The Phantom Airships of the 1890's

The Phantom Airships of the 1890's

Decades before Roswell, decades before the term UFO even existed, something was already flying over America that nobody could explain. On the evening of November 17, 1896, citizens of Sacramento, California, watched a bright light move slowly across the overcast sky at roughly a thousand feet. Some heard voices shouting from the craft. Others reported singing.

A witness named R.L. Lowery described a cigar-shaped body with wheels on the sides, powered by two men pedaling a bicycle-like frame. Within days, newspapers from coast to coast had picked up the story, and the first great UFO wave in American history was underway. This episode traces the full arc of the phantom airship phenomenon from its California origins in November 1896 through its explosive spread across the Midwest and Texas in the spring of 1897.

We cover Colonel H.G. Shaw's November 19, 1896, encounter with seven-foot-tall beings near Stockton, California, who attempted to force him aboard their metallic craft. We examine the February 1897 sightings over Hastings and Inavale, Nebraska, where witnesses described a conical craft with six lights and a fan-shaped rudder. We walk through the March 28, 1897, mass sighting in Topeka, Kansas, witnessed by Governor John W. Leedy himself, and the bizarre April 10, 1897, Springfield, Missouri, encounter where W.H. Hopkins found a grounded airship crewed by a naked man and woman who pointed to the sky and said something that sounded like "Mars."

The episode digs deep into the Texas sightings of mid-April 1897, when twenty-three counties produced thirty-eight separate reports in just five days. We cover the April 17, 1897, Stephenville encounter where over twenty-five witnesses, including Sam Houston's nephew and the town mayor, met a crew that identified themselves as Tilman and Dolbear and claimed to be fulfilling a contract with New York capitalists.

We examine Judge Albert L. Love's same-day encounter in Waxahachie with five peculiarly dressed men who claimed to be descendants of the ten lost tribes of Israel and said they'd built twenty airships. We break down the April 17, 1897, Aurora, Texas, crash, where correspondent S.E. Haydon reported in the Dallas Morning News that an airship collided with Judge J.S. Proctor's windmill, killing a pilot described as "not an inhabitant of this world" whose body was buried with Christian rites in the town cemetery.

We explore the 1973 investigation by reporter Jim Marrs, the sealed well with elevated aluminum levels, and the ongoing debate over whether the story was an elaborate hoax to revive a dying town.We unpack the April 19, 1897, Alexander Hamilton cow abduction from LeRoy, Kansas, one of the most famous airship accounts ever published, backed by a sworn affidavit from eleven prominent citizens, and later exposed as a winning entry in a local liar's club competition.

We cover Captain Jim Hooton's April 20, 1897, encounter near Texarkana, where the railroad conductor followed the sound of what he recognized as a compressed air pump and found the airship on the ground with a crew that confirmed they were using compressed air and aeroplanes.

We detail the May 6, 1897, encounter in the Ouachita Mountains near Hot Springs, Arkansas, where Constable John J. Sumpter Jr. and Deputy Sheriff John McLemore found the airship after their horses refused to advance, and a bearded man offered them a ride and said he was headed for Nashville. The episode also examines the hoaxes that muddied the waters, from the Omaha helium balloon prank to the Dallas boys who tied a burning cotton ball to a turkey vulture and accidentally set fire to the local high school.

We discuss the role of yellow journalism, the cultural context of the 1890s, the theories of researchers Michael Busby and J. Allan Danelek regarding secret inventors, the mysterious Sonora Aero Club, and why Thomas Edison was forced to publicly deny involvement. We close by connecting the 1896–1897 wave to the 1909 New England sightings and the broader pattern of aerial phenomena that would define the twentieth century and beyond.

Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation?

Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com.

Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past.

Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets.

Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

Avsnitt(91)

Tesla's Death Ray

Tesla's Death Ray

In the early nineteen thirties, an aging inventor living alone in a New York City hotel room told the world he'd built a weapon capable of destroying ten thousand enemy aircraft at a distance of two h...

15 Mars 1h 17min

The Nazi Bell

The Nazi Bell

In this episode of Disturbing History, we investigate Die Glocke, the Nazi Bell, an alleged top-secret SS weapons program that may have been experimenting with anti-gravity technology and exotic physi...

13 Mars 1h 21min

Operation Northwoods: America's False Flag

Operation Northwoods: America's False Flag

In this episode of Disturbing History, we dive into one of the most shocking declassified documents in American history. Operation Northwoods was a nineteen sixty-two proposal drafted and signed by ev...

11 Mars 1h 20min

Who Killed Martin Luther King Jr?

Who Killed Martin Luther King Jr?

On April 4th, 1968, a single rifle shot ended the life of Doctor Martin Luther King Junior on the second-floor balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. He was thirty-nine years old. The of...

8 Mars 1h 36min

The CIA Acoustic Kitty Project

The CIA Acoustic Kitty Project

In the early nineteen sixties, at the height of Cold War paranoia, the CIA's Technical Services Division conceived and built one of the strangest intelligence programs in American history. They called...

6 Mars 1h 17min

The Vampire Panic of New England

The Vampire Panic of New England

For nearly a century, families across rural New England dug up their dead, cut out their hearts, burned them, and fed the ashes to the living. They weren't insane. They were desperate. In this episode...

4 Mars 1h 18min

The War Of The Worlds

The War Of The Worlds

On October 30th, 1938, a twenty-three-year-old Orson Welles and his Mercury Theatre troupe performed a radio adaptation of H.G. Wells's The War of the Worlds that supposedly sent millions of Americans...

1 Mars 1h 19min

The Dancing Boys of Afghanistan

The Dancing Boys of Afghanistan

This episode of the Disturbing History Podcast contains graphic discussion of child sexual exploitation, human trafficking, and violence against minors. The content is historically accurate and factua...

27 Feb 1h 21min

Populärt inom Samhälle & Kultur

podme-dokumentar
aftonbladet-krim
en-mork-historia
gynning-berg
p3-dokumentar
svenska-fall
creepypodden-med-jack-werner
skaringer-nessvold
hor-har
spar
killradet
aftonbladet-daily
mardromsgasten
kod-katastrof
rss-brottsutredarna
flashback-forever
historiska-brott
vad-blir-det-for-mord
larm-vi-minns
rysarpodden