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UFOs in the daily Press:

THE ORIGINAL 1897 PRESS ARTICLE ABOUT THE ALLEGED AURORA CRASH:

The following article has been published by the Dallas Morning News April 17, 1897.

It is this article that started what is very likely a mere myth, the crash of a flying saucer and its occupant on a windmill of the small town of Aurora, Texas, 1897.

More information on this case is here.

Aurora, Wise County, Texas, April 17, 1897

About 6 o'clock this morning the early risers of Aurora were astonished at the sudden appearance of the airship which has been sailing throughout the country. It sailed directly over the public square, and when it reached the north part of town collided with the tower of Judge Proctor's windmill and went to pieces with a terrific explosion, scattering debris over several acres of ground, wrecking the windmill and water tank and destroying the judge's flower garden. The pilot of the ship is supposed to have been the only one aboard, and while his remains are badly disfigured, enough of the original has been picked up to show that he was not an inhabitant of this world.

T.J. Weems, the U.S. Signal Service Officer at this place and an authority on astronomy, gave it as his opinion that (the pilot) was a native from the planet of Mars.

Papers found on his person (evidently the records of his travels) are written in some unknown hieroglyphics and cannot be deciphered. The ship was too badly wrecked to form conclusions as to its construction or motive power. The town is full of people today who are viewing the wreck and gathering specimens of strange metal from the debris. The pilot's funeral will take place tomorrow.

S.E. Hayden

Scan

Note: The incomplete parts of the newspaper page refer more generally to the wave of "airships" of that time.


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