Almost a hundred years before Orson Welles soiled the knickers of radio listeners across the country with
his broadcast of A War of the Worlds, a New York newspaper had many of its readers
convinced that the world’s most famous astronomer
had observed a civilization on the Moon through a powerful telescope.
On August 25, 1835 the New
York Sun published the first of six
articles which claimed that noted British
astronomer Sir John Herschel made the observations through a powerful new telescope “of a new
design.” The telescope was so powerful
that the scientist could allegedly observe and identify a number of species
of animals including
types of bison, goats, and giant tailless beavers that walked
erect on their hind legs.
Most miraculous of all were the winged humanoids, dubbed Vespertilio-homo who built civilizations with great temples on the shores of vast oceans.
All of
this was made more credible by the
claim that it was reprinted from The
Edinburgh Courant who in turn referenced a report in The Edinburgh Journal of Science
and accounts by Herschel’s traveling
companion and amanuensis, Dr. Andrew Grant. Herschel was real enough, and his
observations and naming of the moons of Saturn and Uranus had
made him famous. Dr. Grant, however, was
entirely fictional.
According
to the stories, observations came to an end when the telescope was left open
and pointing in the direction of the Sun causing the lenses of the
telescope to act as “burning lenses” igniting a fire which burned
down the observatory.
The Sun, a broadsheet aspiring to ascend to the first
ranks of newspapers in New York’s highly competitive circulation wars,
was just two years old when the Moon stories first ran. They were intended to build circulation,
and they certainly did. Some claim that
the paper tripled its sales and that its numbers stayed strong enough
after to push it to the front ranks.
The
stories ran before science fiction had established itself as a popular
literary genre. All though there had
been fantastical tales of trips to
the Moon by the real Cyrano de
Bergerac and attributed to the Baron Von Munchausen, few Americans would have ever heard of
them. The inventions of Jules Verne,
including his novel From the Earth to
the Moon were decades in the future.
Edgar Allan Poe had published his story Hans
Phaall—A Tale about a man who ascended to the Moon in a hot air balloon a few months earlier in
the Southern
Messenger, but it is unlikely to have made much of stir in the northern city. A rival paper did reprint it in September in response to the success of the Sun series.
Readers had no cultural understanding of these fantastic stories about space. They were regularly exposed to claims of scientific discoveries and the inventions that were a staple of the
period. Many were quite legitimate as major advances in many fields were being made regularly. Others were patently false. The latter
category included Franz von Paula
Gruithuisen, Professor of Astronomy
at Munich University who had claimed he had seen evidence of civilization
on the Moon and The Rev. Thomas Dick
a/k/a The Christian Philosopher who
claimed that the whole Solar System
was populated by humanoid beings including over 400 million supposedly
residing on the Moon. Even men as
sophisticated as Ralph Waldo Emerson
fell under the spell of Dick’s claims.
It was, after all the dawn of the
era of great hoaxes. Phineas T. Barnum was just
getting his career off the ground exhibiting
an elderly Black woman as George
Washington’s alleged nurse.
Several weeks after the publication
of the series, denials by Herschel were printed in other newspapers
exposing the hoax. But The Sun never retracted the story
or issued an apology for running it.
The author
of the series has never been positively identified, however most
scholars of the period are fairly certain it was Cambridge educated Sun reporter Richard A. Locke. He never admitted to being responsible. Some other names have been floated as possible
accomplices, or perhaps sources for Locke, but these
have also turned out to be dead ends.
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