The Final Moment Of A Worthless Mule
Posted by Ross Rosenberg
On June 6, 1881, in Willet’s Point, NY it came to the attention of General Henry L. Abbot — head of the Engineer School of Application — that a “worthless mule” was to be destroyed and it struck him that this would be an excellent opportunity to demonstrate to a military class the sensitivity of photo-geletine plates. To this end the unfortunate beast was positioned in front of the camera with a a bag containing 6 ounces of dynamite strapped to its forehead. Both the fuse and the camera shutter were connected to the same circuit and, at the press of a button, the mule’s head was separated from its body in a spectacular and gruesome fashion. The resulting photo was published in the September 24th edition of Scientific American that same year, complete with expository “Before” and “After” engravings. Recently, what may have been the original copy of this photograph was found and sold at auction for $2750.00
Rare Important Instantaneous Photograph [Stereoviews] : Thanks, John Brownlee!
Categories: Animals, Journalism, Photographs, Photography, Splosion, Violence, Viscera
Posted at 9:43 am on September 30, 2009
6 Comments -









How sad is it when Brownlee is thanked in the link for the post, rather than just making the post on his own blog?
Comment by chesh — September 30, 2009 @ 12:29 pm
It truly is sad chesh, but I think we have found the definitive way to kill all useless animals. Quickly, to the lemming farm!
Comment by corben — September 30, 2009 @ 12:40 pm
I’m so often horrified by the things I see here. Kudos, weirdos. Kudos.
Comment by Raygun Robyn — September 30, 2009 @ 7:47 pm
[...] Photography – The Final Moment Of A Worthless Mule (ECTOPLASMOSIS!) [...]
Pingback by The Final Moment Of A Worthless Mule (Links) — ty.rannosaur.us — October 1, 2009 @ 5:32 pm
SCIENCE!
Comment by Mazo — October 3, 2009 @ 10:38 am
I’m impressed. I’m glad this was before PETA.
Comment by wtfman — October 21, 2009 @ 6:23 pm