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Jules Verne 'From the Earth to the Moon' — Columbiad Capsule Launch Scene, c.1865
Surprisingly human in scale, this hand-colored engraving depicts Victorian adventurers casually boarding a bullet-shaped lunar projectile via wooden ladder — as though catching an omnibus rather than departing for the Moon. Workers and onlookers in period dress observe the enormous ribbed aluminum capsule, its hatch open at the apex. The nonchalant staging of humanity's first imagined spaceflight is both charming and absurd, a perfect encapsulation of Jules Verne's matter-of-fact approach to radical technological speculation.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Henri de Montaut
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1860s
Country: France
Coolness: 4/10
A remarkably calm depiction of mankind's first lunar departure — no explosions, no fanfare, just a man at the top of a ladder wearing a waistcoat. Victorian sangfroid at its most spacefaring.
Tags:
space-travelretro-futurismexplorationrocketslunar projectilespace capsuleladderVictorian menboarding sceneribbed metal shellhatch openingonlookersJules VerneFrom the Earth to the MoonVictorian sci-filunar cannonColumbiadspace capsuleHetzel19th centuryFrench illustrationhand-colored engravingmoon voyageretro space travel





