Aerial Warship Rams Gasholder — Fred Jane's Victorian Air-War Fiction, c.1895 — art by Fred T. Jane — The Angel of the Revolution by George Griffith — 1890s
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Aerial Warship Rams Gasholder — Fred Jane's Victorian Air-War Fiction, c.1895

In an age when heavier-than-air flight was still a dream, Victorians were already imagining aerial warfare with terrible clarity. This dramatic nocturnal scene captures a massive flying warship — hybridizing a sailing vessel with a dirigible hull and side-mounted propeller — ramming through an enemy gasholder at night, sending wreckage cascading earthward. Dark enemy craft loom in the starlit sky while fires erupt below, reflecting the era's obsession with naval supremacy translated violently into the skies.

Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Fred T. Jane
Publisher: Tower Publishing Company
Decade: 1890s
Country: United Kingdom
Coolness: 6/10

Restrained by Victorian illustrative conventions but charged with genuine spectacle — a sailing warship impaling a gasholder mid-air is a wildly inventive image. The monochromatic pen-and-ink treatment keeps the chaos disciplined, earning solid mid-range pulp energy.

Text in image:

"Her ram had passed completely through the gasholder." To face p. 334.

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

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