BRIEF FIREWORKS
HISTORY
QUICK
HISTORY OF FIREWORKS:
9th century Discovery by the Chinese
13th century Marco Polo brings gunpowder back home to Europe
15th century Gunpowder used in military applications
16th century Fireworks used increasingly for entertainment purposes
18th century Fireworks displays begin to incorporate music
1960 The French at Cannes synchronize a sound track to a fireworks
spectacle
1990 Vancouver's first international fireworks competition
Discovery in the East
Though many nations claim the invention, most historians agree that
the Chinese invented fireworks in the 9th century when they
discovered how to make gunpowder. The story is that a Chinese cook
toiling in a field kitchen happened to mix three ingredients
commonly found in the kitchen - potassium nitrate or saltpeter (a
salt substitute), sulfur (a flammable solid) and charcoal (from
charred wood).
The cook noticed that, when ignited, the pile burned with a
combustible force. The cook apparently also discovered that if these
same ingredients were enclosed and then ignited, the combination
exploded rather than burned. This explosion produced a loud sound
perfect for frightening off spirits, celebrating weddings, and
marking battle victories, eclipses of the moon, and the beginning of
the New Year.
Another
version of the history of fireworks credits Taoist monks with their
discovery in the Far East approximately 1000 years ago. Once again,
coincidence played a major role. What scientists of the day were
looking for was a potion that promised immortality and eternal life.
In their experiments, Taoist monks discovered that a mixture of
potassium nitrate, sulfur and finely ground charcoal exploded
violently while giving off a great deal of light, noise and smoke.
So, they poured the explosive powder into bamboo tubes, blocked the
two ends and attached an igniter cord to the charge.
Development in the West
Italy's Marco Polo, in his journeys to the Far East, picked up a
number of novelties and brought them home - among them the black
powder that evolved into a mainstay of Italian entertainment and
celebration: fireworks.
It was in Europe that gunpowder's military potential was discovered
and its usage truly evolved - first with rocketry, and then with
guns.
Fireworks were used to celebrate military victories as early as 1532
under Charles V, the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire. Soon fireworks
were used increasingly for entertainment purposes, as royal families
in Europe competed for the affection of their subjects by staging
ever more sophisticated fireworks at coronations, baptisms and
marriages.
To Tsar Peter the Great, we owe the custom of burning fireworks to
herald the New Year. King Louis XIV was notorious for his lavish
fireworks in the pleasure gardens of Versailles.
Italy and Germany emerged as the two leaders in fireworks displays
in the 16th to 18th centuries.
Musical fireworks
By the 18th century, music was commonly incorporated into fireworks
displays. One famous performance took place in London, England to
celebrate the signing of the peace treaty ending the War of the
Austrian Succession. English composer George Friedrich Handel
created a symphony, Music for the Royal Fireworks, specifically for
this event.
Modern musical fireworks were initiated by the French at Cannes in
1960. They were the first to synchronize a sound track to a
fireworks spectacle with chrysanthemum explosions and roman candles.
For unknown reasons, this style disappeared for 25 years. Then, in
1985, musical fireworks reappeared in spectacular style with the
introduction of an international fireworks competition in Montreal,
Quebec.
MORE
ON HISTORY OF FIREWORKS
WHO
INVENTED FIREWORKS?

Fireworks are thought to have been discovered hundreds of years ago
-- long before America even existed. Although historians aren't sure
which country discovered them first, most believe this discovery was
made in China some 2,000 years ago. Some sources say that the
discovery of fireworks occurred about 2,000 years ago, and other
sources place the discovery sometime during the 9th century during
the Song dynasty (960-1279), although this could be confusion
between the discovery of gunpowder by the cook and the invention of
the firecracker. Other sources suggest that fireworks may have
originated in India, but in the October 18, 2003, online edition of
The Hindu, an Indian national newspaper, the Chinese are credited
with the discovery of gunpowder.
IN A FLASH
The
most prevalent legend has it that black powder, the essential
ingredient in fireworks, was discovered or invented by accident by a
Chinese cook in the 10th century A.D. working in a field kitchen. A
cook was preparing potassium nitrate (a pickling agent and
preservative) over a charcoal fire laced with sulfur. Somehow the
three chemicals (potassium nitrate or saltpeter, charcoal and sulfur
were all commonly found in the kitchen in those days) combined,
causing an explosion. The mixture burned and when compressed in an
enclosure (a bamboo tube), the mixture exploded. The meal was
destroyed, but the powder, later known as gunpowder, was born.
The first fireworks recorded were hollowed out bamboo stalks stuffed
with black powder. The Chinese called them "arrows of flying
fire," and shot them into the air during religious occasions
and holidays to ward off imaginary dragons. According to other
Chinese writings, fireworks similar to those we use today were
probably used in China before the year A.D. 1175.
A Chinese monk named Li Tian, who lived near the city of Liu Yang in
Hunan Province, is credited with the invention of firecrackers about
1,000 years ago. The Chinese people celebrate the invention of the
firecracker every April 18 by offering sacrifices to Li Tian. During
the Song Dynasty, the local people established a temple to worship
Li Tian.
The firecrackers, both then and now, are thought to have the power
to fend off evil spirits and ghosts that are frightened by the loud
bangs of the firecrackers. Firecrackers are used for such purposes
today at most events such as births, deaths and birthdays. Chinese
New Year is a particularly popular event that is celebrated with
firecrackers to usher in the new year free of the evil spirits.
To this day the Liu Yang region of Hunan Province remains the main
production area in the world for fireworks. It is important to
remember the geographic origin of fireworks, because often
detractors of the fireworks industry say that fireworks are produced
in China to take advantage of cheap labor. But the reality is that
the fireworks industry existed in China long before the advent of
the modern era and long before the disparity in east-west wage
rates, and hopefully the fireworks industry will exist long after
the existence of communism has an effect over the Chinese economy.
FIREWORKS
BEGIN TO SPREAD
Many
people believe that Marco Polo brought the Chinese gunpowder back to
Europe when he returned from his visits to China and India in the
late 1200s. Although some accounts credit the Crusaders with
bringing the black powder to Europe as they returned from their
journeys. Others think that gunpowder was invented in Europe by
people unaware of the Chinese discoveries.
Once in Europe, the black powder was used for military purposes,
first in rockets, then in canons and guns. Italians were the first
Europeans who used the black powder to manufacture fireworks.
Germany was the other European country to emerge as a fireworks
leader along with Italy in the 18th century. It is interesting to
note that many of the leading American display companies are
operated by families of Italian descent such as the Grucci family,
Rozzi family, and Zambelli family.
Nevertheless, by the early 1500s, the fireworks industry in Europe
was exploding. The first modern public display of fireworks produced
in England was in 1553. The English were very fascinated with
fireworks. In fact, fireworks became very popular in Great Britain
during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Its purpose was to greet the
new queen when she arrived in London. William Shakespeare mentions
fireworks in his works, and fireworks were so much enjoyed by the
Queen herself that she created the position of "Fire Master of
England." King James II was so pleased with the fireworks
display that celebrated his coronation that he knighted his Fire
Master.
FIREWORKS
ARRIVE TO AMERICA
According to
the fireworks industry's own estimates, as many people have been
killed by 4th of July fireworks as were killed in the Revolutionary
War. Nearly all of the victims were killed setting off their own
fireworks during times when fireworks were almost completely
unregulated. The carnage became so widespread that the 4th of July
came to be known as the "Bloody Fourth" because of the
large number of fireworks deaths.
Then
in the 1930s, pressured by the Ladies' Home Journal, which printed
photos of dozens of maimed victims), the government outlawed just
about every kind of firework imaginable...to the point where many
states now ban them entirely. Since then, the number of
firework-related injuries plummeted. Today, the Consumer Safety
Commission (CSC) ranks them as only the 132nd most dangerous
consumer item, behind such things as beds, grocery carts, key rings
and plumbing fixtures.
CHINESE
FIREWORKS INDUSTRY
In the modern era, the American fireworks industry really began to
influence Chinese manufacturers following President Nixon's
normalization of relations with the Chinese Communist government in
the early 1970s. Prior to that time, business was being done between
U.S. and Chinese companies through Hong Kong brokers with little or
no direct contact with mainland manufacturers.
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the distribution channels in China
were essentially state owned factories producing fireworks that were
then exported through government owned provincial export
corporations. Products produced in Hunan went through the Hunan
Export Corporation, and products produced in Jiangxi went through
the Jiangxi Export Corporation, and so on. During this period,
factories were not required to make a profit, but rather their goal
was to keep people working in a region of China where there was no
real industry other than agriculture. The Chinese government
subsidized these factories to keep production going.
The Provincial Export Corporation in turn sold to Hong Kong brokers
who were the link between Mainland China and the foreign business
entities. The Hong Kong brokers procured orders, arranged logistics,
and helped finance shipments to the U.S. distributors. It was also
during this time period that the first formally educated leader of
China, Chairman Deng Xiaoping, saw what his counterparts in the
former Soviet Bloc did not see, and that is that Communism simply
did not work economically. Chairman Deng began a policy of economic
reform that basically set China on the road toward capitalism.
During the 1980s, China opened up dramatically to travel within its
borders for visiting U.S. importers. This enabled the first American
fireworks buyers to travel to the production regions and establish
relations with Hong Kong exporters and the provincial export
corporations.
SAFETY REGULATIONS IN THE U.S.
In
the late 1980s, consumer fireworks became the focus of intense
scrutiny by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. Up to this
point, most of the fireworks products had old generic export
corporation labels that had incorrect warning labels based on item
size and performance. To correct the situation, representatives from
the CPSC, American Pyrotechnics Association, and Hong Brokers
Association spent 10 days in Southern China meeting with
representatives from each export corporation and factory managers,
on a province by province basis.
The meetings involved shooting each item produced in China and
determining what the appropriate and correct warning descriptions
and print size should be from the point of view of providing safe
warning labels for the American consumers. The Americans involved
took on the infamous moniker of "The Shekou Six" by most
of the shell shocked Chinese industry people, and from that meeting
and a few that followed was born the American Fireworks Standards
Laboratory (AFSL) which monitors firework production within China to
this day.
In the 1990s, economic reform continued under Chairman Jiang Zemin
as Chinese factories were weaned off government funding and forced
to turn a profit for the first time. It was during this period that
many Provincial Export Corporation personnel left the government
owned companies and were permitted to start their own. Initially
these new private companies worked through the established Hong Kong
brokers to reach the U.S. market, but within a few years they were
selling directly to U.S. importers.
In order to survive, Hong Kong brokers invested money into Chinese
factories and joint-ventured with Chinese entrepreneurs to start
their own exclusive product lines and for their remaining larger
customers. With the loss of key personnel, the government provincial
export corporations never quite adapted to economic reform, and
today most are gone or left selling to domestic Chinese markets.
The 1990s saw the rapid growth of private labels in order for U.S.
companies to differentiate their product lines. In the 2000s, China
is a basic "free for all," with small mainland
export-broker companies forming and folding each month.
Additionally, separate factories are attempting to bypass historical
channels and selling directly to U.S. importers. Each week American
companies receive a half dozen e-mails or fax communications asking
for the American companies to place orders directly with some small
new and obscure factories that would like to begin exporting to the
United States.
(Sources:
Microsoft Encarta, Phantom Fireworks, Fireworks! Pyrotechnics on
Display, Fireworks Tonight!)
HOW DID
THEY DO THAT?
Ever
wondered how pyrotechnicians create different shapes? They're made
by filling the inside of a cardboard container with black powder and
gluing individual starlets to the outside. When the black
powder charge explodes, the starlets explode in the same shape as
the cookie-cutter. Almost any shape imaginable can be produced with
this technique.
DID YOU
KNOW...?
- Fireworks,
are like almost everything else, have records for the biggest,
longest, and the most. Here are some of the "official"
records from the Guiness World Book of Records, and some of the
"unofficial" records that have yet to be recognized by
Guiness.
- The largest
fireworks accident ever occurred at a wedding at a wedding in
Paris France when at least 800 people were trampled to death or
drowned after a fireworks display went wrong.
- White
fireworks were impossible to produce until the mid-1800s, when
scientists developed ways to add aluminum, magnesium and
titanium to black powder.
Guiness World
Book of Records
The largest firework
ever produced was Universe I Part II, exploded for the Lake Toya
Festival, Hokkaido, Japan on 15 Jul 1988. The 1,543 pound shell was
54.7 inches in diameter and burst to a diameter of 3,937 feet.
(Note: This was not an aerial shell but a shell that was placed on a
floating platform and ignited).
A
self-propelled horizontal firework wheel measuring 47 feet 4 inches
diameter, built by Florida Pyrotechnic Arts
Guild (FPAG), was displayed at the Pyrotechnics Guild International
(PGI) Convention
in Idaho Falls, Idaho USA
on 14 Aug 1992. It functioned for 3 minutes 45 seconds. (Note: This
wheel had smaller wheels, lance set pieces, mines, gerbs and Roman
candles on it.)
The
longest firecracker display was produced by the Johor Tourism
Department, the United Malaysian Youth Movement and Mr. Yap Seng
Hock, and took place on 20 Feb 1988 at Pelangi Garden, Johor Bahru,
Johor, Malaysia. The total length of the display was 18,777 feet and
consisted of 3,338,777 firecrackers and 1,468 pound of gunpowder. It
burned for 9 hours 27 minutes.
Terry
McDonald of Pyromac Ltd, in Jersey, United Kingdom successfully
established a new world record on Friday 15th August at a little
after 10pm, when 39,210 rockets were fired from the beach at St
Aubins Bay, St Helier, Jersey, United Kingdom.
40,000
rockets were supported in trays holding just over 1000 each
consisting of two layers of chicken wire about 1ft apart (to support
the sticks and hold them straight). The top layer was then laced
with raw-match, onto which the visco fuses of the Falcon rockets
were placed. The completed trays were then connected with quickmatch,
and ignited electrically. The whole rig was put in position in
the space of just one hour as the tide went out. This was performed
with teams of tractors and trailers carrying the trays of rockets.
Unofficial
World Records
The
largest fireworks display ever fired in the world was either the
celebration in Moscow, Russia after the Great Patriotic War (World
War II). The show was made up primarily of anti-aircraft cannons
that fired barrages of pyrotechnic illumination devices into the
sky.
The
longest Niagara Falls effect was performed by Suwako Kojyomatsuri on
August 15 1997 at the Suwa-city,
Nagano, Japan. It was 3000 meters long). The second longest was done
by Kamogawa Natsu-matsuri on August 14 1997 at Kamo-city, Nigata,
Japan. It was 2000 meters long.
Unofficial US
Records
The
largest aerial shells ever built in the United States were Fat Man I
and Fat Man II built by Fireworks by Grucci (New York Pyrotechnics,
Inc.), now of Brookhaven, New
York, USA. They were each 40.50 inches in diameter, 36" tall
and weighed 720 pounds of which 100 pounds was the burst charge. A
test shot of a log replica was fired in Cambridge, New York, USA in
February 1976 using 4 pounds of 2F black powder from a 2 ton
cold-rolled steel mortar that was 10 feet long and had walls 0.75
inch thick. It was estimated the log reached 995 feet in height.
Fat Man I was
fired in February 1976 in Cambridge, New York, USA but an additional
2 pounds of lift powder was added. It failed to fly out of the gun.
For some reason the fuse to the lift charge failed to ignite,
however the time fuse to the shell did ignite and the shell
functioned in the mortar, destroying it. The resulting crater was
about 10 feet deep and a large portion of the mortar landed about
1/4 mile away.
Fat Man II was
fired in October 22, 1977 in Titusville, Florida, USA. It managed to
clear the mortar and rise less than a hundred feet and then burst in
a huge fireball. The burst charge was apparently too much.
The
largest aerial shell to be successfully fired was a 36" aerial
shell of shells built by Devon Dickenson of Sacramento, California,
USA.
The
largest Superstring of firecrackers ever to be successfully fired.
Unofficial
Japanese Records
The
largest aerial shell s
uccessfully
fired in Japan was a tama Boquest of Chrysanthemums aerial
ball shell. It was just under 40 inches in diameter and weighed 564
pounds. It was fired from a 3 ton mortar that was 13 feet long on
October 16, 1980 near Futtsu, Japan and was estimated to have a
break of 2,000 feet in diameter.