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Jules Verne's Gun Club Members Debate Moon Mission, 1865 Engraving
The Gun Club has erupted in thunderous debate — a speaker gestures triumphantly toward a projected lunar map as the crowd surges with frenzied enthusiasm. A great circular diagram bearing the number 1135 dominates the wall, depicting the Moon's cratered surface. Men climb chairs, wave arms, and shout in collective scientific fervor, while a dog wanders unperturbed at the feet of seated members. This is the moment the impossible becomes inevitable: a cannon-launched voyage to the Moon.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Henri de Montaut
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1860s
Country: France
Coolness: 4/10
Not exactly a fever-dream cover, but the manic energy of these Victorian scientists losing their minds over a Moon cannon is genuinely infectious! It's the restrained grandfather of all pulp space-travel spectacle.
Tags:
space-travelexplorationmad-sciencecrowd scenelunar mapGun Club membersdebateMoon diagramVictorian gentlemendogchairsJules VerneFrom the Earth to the MoonGun ClubVictorian science fictionlunar voyage19th century engravingHetzelMoon mapcrowd sceneFrench science fictionclassic sci-fi illustrationspace travel
Text in image:
“1135”





