Jules Verne's Moon Projectile Arrives at Stone's Hill — 1865 French Edition — art by Édouard Riou — De la Terre à la Lune (From the Earth to the Moon) — 1860s
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Jules Verne's Moon Projectile Arrives at Stone's Hill — 1865 French Edition

An 1865 French reader opening 'De la Terre à la Lune' would have felt genuine wonder and vertigo at this scene — here was humanity's audacious dream made tangible: a massive conical aluminum projectile, draped with American flags and mounted on a railway flatcar, surrounded by top-hatted dignitaries and cheering workers at Stone's Hill, Florida. The crane and industrial machinery ground the fantastical in credible Victorian engineering, making the moon shot feel not just possible but imminent.

Source: Wikimedia Commons
Decade: 1860s
Country: France
Coolness: 4/10

Restrained and technically precise in the Victorian engraving tradition, this illustration favors documentary credibility over sensationalism. It belongs in a museum case beside Verne first editions, not on a dorm room wall — though the sheer audacity of the concept it depicts earns it timeless appeal.

Text in image:

L'arrivée du projectile à Stone's-Hill (p. 139).

Public domain. This vintage illustration is free of known copyright restrictions — free to download, share, and reuse for any purpose.

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