docs.lib.noaa.gov...
Found
THIS document which is pretty interesting on their take on Mars over 100
years ago. Some clips:

Already, in the study of the planet Mars, certain interesting and seemingly anomalous atmospheric conditions have been observed. The insolation of
this planet, per unit of area, is less than half that of the earth. This circumstance would seem to imply a rigorous climate, yet it is almost certain
that the average temperature at the Martian surface is somewhat higher than that of our own globe; for otherwise we can hardly account for the small
extent of the polar snowcaps which are so important a feature of the planet’s topography. . . .
Even could we actually perform the journey to Mars, it is not likely that we would be able to communicate with its inhabitants, and if we found
existing there a great number of life forms we would probably have difficulty in deciding to which of them, if any, the designation people should be
applied.
[edit on 25-10-2007 by anhinga]