
Jules Verne's Columbiad Space Bullet Launch — From the Earth to the Moon, 1865
Astonishingly prescient for 1865, this engraving depicts the conical aluminum projectile-spacecraft from Jules Verne's 'From the Earth to the Moon' adorned with American flags and surrounded by cheering crowds — a scene eerily anticipating NASA rocket launches by nearly a century. Industrial cranes loom alongside Victorian-dressed observers in top hats, witnessing what they believe is mankind's first lunar voyage. The smoke-filled sky and patriotic bunting amplify the audacious spectacle of Verne's Gun Club firing men moonward from Florida.
Technically a literary classic rather than pulp, but launching men to the Moon via oversized cannon while waving flags at it is precisely the kind of unearned confidence that built empires. Verne politely invents NASA one hundred years early.





