book is less aboput the technology than it is the politics. power plays and the two men behind the dirigible vs airplane duel that took place in the early decades of the 20th century. Hugo Eckener was the head of the Zeppelin Company, which was basically the only firm to develop and put into service rigid, lighter-than-air craft, and Juan Trippe headed Pan American Airways, the groundbreaking airline which pioneered long oversea routes using airplanes.

If that description makes the book sound kind of dry, that's on me, because it's not. It's very interesting, extremely thoroughly researched, and as much of a page-turner as any fictional thriller. The Zeppelin Company's dirigibles took the early lead in the race for air transportation dominance, but many factors, both technical and otherwise, worked against their majestic aerostats becoming the dominant means of air transport. Airplanes had to play catch up, mostly due to their need for light, efficient engines and optimized airfoils to produce lift, but they eventually won through, and the story behind the contest is fascinating. Business, politics, and war all played a part, with the well-known Hindenburg disaster essentially the final nail in the dirigible's coffin. This book is a must-read for those who are interested in aviation history.
3 people found this helpful
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Age of Flying

This book Empires of the Sky by Alexander Rose is a thick book of 455 pages that tells the in- depth story of air travel. From the beginning of inspirations and designs of men to fly like the birds by German Count Von Zeppelin and the American Wright Brother Orville and Wilbur. It does go into the daily lives and dreams of these men. Zeppelin had the dream of using this machine in the war which he did for World War I in Germany.

This book covers the flight of air travel through Count Von Zeppelin and his dreams of conquering the air. It covers all the background of his life and his associates in the development of an air ship including the use of hydrogen or helium to keep the air ship afloat. It covers all the mistakes and crashes before it became a wonder of the world in the 1930’s.

The Wright Brothers air ship became popular as they became show people in doing acrobat flying in air show in America and France. These airplanes soon became popular and business men such as Juan Terry Trippe who developed air travel that grew into Pan America Air Lines in America. Air plane travel became an air business as a distraction of the Zeppelin’s crossing the ocean. The story of the Hindenberg disaster led to the destruction of Air Ships

If you enjoy detail writings this book is for you, it details the history of the flying machines. Its successes and failures in a very readable book. I did enjoy this book “Empires of the sky” Zeppelin's, Airplanes, and two Men’s Epic Duel to Rule the World by Alexander Rose. It is a detailed book but easy reading and full of history which I love.
3 people found this helpful
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Interesting look at the battle between airplanes and balloons

Empires of the Sky looks at the battle between airplanes and zeppelins and the men who would try to make them rise to prominence. This book follows the Zeppelin closer than the airplane and loosely touches on the wright brothers who made very few comments about the zeppelin. The first part of the book focuses on Count Zeppelin who propagated, worked on and gathered funding for the balloon that would eventually bear his name. His protégé Eckener would follow in his footsteps building balloon after balloon including the biggest one of all the Hindenburg which would meet its tragic end. The author follows the rise and fall of the Zeppelin company comparing it to the rise of the American company Pan Am which would start its flight service across Latin American ad the Caribbean. This book is very well written and although long keeps moving at a fast pace as you see the development of air travel in the 1900’s and the battle between the two technologies which would end in the dominance of the airplane. Set against the backdrop of the rise of Nazi Germany the balloons became a source of national pride that the Nazi’s used despite Eckener’s rather sharp distaste for them. Overall a fascinating story covering new ground that I had not read about before.
2 people found this helpful
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Absolutely Outstanding!

When I bought this book, I knew that I would enjoy it, mainly because of its subject matter. But I did not expect to enjoy it as much as I did! And that is mainly thanks to the author’s gifted writing style. It is clear, friendly, passionate, authoritative, accessible, lively, witty and amazingly captivating.

In short, the book recounts the history of the Zeppelin and, eventually, the competition between it and the airplane mainly in long distance passenger travel, particularly across the Atlantic. The key individuals as well as all the ups and downs in both camps, developmental and otherwise, are closely followed throughout.

This book could be enjoyed by anyone, particularly those interested in the history of air transportation, as well as that of the twentieth century.
2 people found this helpful
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A fascinating read, incredibly researched

Rarely do the phrases "a fascinating read" and "incredibly researched" go together. Inevitably you get one without the other. But Empires of the Sky really breaks the mold—a fast paced account with notes enough to satisfy even the most demanding aviation enthusiast. The juxtaposition Zeppelin and Trippe, airship and aircraft is frankly inspired, and reminds me much of the dual storytelling of Erik Larson. If you like his books (Devil in the While City, Dead Wake) you'll love this. I read it through in two afternoons, and wished there was more. Highly recommended!
2 people found this helpful
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Why do we take airplanes, and not Zepplins?

This extremely well written and researched book about a long race to commercial flight across the Atlantic. Though it seems obvious now that we would get on a jet to cross the Atlantic, that wasn't the situation in the early periods of of aviation. When Lindberg crossed the Atlantic in 1927, it was one man in an airplane that had been stripped down to the lowest weight possible. By comparison, Zepplins, a rigid frame airship, had been capable of carrying over 50 crew members sinces about 1912.

The book looks at the origins of the Zepplin, first envisioned by a German, Count Zepplin. The company was later helmed by Hugo Eckener. It also examines the origins of airplane flight. The book looks at technical innovation, political and social topics.

In the later part of the book, there is a focus on Hugo Eckner (of Zepplin) and Juan Trippe, founder of Pan Am. Both are determined, even stubborn men, with a vision of air travel based in their technology. Both are fighting battles both of technical issues but also political and legal issues.

Fascinating read if you like the history of technology, and how technology change almost always gets tangled up in political agendas. Eckner was a German traditionalist, but his company was taken over by the Nazis, who used the Zepplins for propaganda purposes. Trippe was running planes in to many Caribbean and South American countries, and found himself in constant turmoil as various political agendas changed.

BTW - The answer to why we take airplanes not because Zepplins burst into flames. There was a solution for that. But, the manufacturing costs of airplanes got much cheaper than the manufacturing costs of Zepplins.
2 people found this helpful
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Airships and the age of aviation

This is a detailed and highly researched book about Count Zeppelin, the Hindendburg and the ensuing duel.
The book for me just bogs down after awhile and couldn't hold my interest.
History buffs will probably enjoy though.
Probably 100 pages too long for my taste.
2 people found this helpful