Contributed by Cyril Mazansky
Cigarette cards were intended to help sell cigarettes, naturally. It soon became apparent that the public found the air war and aircraft fascinating. Our regular contributor Cyril Mazansky has shared a number of the aviation examples from his collection.
Cigarette cards were intended to help sell cigarettes, naturally. It soon became apparent that the public found the air war and aircraft fascinating. Our regular contributor Cyril Mazansky has shared a number of the aviation examples from his collection.
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Since the British public found themselves being bombed by zeppelins they had an immediate interest in them and the effort to defeat them. Here we have the front and back of a card telling the history of Ferdinand von Zeppelin's original design. The third image shows naval Lt. Warneford destroying zeppelin LZ-37 over Belgium in June 1915. He was soon rewarded with the Victoria Cross, but died in a crash 10 days later.
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British cigarette sellers, of course, emphasized British aircraft with their cards. The Airco DH2 saw service in early 1916 and temporarily gave the British air superiority. The pusher design, however, was dated and by late 1916 were at a distinct disadvantage against such new German fighters as the Albatross and Halberstadts coming into action.
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The Sopwith Pup was considered, for its time, "the perfect flying machine." It was able to maintain altitude better than the opposing aircraft such as the Albatrosses on the Western Front in late 1916. Because of its smaller size it was used by the Royal Navy to test shipboard take-offs.
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Interesting, but contemporary accounts are not always accurate. The airship is certainly not the first Zeppelin of 1900, L1. It looks more like the passenger carrying Zeppelins of 1910-14, such as L10, "Schwaben".
ReplyDeleteThe Sopwith Pup is shown as a nightfighter version, with the whites of the national markings removed, and an upwards-firing Lewis gun.
Although the original SE5 had "development issues and was underpowered", the improved SE5a was making its mark well before 1918, in fact by June 1917.
The SE5a photo on the card is more recent. F904 is the SE that is still flying with the Shuttleworth Collection in the UK
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