Armageddon 2419 A.D.

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1960s edition of the combined edition of Amageddon 2419 A.D. and The Airlords of Han.
1960s edition of the combined edition of Amageddon 2419 A.D. and The Airlords of Han.

Armageddon 2419 A.D. is Philip Francis Nowlan's novella which first appeared in the August 1928 issue of the pulp magazine Amazing Stories. Later, in the 1960s, the novella and its sequel, The Airlords of Han, were combined by editor Donald A. Wollheim into one paperback novel, titled Armageddon 2419 A.D. The characters and setting eventually evolved into Buck Rogers.

Nowlan’s novella tells about America in the 25th century, conquered by Hans in 2109 A.D. and only now beginning to rebel. The Hans are invaders from Asia with highly advanced technology. They have great aircraft armed with disintegrator rays that turn whatever they hit into nothing. From time to time, they raid American land 'to keep the “wild” Americans on the run within the shelter of their forests, and prevent their becoming a menace to the Han civilization’.

Meanwhile, living in cooperating gangs and hiding in the forests from the Hans, Americans secretly rebuild their civilization and develop new technologies: ultron and intertron. Inertron is a substance with reverse weight, so that a person with an amount of inertron to cancel most of their weight (wearing a “jumper” – ‘rocket motors encased in inertron blocks and strapped to the back’) can travel rapidly across country in long leaps. Ultron, in turn, is an ‘absolutely invisible and non-reflective solid of great molecular density and moderate elasticity, which has the property of being 100 percent conductive to those pulsations known as light, electricity and heat’. They use those technologies, as well as explosive rockets and radio the enemy can’t detect, in their struggles with the Hans.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The main character and the narrator in Armageddon 2419 A.D. is Anthony Rogers, who later appears in comic script, radio show, and movies that follow the novella. Rogers tells about those of the events of the “Second War of Independence” that led up to the first victory of Americans over Hans and in which he played an important role.

He was a veteran of the Great War (World War I) now working as an engineer for the American Radioactive Gas Corporation who, at the age of 29, fell into ‘a state of suspended animation, free from the ravages of catabolic processes, and without any apparent effect on physical or mental faculties’. The incident took place in 1927 in an abandoned coal mine near the Pennsylvania Wyoming Valley, in which he got trapped during a cave-in. As a result of exposure to radioactive gas, Rogers remained in “sleep” for 492 years.

He awakes in 2419 and, thinking that he has been asleep for just several hours, wanders for a few days in unfamiliar forests of what was Pennsylvania almost five centuries before. He finally notices a wounded boy-like-figure, clad in strange clothes and moving in giant leaps, who appears to be under attack by others. He defends the person, killing one of the attackers and scaring off the rest. It turns out that he is helping a girl, Wilma Deering, who, when on an “air patrol”, was attacked by an enemy gang, the Bad Bloods, which was apparently presumed to have intermingled with the Hans.

Wilma takes Rogers to the camps, where he is to meet the gang bosses. He is invited to stay with their gang or leave and visit other gangs. They hope that Rogers’ experience and knowledge he gained fighting in the First World War may be useful in their struggles with the Hans.

Tony stays with the gang for several days, learns about the community life of Americans in the 25th century and makes friends with the people, especially with Wilma, with whom he spends a lot of time. When on a trip, he also experiences a Han air raid, during which he manages to destroy one of the enemy ships. Rogers and his friends hurry to the bosses to report the incident and explain the method he has used when shooting the aircraft. As the raid has caused much destruction, there is a suspicion that the Hans might have known the location of the gang’s plants from some of the Americans. What awaits them now is the fight with the Hans who will, probably, wish to take revenge and the search for the traitors.

According to the bosses’ suggestion, Wilma and Rogers investigate the wreck, when, suddenly, the Hans arrive to take a look of their destroyed ship as well. Thanks to Tony’s quick and wise instructions, not only he and Wilma manage to escape but also the Americans shoot down some more of the Han’s ships. The day after, Wilma and Anthony get married and soon Tony becomes a fully-fledged member of the gang.

Meantime, knowing Rogers’ technique, the other gangs start the hunt for Han ships. The Hans better secure their ships and the Americans need to take up some further steps to have any chances in the fight and to find the traitors quickly.

Anthony develops a plan to get the records of the traitorous transaction, which are kept somewhere in the Han city of Nu-Yok. With the help of other gangs, he creates a team that will go with him. They learn that the traitors are the Sinsings, the gang located not far from Nu-Yok.

The Americans appreciate Rogers’ courage and brave deeds and, grateful to him, make him the new boss. He instantly reorganizes the governing structures of the gang by creating new offices and makes plans for the battle with the Sinsings, again using the knowledge he gained in the First World War. The raid on Sinsings turns out to be a great success and gives the Americans the confidence in their ability to overcome the Hans.

[edit] Outgrowths

The story, with its repeated counterposing of "The White Race" and "The Yellow Race" who fight for control of America, is seen as reflecting the mindset of "Yellow Peril", prevalent among many Americans at the time of writing.

[edit] Allusions/references from other works

After Armageddon 2419 A.D. was published, John F. Dille, the head of the National Newspaper Service, which syndicated comics and features, read Nowlan’s novella and convinced a dubious Nowlan to turn it into a daily comic strip. Dille renamed the character Buck Rogers, possibly after a cowboy hero of the same name, and hired artist Richard Calkins to make the illustration. It was the first real science fiction comic strip, and one of the first strips to tell a continuous adventure story, while also using word balloons, rather than a text box.

Buck Rogers was a huge success, spawning many imitators such as Flash Gordon.

Nowlan’s novella and script introduced the public to science fiction and prepared them for a future that involved space exploration and space/arms race, that later, indeed, was going on between the USA and the Soviet Union. They also introduced many science fictions ideas, like, for instance, that of “personal flight” with the use of devices attached to one’s body.

However, the Buck Rogers sub-genre (not so much the original Nowlan novellas as the many seqels and comic strips) helped create the image of Science Fiction as "low-level form of writing" which is :not real literature" - an image which later SF writers had to struggle long and hard to eradicate.

[edit] See also