Numerous false sightings of mysterious aeroplanes, thought to be German and hostile, were reported by ordinary people around Australia in the Autumn of 1918. These reports were investigated by defence authorities, who initiated a maximum effort to find the merchant raiders presumed to be the source of the aeroplanes. The scare is interpreted in the context of reports that a German seaplane had flown over Sydney in 1917; fears that the German offensive in France would lead to an Allied defeat; wartime paranoia about German subversion; and the growth of negative airmindedness thanks to the wartime press
This article explores the false rumours of secret German gun platforms and Zeppelin bases which swep...
This article explores the false rumours of secret German gun platforms and Zeppelin bases which swep...
Despite its distance from Europe and lack of technological and industrial infrastructure Australia d...
Aerial theatre, the use of aviation spectacle to project images of future warfare, national power an...
In late 1912 and early 1913, people all over Britain reported seeing airships in the night sky where...
This chapter argues that aerial theatre, in the form of annual air displays at Hendon and on Empire ...
In October 1917, the British Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, evocatively and memorably described...
Aerial bombardment was widely believed to pose an existential threat to Britain in the 1920s and 193...
This thesis analyzes the British and German air forces during the First World War, and the various u...
During the First World War, several writers began to argue that the main strategic risk to Britain w...
It is now well established in the historical literature of the First World War that manpower and mat...
The history of Britain’s air services in the First World War has long been coloured by a fascination...
British Imperial Air Power examines the air defense of Australia and New Zealand during the interwar...
The British fear of bombing in the early twentieth century has aptly been termed ‘the shadow of the ...
Recent decades have seen growing historical interest in the phenomenon of rumours, how they arise, t...
This article explores the false rumours of secret German gun platforms and Zeppelin bases which swep...
This article explores the false rumours of secret German gun platforms and Zeppelin bases which swep...
Despite its distance from Europe and lack of technological and industrial infrastructure Australia d...
Aerial theatre, the use of aviation spectacle to project images of future warfare, national power an...
In late 1912 and early 1913, people all over Britain reported seeing airships in the night sky where...
This chapter argues that aerial theatre, in the form of annual air displays at Hendon and on Empire ...
In October 1917, the British Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, evocatively and memorably described...
Aerial bombardment was widely believed to pose an existential threat to Britain in the 1920s and 193...
This thesis analyzes the British and German air forces during the First World War, and the various u...
During the First World War, several writers began to argue that the main strategic risk to Britain w...
It is now well established in the historical literature of the First World War that manpower and mat...
The history of Britain’s air services in the First World War has long been coloured by a fascination...
British Imperial Air Power examines the air defense of Australia and New Zealand during the interwar...
The British fear of bombing in the early twentieth century has aptly been termed ‘the shadow of the ...
Recent decades have seen growing historical interest in the phenomenon of rumours, how they arise, t...
This article explores the false rumours of secret German gun platforms and Zeppelin bases which swep...
This article explores the false rumours of secret German gun platforms and Zeppelin bases which swep...
Despite its distance from Europe and lack of technological and industrial infrastructure Australia d...