Balloon buster


Balloon busters were military pilots known for destroying enemy observation balloons. These pilots were noted for their fearlessness. Seventy-seven flying aces in World War I were each credited with destroying five or more balloons, and thus were balloon aces.

The crucial role of observation balloons

An observation balloon was both a vulnerable and a valuable target: the balloon was moored in a stationary position and was lifted by flammable hydrogen gas, whose use was necessitated by the scarcity of helium reserves among European powers. The artillery observer, suspended in the wicker basket beneath, typically had a wireless transmitter, binoculars and/or a long-range camera. His job was to observe actions on the front-line and behind it, to spot enemy troop movements or unusual activity of any sort, and to call down artillery fire onto any worthwhile targets.
Balloon observers were consequently targets of great importance to both sides, especially before any sort of infantry action or offensive, so individual pilots, flights or whole squadrons were frequently ordered to attack balloons, to destroy them or at least disrupt their observation activities. Pilots on both sides tried to attack from a height that could enable them to fire without getting too close to the hydrogen and pull away fast. They were also cautioned not to go below 1000 feet in order to avoid machine gun and AA fire.
Due to their importance, balloons were usually given heavy defenses in the form of machine gun positions on the ground, anti-aircraft artillery, and standing fighter patrols stationed overhead. Other defenses included surrounding the main balloon with barrage balloons; stringing cables in the air in the vicinity of the balloons; equipping observers with machine guns; and flying balloons booby-trapped with explosives that could be remotely detonated from the ground. These measures made balloons very dangerous targets to approach.
Although balloons were occasionally shot down by small-arms fire, generally it was difficult to shoot down a balloon with solid bullets, particularly at the distances and altitude involved. Ordinary bullets would pass relatively harmlessly through the hydrogen gas bag, merely holing the fabric. Hits on the wicker car could however kill the observer.
One method employed was the solid-fuel Le Prieur rocket invented by Frenchman Lt. Yves Le Prieur and first used in April 1916. Rockets were attached to each outboard strut of a biplane fighter aircraft and fired through steel tubes using an electrical trigger. The rockets' inaccuracy was such that pilots had to fly very close to their target before firing.
It was not until special Pomeroy incendiary bullets and Buckingham flat-nosed incendiary bullets became available on the Western Front in 1917 that any consistent degree of success was achieved. Le Prieur rockets were withdrawn from service in 1918 once incendiary bullets had become available.

Balloon busting aces

NameNationalityBalloon victoriesAircraft victoriesTotalReference
Willy CoppensBelgian35237
Léon BourjadeFrench27128
Michel CoiffardFrench241034
Maurice BoyauFrench211435
Friedrich Ritter von RöthGerman20828
Jacques EhrlichFrench18119
Heinrich GontermannGerman182139
Andrew Beauchamp-ProctorSouth African163854
Frank LukeAmerican14418
Karl SchlegelGerman14822
Oskar HennrichGerman13720
Marcel HaegelenFrench121123
Marius AmbrogiFrench11314
Friedrich FriedrichsGerman111021
Henry WoollettBritish112435
Tom F. HazellBritish103343
Fritz HöhnGerman101121
Max NätherGermany101626
Erich ThomasGermany10010
William George BarkerCanadian95059
Louis BennettAmerican9312
Théophile Henri CondemineFrench909
Hans von FredenGerman91019
Sidney HighwoodBritish9716
Erich LöwenhardtGerman94554
Jean Andre PezonFrench9110
Armand PinsardFrench91827
Erich ThomasGerman9110
Paul BarbreauFrench808
Josef JacobsGerman84048
Max KuhnGerman8412
Charles J. V. MacéFrench8412
Ernest MaunouryFrench8311
Friedrich T. NolteniusGerman81321
Fritz PütterGerman81725
Otto SchmidtGerman81220
Maurice BizotFrench7310
Oskar Freiherr von BoenigkGerman71926
Julius BucklerGerman72936
Siegfried BüttnerGerman7613
Harry King GoodeBritish7815
Harold B. HudsonCanadian7613
Hans NülleGermany7411
Charles NungesserFrench73643
Hans Martin PippartGerman71522
Paul SantelliFrench707
Eugen BönschAustro-Hungarian61016
Hans KleinGerman61622
Antoine LaplasseFrench628
Donald Roderick MacLarenCanadian64854
Georg MeyerGerman61824
Marcel BlochFrench505
Heinrich BongartzGerman52833
Fernand BonnetonFrench549
Godwin BrumowskiAustro-Hungarian53035
William Charles CampbellBritish51823
Pierre CardonFrench505
Sydney CarlinBritish5510
Arthur CobbyAustralian52429
Martin DehmischGerman5510
Pierre DucornetFrench527
Wilhelm FrickartGerman5712
Louis Prosper GrosFrench549
Francis GuerrierFrench505
Heinrich HaaseGerman516
Lansing HoldenAmerican527
Adrien L. J. LepsFrench5712
Richard Burnard MundayBritish549
Marcel NoguesFrench5813
Eddie RickenbackerAmerican52126
George R. RileyBritish5813
Gilbert SardierFrench51015
William Ernest ShieldsCanadian51924
Walter SoutheySouth African51520
Paul Y. R. WaddingtonFrench5712
Joseph WehnerAmerican516
Hans WeissGerman51116

Aviators with four balloon victories

Aviators with three balloon victories

Aviators with two balloon victories

Fictional portrayals

' novel The Wild Blue and the Gray was set in a World War I squadron that flew several balloon-busting missions.
In Wilbur Smith's The Burning Shore the lead character carries out balloon-busting missions during World War I.