Zeppelin: A Biography

Zeppelin: A Biography

by Margaret L. Goldsmith
Zeppelin: A Biography

Zeppelin: A Biography

by Margaret L. Goldsmith

eBook

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Overview

IN his fiery, adventurous youth he joined the Union Army in our Civil War, and became vitally interested in aeronautics

AS a man he was known as the most fearless and audacious officer the Württemberg Army

AT fifty-two he retired and began the great adventure of his life—the conquest of the air

THEN, with magnificent courage, he rode over obstacle and failure to an achievement immortal in the history of flying

Originally published in 1931, this is a biography of Count von Zeppelin, the German general turned aircraft manufacturer who founded the Zeppelin airship company.

Ferdinand Adolf Heinrich August Graf von Zeppelin (8 July 1838 - 8 March 1917), the scion of a noble family, was born in Konstanz, Grand Duchy of Baden (now part of Baden-Württemberg) in Germany. His father was Württemberg Minister and Hofmarschall Friedrich Jerôme Wilhelm Karl Graf von Zeppelin (1807-1886).

Count Zeppelin’s military career spanned more than three decades, beginning as an army officer in the army of Württemberg in 1855, seeing active service in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871, and rising through the ranks to commander of the 19th Uhlans in Ulm and envoy of Württemberg in Berlin from 1882-1885. He retired from the army with the rank of Generalleutnant in 1891 at age 52. He was awarded the Ritterkreuz (Knight’s Cross) of the Order of Distinguished Service of Württemberg.

His service as an official observer with the Union Army during the American Peninsular War led him to travel to St. Paul, Minnesota, where the German-born former Army balloonist John Steiner offered tethered flights; it was his first ascent in a balloon during this visit that is said to have been the inspiration of Count Zeppelin’s later interest in aeronautics.

He passed away in 1917 at the age of 78, before the end of World War I. The unfinished World War II German aircraft carrier Graf Zeppelin and two rigid airships were named after him.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781787207653
Publisher: Borodino Books
Publication date: 07/31/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 130
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Margaret Leland Goldsmith (1894-1971) was an American journalist, historical novelist and translator who lived and worked primarily in England. One of her best known translations is popular German writer Erich Kästner’s Emil and the Detectives for the first UK edition in 1931.

Goldsmith spent some of her childhood in Germany, where she attended school and learned to speak German fluently. She then studied at Illinois Woman’s College in Jacksonville, Illinois and gained an MA from the University of Illinois. During World War I she was on the staff of the war trade board under Bernard Baruch. She then worked for the national chamber of commerce in Washington and the international chamber of commerce in Paris, helping Wesley Clair Mitchell with his 1919 report on international price comparisons. Returning to Berlin as a research assistant in the office of the commercial attaché of the American Embassy, she became one of the first women to be appointed an assistant trade commissioner from 1923-1925.

In 1926 she married Frederick Voigt, the Manchester Guardian’s diplomatic correspondent in Berlin in the 1920s and 1930, although the couple divorced in 1935. While living in Berlin she worked as an agent representing English-speaking authors.

She was a friend of author Katharine Burdekin (pseudonym Murray Constantine), with whom she co-authored the historical novel based on Marie-Antoinette, Venus in Scorpio: A Romance in Versailles, 1770-1793 (1940). Goldsmith’s other novels were Karin’s Mother (1928); Belated Adventure (1929); and the German language novel Patience geht Vorüber: ein Roman (1931).

Her non-fiction publications included Frederick the Great (1929); Hindenburg: The Man and the Legend (with Frederick Voigt, 1930); (1933); Franz Anton Mesmer: The History of an Idea (1934); John the Baptist: A Modern Interpretation (1935); and Florence Nightingale: The Woman and the Legend (1937).

Goldsmith died in 1971.
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