A Representation of the Meteor Seen at Paddington about 12 Minutes before 11 o'clock, on the Evening of the 11th of Feb. 1850

This is a mezzotint representation of a bright, exploding meteor seen over London in 1850. The image is dominated by the dark sky and streaking meteor, with rooftops and clouds just visible. The explosion and sparks of the meteor suggest that it was a bolide. It was drawn by Matthew Cotes Wyatt, who also produced the engraving so that "a faithfully graphic exhibition of its appearance might be more generally diffused". Wyatt was a painter and sculptor, and member of the Wyatt family of architects and sculptors.

This meteor was evidently particularly spectacular and was widely reported, including in the Illustrated London News. The Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society record that George Airy, Astronomer Royal, had observed this meteor, and James Glaisher, Second Assistant, published observations of it in the Philosophical Magazine. An inventory of the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, from 1893 records that a copy of this print was displayed on the staircase to the Octagon Room in Flamsteed House.

Object Details

ID: PAJ3495
Collection: Fine art
Type: Print
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Lloyd Brothers & Co.; Leggatt, Hayward & Leggatt Wyatt, Matthew Cotes
Date made: 1850
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, Caird Collection
Measurements: 325 x 454 mm
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