Top 7 Texas UFO Sightings of All Time
11/15/2013
Every UFO nut has that case that won them over. For me, it was the Phoenix Lights. For others, it might be Roswell.
If you're sitting on the fence about UFOs, one of these top Texas UFO sightings might be the one that yanks you over the edge and makes you a believer, too.
The Texas sky is full of bewildering and bemusing sights. Here are the most well documented of these. But be careful where you tread. This round up might lead you down a dark, twisty turny Rabbit Hole, home to strange supernatural phenomenons and clandestine government agendas...
Glowing Cigar-shaped Craft Lands on Road, Disables Vehicles
The first 911 call is made by Pedro Saucedo. His truck has abruptly broken down - the engine and electrical system are unresponsive. But that's not why he's calling. Parked in front of him is a 200-foot glowing cigar shaped object. Before you know it, it lifts up and goes about its way. Pedro's truck starts working again.
This is the first of several calls just like this. The "object" makes its way through the small Texas town, routinely landing on the side of the road, and disabling vehicles in the process. It's not always the same color, though - sometimes it's blue, sometimes it's orange. It eventually disappears for good.
So, what did these frightened Texans witness? So far, the only explanations tossed onto the table - besides, well, aliens - have been ball lighting or some kind of electrical storm. Scientists know very little about ball lightning (because they avoid UFO-related topics like a career-ending plague), but they do know that it does not hop and skip along roadways and disable vehicles.
Strange Lights Haunt Lubbock for Month
Specifically, a group of professors from the Texas technological college in Lubbock. They are hanging out in Dr. W.I. Robinson's backyard when they spot a V or U shaped arrangement of extremely bright lights - brighter than Venus even - zipping through the sky!
But that's not all. The same string of lights is spotted flying over the area for the next month. The lights now have a reputation. Texans are actively looking for them. Some witness bright white lights, while others notice a blue or orange tinge. Some even see a wing, as if the lights are attached to some sort of air craft. Luckily, 16-year-old Carl Hart Jr snaps five photos of the orbs. Now there was hard evidence, not just secondhand accounts, to investigate!
The Air Force is just as bewildered as the witnesses, though. Captain Edward J. Ruppelt, the eventual director of Project Blue Book, visits. He doesn't come up with anything.
For a brief period of time, locals toy with the idea that these lights could be plovers, a type of water bird. But that theory is quickly put to bed. Today, the delicious mystery of the Lubbock Lights is still unsolved.
That doesn't mean people aren't theorizing. Although "earthlights," or "earthquake lights," aren't a well-known natural phenomenon just yet, that's one favorite go-to explanation for many UFO sightings. The idea is that our skies are filled with strange electrical energy that can create phenomenal light shows. The Marfa lights (another top Texas UFO sighting) also falls into this category.
Songs have been inspired by them. Movies have been made about them. And ufologists have been writing about them. And until we figure out what they are, people will be fascinated by the Lubbock Lights.
Air Ship Crashes, Witnesses Bury Alien Pilot
That's because if something wasn't a bird, blimp, balloon, or kite... it was a UFO. The Wright Brothers had yet to make anything fly. Drones and top-secret military crafts weren't around just yet.
Although Roswell gets all the attention, the 1897 Aurora, Texas UFO incident... or, crash... is eerily similar to it, and is actually much more dramatic. Legend, old newspaper clippings, and witnesses tell of an air ship hitting a wind mill and crashing, killing the extra terrestrial pilot inside. Witnesses recovered the body and gave it a Christian burial in an unmarked grave at the local cemetery. Shortly afterward, the military swooped in to investigate, but the only thing they appeared to do was get the locals to shut up about it.
For example, when MUFON visited the Aurora cemetery, they did indeed track down an unmarked grave featuring a flying saucer-adorned headstone. When they attempted to exhume the body, however, the city would not let them.
Despite the well-documented witness reports (some made as recently as 1972 - a living witness recalled seeing the alien body as a 15 year old), and military involvement, a theory that the incident was a hoax caught on. Former mayor Barbar Brammer theorized that the journalist who first reported on the story was trying to bring life to a city that had recently endured tragedy after tragedy. But Brammer was either mistaken or trying to cover up the incident. Several of the claims she made were totally wrong.
Military Tries to Cover Up Strange Stephenville Lights
While it took a few years to get the facts straight, thanks to radar evidence, we now know that there absolutely was an unidentified craft passing through Stephenville and it was apparently headed toward President George Bush's ranch in Crawford. Several F16s either pursued or chaperoned it.
We also know that the military was dishonest about it, and that the journalist who broke the story eventually left the local newspaper to pursue the investigation full time.
- Watch a clip from the Larry King Show episode about the Stephenville Lights:
- Click https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=gRIHCWGpKeQ
Strange, Centuries-old UFOs in Real Time: the Marfa Lights
Some witnesses describe them as playful, while others are a little more disturbed by them. However you slice it, the Marfa Lights are a real-time UFO attraction.
So, what's going on here? Leading theories include "earthquake lights," a relatively new scientific phenomenon still smothered in mystery. This theory has also been used to describe the Lubbock Lights (also a top Texas UFO sighting).
However, Wikipedia and other sources claim these lights are simply reflections from cars and campfires - they just appear goofy like this due to unusual atmospheric conditions.
This theory is bullshit. Cars weren't bustling in and out of there in the 1800s, when these lights first became legendary.
- Check out a video of the Marfa lights up close:
- Click https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=pfCJvh6kwcQ
Flame-Throwing Craft Poisons Witnesses with Radiation
On a chilly December night in 1980, the three were driving through the Piney Woods of Texas, north of Houston.
They noticed a bright light in the sky, but didn't think too much of it. However, as they got closer to it, they realized it wasn't just a light, but a large glowing craft - shaped like a diamond missing its top and bottom, and spitting out flames beneath it. Vickie - the older of the two women - thought it was the end of the world. The women then stepped outside the vehicle, and were immediately slapped in the face with intense, burning heat. They hurried back into the car. The dangerous craft then lifted itself up into the air and took off, but now it was joined by over 20 helicopters. All left the scene.
If only that was all there was to the story. Unfortunately, the three witnesses continued to suffer from radiation sickness.
Cash has been pursuing the government for answers - as well as money for medical damages - ever since. The government claims no involvement however, and will not give Cash an answer or a dime.
One theory is that the craft was the military's, specifically a Lenticular Reentry Vehicle, which was only made public by the Freedom of Information Act decades after the incident.
Foo Fighter Pursues Military Jet
On July 17th, 1957, the craft was traveling from Mississippi to Oklahoma. For about 700 miles of its journey, however, it was pursued and attacked by a large glowing orb (or foo fighter, as the military came to know them in World War II).
The orb disappeared and reappeared, changed colors, and eventually zoomed off - it's even possible there was more than one.
Radar confirmed the encounter.
The predatory ball or balls of light were so large that they were witnessed by many on the ground, including folks in East Texas. Eventually the Air Force would acknowledge the event, but claim the RB-47 was simply tracking an airliner, a claim investigator and physicist Gordon David Thayer dubbed "literally ridiculous."
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