Cecil Shadbolt


Cecil Victor Shadbolt was a British photographer, who pioneered aerial photography from flying balloons.

Life

Shadbolt was born in 1859, the son of the mahogany dealer and photographer George Shadbolt.
He showed photographs of Welsh landscapes at the 1877 Photographic Society exhibition.
, taken from 2000ft. The earliest extant aerial photograph taken in the British Isles.
His first balloon ascent was in May 1882, at Alexandra Palace. He made his own device for attaching a camera to the basket below a balloon, allowing him to take pictures looking directly downwards. One of his images, taken from over Stamford Hill, is the earliest extant aerial photograph taken in the British Isles. A print of the same image, An Instantaneous Map Photograph taken from the Car of a Balloon, 2,000 feet high, was shown at the 1882 Photographic Society exhibition.
Shadbolt gave public lectures, using magic lantern slides, with the title Balloons and Ballooning, Upward and Onwards.
He was secretary of the West Kent Sunday School Union from 1886.

Death

On 29 June 1892, he took a flight in a gas balloon owned by his friend 'Captain' William D. Dale, at Crystal Palace. The balloon ripped during the initial ascent, at around, and though those aboard dropped ballast, the basket crashed to the ground, immediately killing Dale. Shadbolt and the other passengers were taken to Norwood Cottage Hospital, but Shadwell died on 8 July, aged 33. He was buried, alongside members of his family, in grave 1,932, square 113, at West Norwood Cemetery. His father was later buried in the adjacent plot.
An inquest at the hospital, on 12 July 1892, under coroner, Mr Jackson, returned verdicts of accidental death.

Shadbolt Collection

The Shadbolt Collection of 76 glass lantern slides taken between 1882 and 1892 is held by Historic England, The slides were found at a car boot sale and subsequently purchased at auction by Historic England in 2015.

Publications