The Great Balloon Hoax
The "Steering Balloon 'Victoria'" that Monck Mason supposedly used to cross the Atlantic. This illustration accompanied Poe's article in The Sun. Poe obtained this picture by redrawing it from the frontispiece of an anonymous 1843 pamphlet (the author of which was probably Monck Mason) that was titled: Remarks on the Ellipsoidal Balloon, propelled by the Archimedean Screw, described as the New Aerial Machine.
On April 13, 1844 a broadside, or 'extra page,' appeared in the midday issue of the
New York Sun (the same newspaper that ran the
Great Moon Hoax back in 1835) announcing that the famous European balloonist Monck Mason had succeeded in flying across the Atlantic Ocean in 75 hours. If true, this would have been a remarkable achievementthe first time the Atlantic had ever been crossed in a balloon.
The balloon, named the Victoria, had apparently taken off from England on a trip to Paris, but had been blown off course due to a propeller accident and ended up floating across the Atlantic and landing on Sullivan's Island, near Charleston, South Carolina.
The story was quickly revealed to be a hoax, authored by Edgar Allan Poe. Monck, however, was a real person who had ballooned from London to Weilburg, Germany in 1836, a journey which he had described in 1837 in a book entitled
Account of the Late Aeronautical Expedition from London to Weilburg.
On the day of the article's publication, Poe stood on the steps of the
Sun's building in New York City telling crowds that his own story was a hoax. But apparently, amidst the general excitement, not many people paid attention to him.
He later wrote an account in the
Columbia Spy of the scene following the publication of the balloon news:
"On the morning (Saturday) of its announcement, the whole square surrounding the 'Sun' building was literally besieged, blocked upingress and egress being alike impossible, from a period soon after sunrise until about two o'clock P.M.... I never witnessed more intense excitement to get possession of a newspaper. As soon as the few first copies made their way into the streets, they were bought up, at almost any price, from the news-boys, who made a profitable speculation beyond doubt. I saw a half-dollar given, in one instance, for a single paper, and a shilling was a frequent price. I tried, in vain, during the whole day, to get possession of a copy."
References/Further Reading:
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Sassaman, Richard. "The Tell-Tale Hoax". Air & Space/Smithsonian 1993 8(3): 80-89.
Text copyright © 2002 Alex Boese