Vincenzo Lunardi's family were of minor Tuscan nobility from Lucca, and his father had married late in life. Vincenzo was one of three children. He travelled in France in his early years before being called home, where he was put into the diplomatic service. Vincenzo Lunardi came to England as Secretary to
Prince Caramanico, the Neapolitan Ambassador.
15 September 1784 There was a flying craze in France and Scotland with
James Tytler, Scotland's first
aeronaut and the first Briton to fly, but even so and after a year since the invention of the
balloon, the English were still sceptical, and so George Biggin and 'Vincent' Lunardi, "The Daredevil Aeronaut," together decided to demonstrate a hydrogen balloon flight at the
Artillery Ground of the
Honourable Artillery Company in London on 15 September 1784. Because the 200,000-strong crowd (which included eminent statesmen and the
Prince of Wales) had grown very impatient, the young Italian had to take off without his friend Biggin, and with a bag that was not completely inflated; he was accompanied by a dog, a cat and a caged pigeon. The flight from the Artillery Ground travelled in a northerly direction towards
Hertfordshire, with Lunardi touching down briefly in a cornfield in the parish of
North Mymms to release the cat which had become unwell. The field is opposite Queenswood School north of Shepherds Way (B157) to the south-east of
Brookmans Park. There is a commemorative stone in
Welham Green, almost three miles to the north-west of the North Mymms landing spot, at a road junction called Balloon Corner. After the brief touch down, Lunardi continued his flight before eventually bringing the balloon to rest in
Standon Green End. Lunardi's balloon was later exhibited at the
Pantheon in
Oxford Street. Portret van Vincenzo Lunardi, RP-P-1959-296 (cropped).jpg | Portrait of Vincent Lunardi, 1784 File:Apparatus for filling M. Lunardi's balloon b1035339 014a tif 3r074v747.tiff | Apparatus for filling M. Lunardi's balloon File:The English Balloon and Appendages b1035339 016a tif fn106z672.tiff | The English Balloon and Appendages File:Patheon Lunardi's Balloon.jpg|Exhibition of Lunardi's balloon at the Pantheon in Oxford Street File:Balloon Corner, Welham Green - geograph.org.uk - 110478.jpg|Balloon Corner, Welham Green. A stone commemorating the brief landing of the first (hydrogen) balloon flight in England The 24-mile flight brought Lunardi fame and began the ballooning fad that inspired fashions of the day—Lunardi skirts were decorated with balloon styles, and in Scotland, the Lunardi Bonnet was named after him (balloon-shaped and standing some 600 mm tall), and is even mentioned by Scotland's national poet,
Robert Burns (1759–96), in his poem "To a Louse", written about a young woman called Jenny, who had a louse scampering in her Lunardi bonnet, "But Miss's fine Lunardi, fye". Lunardi published
An Account of the First Aërial Voyage in England (1784), written as a series of letters to his guardian, Gherardo Campagni. Doubt about the experiment still remained in England, at least in some circles.
Samuel Johnson, in a letter to
Richard Brocklesby (September 29, 1784), dismissed ballooning as "a species of amusement": In amusement, mere amusement, I am afraid it must end, for I do not find that its course can be directed so as that it should serve any purposes of communication; and it can give no new intelligence of the state of the air at different heights, till they have ascended above the height of mountains, which they seem never likely to do.
29 June 1785 , 1785) , 1785) Lunardi's next flight was made nearly a year later on 29 June 1785 and left from
St George's Fields on the south side of the Thames. Lunardi and Biggin, and two invitees,
Letitia Ann Sage and Colonel Hastings, were supposed to make the flight, but the balloon would not take off because of the weight. Lunardi and Hastings stepped down, and the balloon took off with Biggin and Mrs. Sage, making her the first English female in flight. 90 minutes later, they landed near
Harrow, where the two
aeronauts had to be rescued by a group of boys from
Harrow School from the angry farmer whose crops were damaged. Lunardi then made flights in
Liverpool on 20 July and 9 August that year before moving onto
Glasgow and
Edinburgh. ==Ascents in Scotland==