Everything about Umberto Nobile totally explained
Umberto Nobile (
January 21,
1885 –
July 30,
1978) was an
Italian aeronautical engineer and Arctic explorer. Nobile is primarily remembered for having piloted the
airship Norge that was the first aircraft both to reach the
North Pole, and to cross the polar ice cap between Europe and America.
Early career
Born in
Lauro,
province of Avellino, Nobile graduated from the University of
Naples with degrees in both electrical and industrial engineering. In
1906 he began work with the Italian state railways, where he worked on electrification of the rail system. In 1911 his interests turned to the field of aeronautical engineering and he enrolled in a one year course offered by the Italian Army. Nobile had always been fascinated by the work of airship pioneers such as
Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin. When Italy entered
World War I in
1915, the then 29 year old attempted three times to enlist but was rejected as physically unfit for service. The Italian military had used airships as early as
1912, during the
Italo-Turkish War for bombing and reconnaissance. Nobile worked on airship construction and design during the war. Italy built about 20 M-class
semi-rigid airships with a
bomb load of 1000 kg which it used for bombing and anti-shipping missions. Other smaller airships – some of them British built – were also used, but none of Nobile's designs flew until after the war.
In July
1918, Nobile began a business partnership with the engineers
Giuseppe Valle,Benedetto Croce and
Celestino Usuelli which they called the Aeronautical Construction Factory. During this period he also lectured at the University of Naples, obtained his test pilots license and wrote the textbook
Elementi di Aerodinamica (
Elements of Aerodynamics). He became convinced that medium sized,
semi-rigid airships were superior to
non-rigid and
rigid designs. The company's first project was the
Airship T-34, which was designed for a trans-Atlantic crossing. When the British
R34 crossed the Atlantic in
1919, the airship was sold first to the Italian military and then the
US Army where it was commissioned as the
Roma. The
Roma ultimately crashed in Virginia in 1922. The deteriorating political situation and threats to nationalise his company convinced Nobile to go to the US in 1922 to work as a consultant for
Goodyear in Akron, Ohio. He returned to Italy in
1923 and began construction of a new airship, the N-1. However he was immediately enveloped in a storm of political intrigue, stage-managed by personal enemies and business competitors who used the newly emerged
Fascist government to harass and intimidate Nobile and those associated with his company. The main antagonists seem to have been General
Gaetano Arturo Crocco, an airship manufacturer and General
Italo Balbo, chief of the general staff and heavier-than-air proponent.
Polar expeditions
In 1925 Nobile became involved in planning a Polar flight with Norwegian explorer
Roald Amundsen and American millionaire/explorer
Lincoln Ellsworth. The pair had previously flown to within 150
nautical miles (280 km) of the North Pole in two amphibious aircraft, but were trapped on the ice for 30 days after a forced landing. After a series of test flights, the N-1, made by the Italian Military Navy, was handed over on
March 29 1926 and re-christened
Norge (
Norway) by Nobile. On
April 14 the airship left for
Ny-Ålesund (Kings Bay),
Spitsbergen via a stop in
Leningrad. On
May 9, the expedition members were dismayed by a report that
Richard E. Byrd and
Floyd Bennett had reached the Pole before them (this claim has since been disputed). On
May 11,
1926, the expedition left for the Pole. They flew over the Pole and landed in
Teller, Alaska two days later, strong winds having made a return to Norway impossible. This "Rome to Nome" flight resulted in controversy between Nobile and Amundsen as to who deserved the credit for the expedition — Nobile, the pilot, or Amundsen, the expedition leader. The controversy was worsened by Nobile's Fascist enemies at home, who trumpeted the genius of Italian engineering and ordered Nobile on a speaking tour of the US, further alienating Amundsen and the Norwegians.
He was famously seen off from Stolp by a team of friends who had travelled all the way from Milan, Italy to wish him luck on his departure.
Despite the controversy, Nobile continued to have good relations with other polar scientists and started planning a new expedition, this time under Italian control. Nobile's company managed to sell an N-class airship to
Japan; however, political interference in his business led to constant threats and intimidation of staff. Publicly, Nobile's popularity meant he was, for the moment, safe from direct attack. When the plans were announced,
Italo Balbo is reputed to have said "Let him go, for he can't possibly come back to bother us anymore".
The N-class airship
Italia was slowly completed and equipped for Polar flight during 1927-28. Part of the difficulty was the raising of private funding for the expedition, the Italian government limiting its direct participation to sending the aging steamer
Città di Milano as a support vessel to
Spitsbergen, under the command of the incompetent
Giuseppe Romagna. After two preliminary flights from
Ny-Ålesund (Kings Bay), the flight to the North Pole began on
May 23,
1928, but ended in a crash on the ice on
May 25, close to 81° 14' latitude north, 28° 14' longitude east, less than 30 kilometres north of Spitsbergen. Of the 16 men involved in the crash, ten were thrown onto the ice, and six were trapped helplessly when their intact gondola was taken upward by the now-lightened airship, and were killed when the airship exploded. One of the ten thrown onto the ice was killed in the crash. Nobile and another crew member suffered broken legs, and another a broken shoulder.. The crew managed to salvage several items from the crashed airship, including food, a radio transmitter and, famously, a red tent. The drifting sea ice later took the survivors towards
Foyn and
Broch islands. Incompetence on the part of Captain Romagna meant that the survivors' distress signals were not picked up for several weeks, and despite the presence of Italian ski-troops on board in case of just such an emergency, no effort was made by the Italian authorities to mount a search, let alone a rescue effort.
Thus it was left to the international community, and in particular Norway, Sweden and Finland to begin the first polar air rescue effort. Several privately owned ships which had been chartered by polar scientists and explorers also participated. Even Amundsen forgot his past differences, but went missing when his overloaded seaplane disappeared en route to the search headquarters. His body was never found. After a month of privation, the first rescue plane, a
Swedish airforce
Fokker ski plane, piloted by Lieutenant
Einar Lundborg landed near the crash site. Nobile had prepared a detailed evacuation plan, with the most seriously wounded men at the top of the list. However Lundborg refused to take anyone but Nobile. He argued that the plane could only take one survivor and the other seriously injured man was so heavy Lundborg was unsure he could take off. Nobile was reluctantly airlifted to
Ryss Island, base camp of Swedish and Finnish air rescue efforts. However, when Lundborg returned to pick up a second survivor he crashed his plane on landing and became trapped with the others. Eventually, Nobile reached the
Città di Milano where he was dismayed at the incompetence he found. His attempts to co-ordinate the international rescue effort were blocked, and when he threatened to leave he was placed under virtual arrest by Captain Romagna. His telegrams to the survivors still on the ice, as well as to various people involved in the rescue, were heavily censored, and he was forced to sign a communique implying cowardice for being the first to be evacuated. Eventually the rest of his crew were rescued by the Soviet
icebreaker Krasin. Nobile wanted to continue the search for six crew who were swept away in the envelope of the airship when it crashed, but he was ordered back to Rome with the others, in a locked train.
Two hundred thousand cheering Italians met Nobile and his crew on arrival in Rome. This show of popularity was unexpected by Nobile's enemies, who had been seeding the foreign and domestic press with accusations against him, probably to whitewash over their own incompetence in the rescue effort. During an interview with
Benito Mussolini he offended the dictator by detailing his grievances at length, thus sealing his fate. The patently rigged official inquiry blamed Nobile for the disaster and, accused of abandoning his men, he spent the rest of his life defending his actions. However the complex conditions that led to the crash can't rest solely on the shoulders of Nobile. Horrendous climatic conditions, equipment failure, and poor decision making all played a part. After resigning in public protest from the Italian air force (further angering Mussolini) in March 1929, Nobile faced a further trial with the death of his wife in 1930.
Later career
In
1931 he left to work in the
Soviet Union, where he helped with the Soviet semi-rigid airship programme. Details of the
Soviet Airship Program remain obscure, but there's an obvious Nobile influence in the design of the airships USSR-V5, and
URSS W6 Ossoawiachim. He was allowed to return to Italy to teach in 1936, before going to the
United States in
1939 to teach aeronautics at
Lewis University in
Lockport,
Illinois. Despite his enemy alien status, he was permitted to remain in the US, and only returned home in 1943 because of his children.
In
1945 the Italian air force cleared him of all charges and promoted him to rank of major general. He was persuaded to run for parliament, but once elected was smeared as a
communist on the basis of 5 years spent working in Russia. He then returned to his beloved University of Naples where he taught until his retirement.
He died in Rome on
July 30,
1978.
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