Sunday, January 7, 2024

First Known Mail Delivered by Air on 7 January 1785


On January 7, 1785, mail was carried by an air vehicle for the first time. The honour of flying that first airmail delivery went to Jean-Pierre Blanchard of France.  Blanchard was a balloon flight pioneer.

Blanchard wanted to become the first person to fly across the British Channel.  John Jeffries, a wealthy doctor from Boston covered the expenses but also wanted to take part in the flight. Though Blanchard didn’t want to share the honour, they eventually decided to fly together.  On January 7, 1785, they piloted the balloon up over Dover, England to cross the channel.  Blanchard had printed pamphlets about himself beforehand and dropped them over the English countryside.

The flight over land had been peaceful, but once they reached the sea, the balloon continuously dropped nearer and nearer to the water.  Blanchard and Jeffries frantically threw whatever they could overboard, including the bag of mail they were supposed to deliver and most of their clothes.

However, after about two and a half hours, they reached their destination, Calais, France, and landed safely.  Though they had dumped most of the letters into the sea, they carried one all the way to France.  It was a letter sent from American loyalist William Franklin to his son William Temple Franklin. The younger Franklin was serving as a diplomat in France with his grandfather, Benjamin Franklin.

For his accomplishment, Blanchard received a pension from King Louis XVI.  He went on to make the first balloon flights in America, Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, and Poland.

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