Jules Verne's Columbiad Shell Races to the Moon – 1870s Engraving
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Jules Verne's Columbiad Shell Races to the Moon – 1870s Engraving

A bullet-shaped projectile — the Columbiad shell carrying three men and two dogs — blazes through the star-scattered void, its conical hull ringed with engraved lines suggesting tremendous speed as billowing propellant clouds trail behind it. Above, the cratered face of the Moon looms enormous and tantalizingly close. The craft has just escaped Earth's gravity; destination achieved or catastrophe imminent? This iconic image captures Jules Verne's audacious vision of cannon-launched spaceflight decades before rocketry was conceivable.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Émile-Antoine Bayard
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 4/10

Found this beauty tucked inside a crumbling Hetzel edition — it's the granddaddy of all rocket illustrations, drawn before rockets even existed! Restrained by later pulp standards but absolutely electrifying as proto-science-fiction art.

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