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Aurora, Texas Airship Crash - April 17, 1897

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title: "Aurora, Texas Airship Crash - 1897"

date: "1897-04-17"

location: "Aurora, Texas, USA"

coordinates: "33.0584° N, 97.5147° W"

source: "Dallas Morning News, local witnesses"

classification: "HISTORICAL"

tags: ["airship-wave", "crash-retrieval", "historical-case", "19th-century", "texas"]

witnesses: "Multiple townspeople"

duration: "Single event"

summary: "Alleged crash of an unidentified airship into a windmill in Aurora, Texas, with reports of a 'Martian' pilot and subsequent burial in the local cemetery."

relatedCases: ["1896-1897-airship-wave", "mystery-airships"]

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Aurora, Texas Airship Crash - April 17, 1897

Executive Summary

The Aurora, Texas incident represents one of the most famous alleged UFO crash retrieval cases from the 19th century mystery airship wave. According to newspaper reports and local testimony, an unidentified airship crashed into Judge J.S. Proctor's windmill, destroying both the craft and killing its non-human pilot.

Incident Overview

Initial Reports

On April 17, 1897, the Dallas Morning News published an account by S.E. Haydon describing an extraordinary event in the small town of Aurora, Texas. According to the report, around 6:00 AM, an airship traveling at approximately 10-12 mph approached the town from the north, appearing to experience mechanical difficulties.

The Crash Sequence

Approach and Impact:

The Aurora, Texas incident remains one of the most intriguing cases from the 1897 airship wave, offering a unique window into both anomalous phenomena and American frontier culture. While physical proof remains elusive, the incident's documentation and witness testimony provide valuable insights into unexplained aerial phenomena preceding the modern UFO era.