Victorian Bat-Wing Flying Apparatus — Human Flight Experiment Diagrams, c.1860s
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Victorian Bat-Wing Flying Apparatus — Human Flight Experiment Diagrams, c.1860s

A Victorian reader would have felt the electrifying promise of human flight made tangible — here, at last, was science conquering the sky. Two diagrams labeled A and B depict a figure harnessing enormous membranous bat-like wings, their webbed grid-panels stretched wide enough to carry a man aloft. Figure A shows the aviator on a coastal bluff preparing for launch; Figure B captures the miraculous moment of actual flight over open water. The cross-hatched engraving style gives the impossible contraption an air of serious scientific authority.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1860s
Country: France
Coolness: 4/10

Restrained and technical in presentation, this belongs in a museum of Victorian scientific illustration rather than a pulp rack. Its quiet audacity — a man casually wearing giant bat wings as if they were a sensible invention — earns it a modest but genuine sense of wonder.

Text in image:

A B

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