The group, which investigates unidentified flying objects, has already initiated legal
proceedings to exhume the body and will go to court if necessary to open the grave, director
Hayden Hewes said Wednesday.
“After checking the grave with metal detectors and gathering facts for three months, we are
certain as we can be at this point [that] he was the pilot of a UFO which reportedly exploded
atop a well on Judge J.S. Proctor’s place, April 19, 1897,” Hewes said.” “He was not
an inhabitant of this world.”
The legend was back in the news! Only a couple of days later, UPI followed up the first report
with another from Aurora. They had located a living witness to the event.
“A ninety-one-year-old who had been a girl of fifteen in Aurora at the time of the reported
incident was quoted. “I had all but forgotten the incident until it appeared in the newspapers
recently.”
She said her parents had actually been to the crash sight, but had not allowed her
to accompany them for fear of what might be in the debris.
“She recalled that the remains of
the pilot, ‘a small man,’ had been buried in the Aurora cemetery, validating the other legends.”
The Associated Press now joined the chase for the sensational story. From the city of Denton,
Texas came this account:
“A North Texas State University professor had found some metal fragments near the Oates
gas station (former Proctor farm). One fragment was said to be ‘most intriguing’ because it
consisted primarily of iron which did not seem to exhibit magnetic properties.”
The professor also said he was puzzled because the fragment was “shiny and malleable
instead of dull and brittle like iron.”
For reasons unknown, the Aurora Cemetery Association fought the attempts to exhume the
alleged alien body. They were successful, and the dead alien’s remains stayed a mystery.
The town of Aurora still shows traces of Military intervention today, and the question must be asked, “Why would the U. S.
Military be in the town of Aurora?”
Anyone familiar with the Roswell crash of 1947 will remember
that debris from Mac Brazel’s field was flown to Ft. Worth, which is only a short hop’s distance
from Aurora. Is this why the Military was in Aurora? Could the Government have the alien body?
Today Aurora, like other cities, is modernized, and yet a few hints of the past still remain.
Although the headstone of the alien was stolen, there remain pictures of it today. A copy
of this photo now adorns the grave site.
There has been, at times, a lobby to exhume the remains
of the little pilot and give it a proper burial, with a new headstone. So far, this has not happened.
Should the little grave be dug up, or should we just leave it and the legend of the Aurora UFO alone?
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