Aurora, Texas, UFO incident - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
During the 1896–1897 timeframe, numerous sightings of a cigar-shaped mystery airship were reported across the United States. One of these accounts appeared in the April 19, 1897, edition of the Dallas Morning News. Written by Aurora resident S.E. Haydon,[2] the alleged UFO is said to have hit a windmill on the property of a Judge J.S. Proctor two days earlier at around 6am local (Central) time,[3] resulting in its crash. The pilot (who was reported to be "not of this world", and a "Martian" according to a reported Army officer from nearby Fort Worth)[4] did not survive the crash, and was buried "with Christian rites" at the nearby Aurora Cemetery. (The cemetery contains a Texas Historical Commission marker mentioning the incident. - Greg GuitarBuster
The comedy group The Firesign Theatre makes several references to the Aurora Incident on the 1974 album titled: Everything You Know Is Wrong. - Greg GuitarBuster
Might be worth a stop on a road trip, it's only 40 miles away from me. - North end of Eagle Mountain Lake. Just down the road from Gogo Gumbo in Boyd. - Greg GuitarBuster