The Balloon Over Hellsbye Hill in Cheshire
Description:
Writing in Airopaidia: Containing the Narrative of a Balloon Excursion (1786), Thomas Baldwin describes this view as "taken in a high Field, at the End of Sutton-Causeway," while looking to the southwest, 2.30PM "on Thursday the 8th of September, 1785" (iv). It comprises three horizontal panels, which offer in turn, beginning from the lower-margin of the design: first a beautiful, then a sublime and, finally, a hyper-sublime landscape.
The first landscape occupies the lower third of the design. On the far side of four large trees, it slopes gently down from the "high field," through a peaceful rural-landscape, past a meandering stream (probably Witton Brook), towards a village almost hidden by trees, and a small hill crowned by a church and its tower. In the middle-distance, this beautiful, rustic landscape is succeeded by the second, which encompasses, to the left, the imposing form of Helsbye Hill and, to the right, a view that extends over two bodies of water (probably marshland), across a line of distant hills, to the vast estuary of the River Mersey.
The third landscape, occupying more than half of the design, rises above the others. It is composed first of a lightly coloured band of sky without distinct features, which seems to lie at an immense distance from the observer. Above it a second and then a third band of sky, each darker than the one beneath it, evoke the immense vault of the heavens, arching from the horizon into the air and then back over the observer. The effect is completed by the two black clouds towering over Helsbye Hill, and over the landscape that divides the Hill from the "high field" where the viewer is standing. The sky and clouds echo the landscapes below, while dwarfing them both, as if to demonstrate that a scale able to reach only from the beautiful to the sublime will be an inadequate tool for describing the aerial world.
Each of the three panels we have been discussing is bisected by a vertical line that divides them in two. In the first, the line is formed by the road leading from the lower-boundary of the design, across the bridge, towards the small village. In the second, the "same" line is continued (and widened) by the cliff in which Helsbye Hill terminates, which takes our gaze from land to sky. Immediately above the Hill, an aerial highway, its borders marked by the two black clouds, leads us still further into the air where, at the upper margin of the design, Thomas Baldwin's balloon can be seen, taking him to the borders of a world that, for this design at least, stretches into the distance, far beyond the limits of representation.
Copyright:
Copyright 2009, Department of Special Collections, Memorial Library, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI
Accession Number:
Thordarson T 203
Height (in centimeters):
16
Width (in centimeters):
23
Printing Context
"The Balloon over Helsbye Hill in Chester" was included (facing page 78) in Thomas Baldwin's Airopaidia: Containing the Narrative of a Balloon Excursion from Chester, the eighth of September, 1785, taken from Minutes made during the Voyage . . . (Chester: Printed for the Author, 1786).Associated Events
Vincenzo Lunardi's visit to Chester in 1785, which was advertised as the occasion for his ascent in a hydrogen balloon from the town's castle (Anonymous, "Extract of a Letter"). In the event, Lunardi suffering a burn to the hand from an acid used to make the hydrogen, and his servants were left to make the ascent, in order to appease the angry crowd (Chester Community Heritage & History 5).Associated Places
Helsbye-Hill [Helsby Hill], Cheshire, England.Associated Texts
The image is one of four full-page designs included in Thomas Baldwin's Airopaidia (1786), which when seen together compose a visual narrative that explores the dimensions and some of the implications of aerial views.Subject
The primary subject of this image is Thomas Baldwin's "Balloon Excursion," from Chester to Warrington, which it depicts just 50 minutes after it began, as seen from "a high Field, at the End of Sutton-Causeway" (iv, 29). In this regard, the design (directly or indirectly) represents the singularity of the occasion; the rapidity of the balloon's ascent; the bravery of the balloonist; the path taken by the balloon; and the immense, aerial world that Baldwin has begun to explore.Theme
This image highlighted the sublime nature of Baldwin’s flight, which carried him high above Helsbye-Hill amidst the “tremendous” storm clouds that were “grand yet beautiful.”Significance
"The Balloon Over Helsbye Hill in Cheshire," along with the book it illustrates and episode it reports, are products of the balloon craze that took hold in England after the flights of Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier in Paris (21 November 1783) and Vincenzo Lunardi in London (15 September 1784). During this period, as Horace Walpole remarked, it seemed that balloons were the talk of "senators, philosophers, ladies, everybody" (quoted in Keen, 507).Function
The image functions as a report of an episode in Baldwin's balloon excursion; an illustration of that episode as recounted in his "Narrative of a Balloon Excursion"; a testament to the balloonist's bravery and the ingenuity of science; and a reflection on the challenge posed by balloon flight, to traditional aesthetic and conceptual categories. In the context of Airopaidia, it also functions as the contrary of and counter-weight to "A Balloon Prospect from above the Clouds."Bibliography
[Anonymous]. "Extract of Letter from Liverpool, Aug. 1." Chester Journal, August 1785.Long Title
"The Balloon over Helsybe Hill in Cheshire" Publish'd May 1st. 1786, by T. Baldwin[,] Chester, [included in] Airopaidia: Containing the Narrative of a Balloon Excursion from Chester, the eighth of September, 1785, taken from Minutes made during the Voyage: Hints on the Improvement of Balloons and Mode of Inflation by Steam: Means to Prevent their Descent over Water: Occasional Enquiries into the State of the Atmosphere, favouring their Direction: With various Philosophical Observations and Conjectures. To which is subjoined, Menstruation of Heights by the Barometer, made Plain: With extensive Tables. The Whole serving as an Introduction to Aerial Navigation: with a copious Index. By Thomas Baldwin, Esq. A.M. Chester: Printed for the author, by J. Fletcher; and sold by W. Lowndes, No. 77, Fleet-Street, London; J. Poole, Chester; and other Booksellers, 1786.Artist Unknown
Image Date:
5 January 1786