The Wreck of the Naval Airship USS Shenandoah by Jerry Copas – Book cover |
It is no surprise that Copas would have an interest in airships filled with helium. He himself is co-owner of Images Aloft Balloning, Inc. He has been a balloon pilot for over 35 years and has piloted balloons in 30 states and 7 countries. He is a member of the Balloon Federation of America, the Balloon Society of Kentucky, the Akron Lighter-Than-Air Society, the Naval Airship Association, and the Navy Lakehurst Historical Society. He is a prolific author of magazine and newsletter articles on ballooning and aviation history and is awaiting release of his upcoming book, French Lick and West Baden Springs, which is due out in 2019.
Copas will speak about the USS Shenandoah and Lt. Cmdr. Zachary Lansdowne, who was piloting the Shenandoah on the day that it crashed in 1925. Based on the engineering of the famous German Zeppelins, the airship was a marvel of its day. When launched from the U.S. Naval Air Station in Lakehurst, New Jersey, the USS Shenandoah became the nation’s first rigid airship and the first to use helium gas. Unfortunately, rigid airships were especially vulnerable to bad weather, and the Shenandoah was no exception. On September 3, 1925, while starting off on a 3,000-mile publicity trip to the Midwest, the airship was ripped into several pieces by a storm over Noble County in southeastern Ohio. Fourteen men died, but 29 miraculously survived. On that fateful day, Lt. Cmdr. Zachary Lansdowne, a Greenville native, went down with his ship. The Garst Museum has an exhibit about Lt. Cmdr. Lansdowne, who had been deemed a national hero by the time he appeared on the cover of Time magazine on September 14, 1925. The wreck of the USS Shenandoah was front-page news nationwide, and Lansdowne was hailed as a hero who remained at his post until the end.
All Garst lectures are free and open to the public. However, regular admission will apply to tour the museum, which includes the outstanding National Annie Oakley Center, Crossroads of Destiny, Lowell Thomas exhibit, and Longtown display. Funding for this program was made possible, in part, by the Harry D. Stephens Memorial Foundation.
No comments:
Post a Comment