Balloon reconnaissance marks 150th anniversary

  • Published
  • By Donna Miles
  • American Forces Press Service
The intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance support critical to operations in Afghanistan got its start 150 years ago in June, when a balloonist showed then-President Abraham Lincoln how a gas-filled balloon could help the Union Army prevail in the Civil War.

Thaddeus Lowe met with President Lincoln June 11, 1861, to pitch the concept of balloon reconnaissance.

The idea wasn't totally new, explained Tom Crouch, the curator for lighter-than-air aircraft at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum here. The French first used balloons in 1794 to observe Dutch and French movements during the Battle of Fleurus.

Mr. Lowe got his chance to show President Lincoln the balloon's ISR capabilities as he reported his sightings from a tethered balloon as it floated 500 feet over Washington. Mr. Lowe took a telegrapher and a lightweight telegraph set with him in the balloon's basket, and he delivered reports to the White House via the War Department, Mr. Crouch said.

"He could see 25 miles in every direction, and was able to report on what he was seeing in the military camps below," Mr. Crouch said. "He demonstrated the fact that if you could get above the battlefield, you could see a lot of useful things, (such as) where the enemy was and what the enemy was doing. Obviously, that was incredibly useful information."

Convinced that balloons could provide a critical advantage on the battlefield, President Lincoln gave the War Department the go-ahead to establish the Union Balloon Corps. It stood up four months later, providing the U.S' first "air force" and delivering the nation's first aerial reconnaissance capability, Mr. Crouch said.

"Some of the most important generals of the war loved the balloons and appreciated their value in what they could deliver," he said. "They found it genuinely useful in supporting what they were doing."

But the Balloon Corps was disbanded in 1863, as the victim of bureaucracy as well as logistics. It was run by a civilian organization that wasn't able to work smoothly with the Army. Further complicating things was the fact that the balloons required extensive logistical support to move and inflate, and an entire company of Soldiers to operate.

Another challenge was to get the intelligence collected from the balloons to the ground troops who needed it as quickly as possible.

After the demise of the Balloon Corps, balloon reconnaissance began to flourish in Europe, Mr. Crouch said.

And 150 years later, in an age of supersonic aircraft and satellites, Mr. Crouch said balloons continue to provide critical intelligence, reconnaissance and surveillance in ongoing military operations. Now unmanned, they're equipped with cameras, electronic sensors and communication equipment to gather intelligence and provide communications links.

Ashton B. Carter, the undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics, has worked to provide more of this capability to ground forces in Afghanistan.

This spring, he announced plans to increase the number of aerostats to support counterinsurgency operations and provide increased force protection.

"We are going to be, this summer, increasing many-fold the number of aerostat-borne cameras," he said. "They're terrific.

"Balloons are still with us, still providing reconnaissance for warfighters," Mr. Crouch said. "One hundred and fifty years later, balloons are still performing the function they did in 1861."

The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum will mark the 150th anniversary of Mr. Lowe's demonstration and the birth of the Union Balloon Corps June 11 on the National Mall. Reenactors will portray Mr. Lowe, President Lincoln and Union soldiers as they demonstrate a 19,000-cubic-foot netted gas balloon, built in 1941 to closely replicate Mr. Lowe's, officials said.

The Air and Space Museum also will give presentations about ballooning and espionage during the Civil War and give visitors hands-on educational activities inside the museum.