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The English Channel (La Manche) is the part of the Atlantic Ocean that separates Britain from France. The actual channel is the length of the entire southern coast of England, and contains many inhabited islands. When people attempt new ways of crossing the channel, they do it at the Strait of Dover, which is the narrowest point of the channel at only 34 kilometers (21 miles) between Dover and Calais. The cachet of crossing the channel is way out of proportion to its distance. There is something symbolic about making the trip, particularly if you do it in a new way.

The first channel crossing by air was in the 18th century. French balloonist Jean-Pierre Blanchard and American doctor John Jeffries took off from Dover Castle in a hydrogen balloon on January 7th, 1785. The two had to pitch almost everything they took overboard in order to stay afloat, but landed unharmed at Guînes, France about two and a half hours later.

The first man to swim the channel was Captain Matthew Webb in 1875. It took 21 hours and 45 minutes. Webb trained for two years and made an unsuccessful attempt a couple of weeks before his historic crossing. The course he took was 39 miles, due to strong currents. He became a celebrity and a professional swimmer afterward. Webb died while attempting to swim the Whirlpool Rapids under Niagara Falls in 1883.

The first woman to swim the channel not only broke ground for her sex, but beat the time of the five men who preceded her by at least two hours! American swimmer Gertrude Ederle had already won a gold medal and two bronze medals at the 1924 Olympics. On August 6th, 1926 she swam from Cap Gris-Nez, France to Kingsdown, England in 14 hours and 30 minutes. That speed record stood until 1950.

The first flight over the channel in an airplane came in 1909 when French inventor Louis Blériot piloted a monoplane he designed from Calais to Dover in 37 minutes. He was one of three competitors who answered a challenge from the Daily Mail, which had offered a thousand pounds ($5,000) to the first man to fly the channel.

The first human-powered flight across the channel occurred in 1979 when the Gossamer Albatross piloted by cyclist Bryan Allen flew over the channel in 2 hours and 39 minutes. It was powered by pedals that turned propellers. The Gossamer Albatross was designed by Paul B. MacCready and his team. MacCready won his second Kremer Prize (worth £100,000) with the channel crossing.

Since May 6, 1994 it is possible to cross the channel by train. It was on that day the Channel Tunnel (Le tunnel sous la Manche) or “Chunnel” officially opened. A Eurostar train left Folkestone carrying Queen Elizabeth II, and another left Coquelles carrying French president Francois Mitterand. In addition to passengers, trains carry trucks and other vehicles underneath the Strait of Dover.

In 2003, Australian Felix Baumgartner became the first person to skydive across the channel. He jumped out of a plane over Dover and landed in Cap Blanc-Nez, France 14 minutes later. Baumgartner wore an aerodynamic suit with a 6-foot carbon fin attached to guide his flight.
Swiss pilot Yves Rossy flew the channel last week using a jet pack. He launched from a plane high over Calais and flew to Dover in just ten minutes. Rossy, known as the Rocket Man, uses a jet wing powered by four kerosene-burning engines.

The quest for new ways to cross the English Channel never ends. 39-year-old Stephane Rousson made an attempt this past weekend to cross the channel in a pedal-powered zeppelin. The French amateur pilot was 11 miles from his goal in Wissant, France when the wind direction changed and he had to abort the flight. Rousson was inspired by a scene in the movie E.T.
Oh, I want a pedal-powered zeppelin!
posted by Brother Bill on 9-30-2008 at 7:33 am
“Queen Elizabeth 11″ who are the other 9?
we’re only upto to Queen Elizabeth II
posted by parry on 9-30-2008 at 8:18 am
21 hours of swimming?!? I would probably drown as I fell alseep!!
posted by GTT on 9-30-2008 at 8:46 am
What about the guys on BBC show Top Gear that created their own amphicars (from regular cars/trucks) and took one of them across the channel??? That was pretty innovative!!
posted by Jamie on 9-30-2008 at 9:08 am
True, Jamie. That would be very inventive.
posted by Sara on 9-30-2008 at 9:38 am
I want to hot air balloon or zeppelin my way to work in the mornings and beat rish hour traffic…sometime it feels like it takes 21 hours…
posted by Caitlin on 9-30-2008 at 9:54 am
Parry beat me to it! It should be Queen Elizabeth II, not 11. flossy readers demand accuracy!
posted by Amy D on 9-30-2008 at 10:08 am
OK, y’all, it’s fixed. You know I can’t type, and I can’t see all that well, either!
posted by Miss Cellania on 9-30-2008 at 10:47 am
The point about the channel is that for experimental transport, it is seen as a good demonstatration of your fail in it – because if it fails, you fall in the sea.
posted by Doug on 9-30-2008 at 10:55 am
“Rousson was inspired by a scene in the movie E.T.”
I bet it was the scene where Elliot sets all the frogs free.
posted by ZeroCharisma on 9-30-2008 at 11:09 am
Thank you Jaime. I read this expecting to see mention of Top Gear’s pickup with outboard motors making it.
posted by The Stig on 9-30-2008 at 6:21 pm
Was anyone else forced to read a story about Gertrude Ederle? I think it was in one of those lame “Celebrations” color coded reading books in school. She’s since been stuck in my brain as an example of a super buttkicking woman, maybe its her name that made her stick in my mind.
posted by Ern on 10-1-2008 at 7:59 am
This got me thinking…..
Arrival in Gare du Nord, after a comfortable Eurostar journey looks pretty boring in comparison !
.Now I am a regular passenger on Eurostar, but the other ways look more interesting to cross the channel. Been contemplating the Jet pack for some time, probably I am too heavy for that though. By the way I thought the Jet pack – Rocket man was French ?
posted by Eurostar Tickets on 1-27-2009 at 4:07 am