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A renewed belief in a flat Earth was popularized in the 19th century by the Englishman Samuel Birley Rowbotham[?], who, after his 1849 publication of a 16-page-pamphlet, Zetetic Astronomy: A Description of Several Experiments which Prove that the Surface of the Sea Is a Perfect Plane and that the Earth Is Not a Globe!, spent the next 35 years publishing and lecturing about his beliefs. He supported his statements both with observational claims and scriptural references. For example, Rowbotham believed that observations of lighthouses by mariners at considerable distances defied the theory of the Earth's rotundity. However, it was shown by his contemporaries that he selectively chose only data from lighthouses that supported his view (about 1.5% of the sample), and ignored that which did not (lighthouses which were no longer visible); the remaining deviation could be explained with atmospheric refraction[?]. Regardless, Rowbotham's devotion paid off as the Universal Zetetic Society[?] was founded with branches in Great Britain and the United States (New York, 1873).
In 1956, Samuel Shenton[?], renamed the American UZS to International Flat Earth Society. With the advent of the space program, the Society found itself confronted with pictures of Earth made by orbiting satellites and, eventually, by astronauts who had landed on the moon. When confronted with first NASA photographs of Earth from deep space, Shenton reportedly remarked: "It's easy to see how a photograph like that could fool the untrained eye." The Society took the position that the Apollo moon landings were a hoax, staged by Hollywood and based on a script by Arthur C. Clarke.
Charles K. Johnson: The Last Flat-Earther?
In 1971, Shenton passed away and Charles K. Johnson[?] became the new president of the Flat Earth Society. Under his leadership, over the next three decades, the group grew in size from a few members to around 3,000. Johnson distributed newsletters, flyers, maps etc. to anyone who asked for them, and managed all membership applications together with his wife, Marjory, who was also a flat-earther. Membership inquiries came from many religious countries such as Saudi Arabia, Iran and India.
The last world model propagated by the Flat Earth Society holds that we live on a disc, with the North Pole at its center and a 150-feet-high wall of ice at the outer edge. In this model, the sun and moon are each a mere 32 miles in diameter.
A newsletter from the Society has been digitized. While incoherent, it gives some insight into Johnson's mindset (all errors original):
On March 19, 2001, Charles Johnson passed away, leaving the fate of the Flat Earth Society uncertain.
Flat Earth Society is also a song by the punk rock band Bad Religion from their 1990 album Against the Grain. Excerpt from the lyrics:
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