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(word processor parameters LM=8, RM=75, TM=2, BM=2)
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Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
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Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
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PO BOX 1031
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Mesquite, TX 75150
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There are ABSOLUTELY NO RESTRICTIONS
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on duplicating, publishing or distributing the
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files on KeelyNet except where noted!
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October 29, 1991
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AERO1.ASC
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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We have been looking for tangible information on the Aero Club of
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California as it existed in the mid 1850's for years.
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In a discussion with one of our users, Mr. Jim Shaffer, he
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remembered that he had an article on that very subject
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and took the time to type it in and send it up.
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Thank you JIM!!!
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This EXCELLENT file shared with KeelyNet courtesy of
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Jim Shaffer.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Fate magazine has been in existence for many years and covers
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a wide range of subjects, much like KeelyNet.
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If you might be interested in subscribing to this interesting
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journal, their mailing address, etc..is:
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FATE
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PO BOX 64383
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St. Paul, Minnesota 55164-0383
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Phone - 612-291-0383
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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from Fate, May 1973
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Mystery Airships of the 1800's (Part 1 of 3)
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Part One: "No form of dirigible or heavier-than-air machine was
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flying -- or could fly -- at this time." And yet...
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By Jerome Clark and Loren Coleman
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March 26, 1880 was a quiet Friday night in tiny Galisteo Junction,
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N. Mex. (now the town of Lamy). The train from nearby Santa Fe had
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come and gone and the railroad agent, his day's work finished,
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routinely locked up the depot and set out with a couple of friends
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for a short walk.
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Suddenly they heard voices which seemed to be coming from the sky.
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The men looked up to see an object, "monstrous in size," rapidly
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approaching from the west, flying so low that elegantly-drawn
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characters could be discerned on the outside of the peculiar
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vehicle. Inside, the occupants, who numbered 10 or so and looked
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like ordinary human beings, were laughing and shouting in an
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Page 1
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unfamiliar language and the men on the ground also heard music
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coming from the craft. The craft itself was "fish-shaped" -- like a
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cigar with a tail -- and it was driven by a huge "fan" or propeller.
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As it passed overhead one of the occupants tossed some objects from
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the car. The depot agent and his friends recovered one item almost
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immediately, a beautiful flower with a slip of fine silk-like paper
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containing characters which reminded the men of designs they had
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seen on Japanese chests which held tea.
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Soon thereafter the aerial machine ascended and sailed away toward
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the east at high speed.
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The next morning searchers found a cup -- one of the items the
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witnesses had seen thrown out of the craft but had been unable to
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locate in the darkness.
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"It is of very peculiar workmanship," the _Santa Fe Daily New
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Mexican_ reported, "entirely different to anything used in this
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country."
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The depot agent took the cup and the flower and put them on display.
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Before the day was over, however, this physical evidence of the
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passage of the early unidentified object had vanished.
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In the evening a mysterious gentleman identified only as a
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"collector of curiosities" appeared in town, examined the finds,
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suggested they were Asiatic in origin and offered such a large sum
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of money for them that the agent had no choice but to accept. The
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"collector" scooped up his purchases and never was seen again.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Vangard note.......
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We found more on this interesting case in a doctoral
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dissertation by Mr. T. E. Bullard, published in 1982 under the
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name of "Mysteries in the Eye of the Beholder." Chaper X -
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Loose in an Airship - The Age of Phantom Dirigibles and Ghost
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Airplanes, 1880-1946.
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Page 205
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"Several precocious flying machines sailed the skies during
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1880. In late March several citizens of the unlikely place of
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Galisteo Junction, New Mexico heard voices overheard and saw a
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fish-shaped balloon driven by a fan-like apparatus.
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A cup and several other artifacts fell from the ship as it
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passed, but the next day a collector of curiosities, a man
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unknown in town, appeared and paid a large sum of money for
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the items.
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The story ends on this note of mystery, BUT THE FOLLOWING WEEK
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another installment CLARIFIED THESE STRANGE PROCEEDINGS.
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A party of tourists which included a wealthy young Chinaman
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stopped in the vicinity and found the stranger engaged in
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archaeological work. The young man grew excited on seeing the
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articles dropped from the airship, because among among them
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was a note in his fiancee's hand, and he explained that
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Page 2
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CHINESE EXPERIMENTS IN FLYING HAD AT LAST SUCCEEDED, meaning
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the airship which crossed the skies of Galisteo Junction was
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THE FIRST FLIGHT OF a CHINA-TO-AMERICA airline.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Of course the story of aviation does not begin on December 17, 1903,
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the date of Orville Wright's 12-second aerial hop at Kitty Hawk.
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Long before that scientists and inventors had struggled to unlock
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the secrets of powered flight and to build what an 1897 issue of
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_Scientific American_ called the "true flying machine; that is, one
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which is hundreds of times heavier than the air upon which it rests,
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(and flies) by reason of its dynamic impact, and not by the aid of
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any balloon or gasbag whatsoever."
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But nothing in the early history of flight tells us what a huge
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airborne cigar was doing over New Mexico in 1880, especially as it
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"appeared to be entirely under the control of the occupants and...
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guided by a large fan-like apparatus," and also could ascend with
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startling speed.
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Its "monstrous size" and its propeller clearly indicate it was
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heavier than air, but such a flying machine didn't then exist
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according to British authority Charles H. Gibbs-Smith: "Speaking as
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an aeronautical historian who specializes in the periods before
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1910, I can say with certainty that the only airborne vehicles,
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carrying passengers, which could possibly have been seen anywhere in
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North America... were free-flying spherical balloons, and it is
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highly unlikely for these to be mistaken for anything else. No form
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of dirigible (i.e., a gasbag propelled by an airscrew) or heavier-
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than-air flying machine was flying -- or indeed *could* fly -- at
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this time in America."
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Nevertheless, mysterious "airships" were seen in many parts of the
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world in the last half of the 19th Century and the early years of
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the 20th. And plans for the construction of such craft were not
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unknown.
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In 1848 gold fever seized America. On January 24 a workman
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discovered the precious metal in Sutter's millrace in California's
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Sacramento Valley. Within weeks the entire Pacific coast knew about
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it and a few months later "gold" was on the tongue of every
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easterner who ever dreamed of easy fortune.
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Getting to those goldfields, however, was a problem, for the inland
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parts of the young nation were largely unsettled. A unique solution
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-- air travel -- came from "R. Porter & Company," a firm which
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listed its address as Room 40 of the Sun Building in New York City.
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In the latter part of 1848 the company distributed an advertising
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flyer in the eastern United States which promised more than it ever
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delivered.
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Touting "THE BEST ROUTE TO THE CALIFORNIA GOLD!" the flyer read in
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part that the company was "making active progress in the
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construction of an 'Aerial Transport' for the express purpose of
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carrying passengers between New York and California.
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"It is expected to put this machine in operation about the first
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of April, 1849, and the transport is expected to make a trip to the
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Page 3
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gold region and back in seven days..."
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On the flyer the "aerial locomotive" is illustrated -- a huge cigar-
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shaped device, identified as a "gasbag," with a tail. Under it,
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attached with "sturdy material arrows can't puncture," is a
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similarly-shaped car with windows in its midsection.
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"Snug gondola with benches for 50 or more passengers," the caption
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reads. From the top of the gondola stretches a long pipe which is
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identified as "a steam engine for controlled propulsion through
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sunny skies at 60 miles the hour."
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Except for this pipe, entrepreneur Porter's vessel is almost a dead
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ringer for the type of "UFO" widely reported in the late 1800's and
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early 1900's which came to be called "the airship," although
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obviously there had to be more than one of them and they did not all
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look alike. But in the advertisement of an obscure company lie the
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first hints of a bizarre mystery which is staggering in its
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implications. *
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* [We do not pretend to "solve" this mystery. What we offer
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instead are possibilities suggested by a wide range of often
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conflicting evidence complicated by the distance in time
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separating us from the events described (which makes firsthand
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investigation impossible in all but rare instances).]
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During the 1850's mysterious "airships" regularly crossed the skies
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of Germany and just before that, probably in the year 1848, an
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enigmatic young German named C. A. A. Dellschau immigrated to the
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United States.
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Dellschau's own testimony places him in Sonora, a California mining
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town, in the 1850's. Where he might have been in the decades after
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that is unknown. We do know, however, that about the turn of the
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century he married a widow and took up residence in Houston, Tex.,
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where he lived in virtual seclusion. He had no friends; by all
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accounts his quarrelsome disposition kept everyone at a distance.
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Dismissed as an eccentric by the few who knew him Dellschau devoted
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hours to the compilation of a series of scrapbooks filled with
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clippings, drawings and cryptic notations. He died in 1924 at the
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age of 92.
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Were it not for a chance discovery many years later Dellschau's life
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would have gone unnoticed. But one day in May 1969 a UFOlogist
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named P. G. Navarro happened to stroll past an aviation exhibit at
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the University of St. Thomas in Houston. Two large scrapbooks
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(Dellschau's) caught his eye and he stopped to take a closer look.
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* [In telephone conversations and by correspondence, Navarro
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himself has provided us with this information.]
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He found that the scrapbooks contained old news stories and articles
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about attempts of various inventors to construct heavier-than-air
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flying machines. But these were not nearly so interesting as
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Dellschau's drawings of strange-looking, cumbersome vessels which he
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claimed *actually had been flown at one time*.
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Navarro, his curiosity aroused, sought more of the scrapbooks and
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Page 4
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over a period of time acquired 10 more -- from such places as a junk
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shop in Houston and from a woman art collector who had been
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interested in Dellschau's strange drawings.
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Navarro even talked with Dellschau's stepdaughter, then an old
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woman. Finally he set out to makes sense of Dellschau's notes which
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had been penned in English, German and code. When he had finished
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he had reconstructed an incredible story.
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One thing was obvious: Dellschau was of two minds about what he was
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doing. On one hand he wanted his "secrets" known; on the other he
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seemed afraid to speak directly. So he compromised and wrote in a
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fashion aimed to discourage all but the most determined investigator
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-- and even so his writings in the main only add to the mystery.
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He was writing for an audience -- if not one in his own day, one in
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some future period. He addressed potential readers thus:
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"You will... Wonder Weaver... you will unriddle these writings.
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They are my stock of open knowledge. They... will end like
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all the others... with good intentions but too weak-willed to
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assign and put to work."
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From the notes Navarro learned that in the 1850's Dellschau and a
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group of associates, about 60 in all, gathered in Sonora, Calif.,
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where they formed an "Aero Club" and constructed and flew heavier-
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than-air vehicles. They worked in an open field near Columbia, a
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small town near Sonora. (Today an airstrip covers the field, the
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only area in the predominantly hilly region where planes can take
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off and land safely.)
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The club worked in secrecy and its members were not permitted to
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talk about their activities or to use the aircraft for their own
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purposes. One member who threatened to take his machine to the
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public in the hope of making a fortune died in an aerial explosion -
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- the victim, Dellschau hints, of murder.
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Another, a "high educated mechanic" identified as Gustav Freyer, was
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called to account by the club for withholding new information.
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Apparently this was no ordinary social group.
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The "Aero Club" was a branch of a larger secret society whose
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initials Dellschau gives as "NYMZA." He says little about this
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society except to observe that in 1858 it was headed by a George
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Newell in Sonora.
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Otherwise he alludes to orders from unnamed superiors who were
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overseeing the club's activities. These were not governmental
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authorities, for Dellschau writes that an official who somehow
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learned of their work once approached club members and tried to
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persuade them to sell their inventions for use as weapons of war.
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The unnamed superiors instructed the club to refuse the offer.
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The club had a number of aircraft at its disposal, including among
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others August Schoetler's Aero Dora, Robert Nixon's Aero Rondo and
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George Newell's Aero Newell. However, from Dellschau's drawings it
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is hard to believe that anything resembling these machines ever
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could have flown.
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Page 5
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Navarro remarks, "The heavy body of the machines seems to be
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radically out of proportion to the gasbag or balloon which is
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supposed to lift the contraption. Considering the large amount of
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gas (usually hydrogen or helium) that is required to lift one of
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today's dirigibles or even a small blimp, it is inconceivable that
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the small quantity of gas used in Dellschau's airship would be
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sufficient to lift it."
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But this wasn't ordinary gas. According to Dellschau it was a
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substance called "NB" which had the capacity to "negate weight."
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Incredible as it may seem he is talking about antigravity.
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Dellschau's notes have a curiously pessimistic tone. One strange
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paragraph reads, "We are all together in our graves. We get
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together in my house. We eat and drink and are joyful. We do
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mental work, but everybody is forlorn, as they feel they are
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fighting a losing battle. But little likelihood is there that fate
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shall bring forth the right man."
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Dellschau wrote of the human race -- and even the planet Earth -- as
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if he stood apart from it. One peculiar paragraph of his oddly
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archaic German reads: "Your Christian love reaches for the
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Wanderplace, and wanders away from Earth. Planets there are enough
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where Christian love shall be as we say so nicely in the Book
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Selag."
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A drawing elsewhere shows the figure of a devil opening a crack in
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the fabric of the sky above one of the "Aeros." The overall
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impression conveyed by his writings is that Dellschau was a man who
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knew secrets that would render him forever an outsider, isolated
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from the community of mankind.
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Who was he? A spinner of tall tales? But to what end? If he is
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only that why did he spend years compiling the scrapbooks - devoting
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most of his waking hours to the task - on the slight chance that one
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day far in the future, long after his death, someone might be taken
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in?
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On November 1, 1896, the _Detroit Free Press_ reported that in the
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near future a New York inventor would construct and fly an "aerial
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torpedo boat." And on November 17 the _Sacramento Bee_ reprinted a
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telegram the newspaper had received from a New York man who said he
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and some friends would board an airship of his invention and fly it
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to California. The trip, he said, would take no more than two days.
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That very night all hell broke loose and the Great Airship Scare of
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1896-97 was off and running.
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The next day the _Bee_ led off a long article with this paragraph:
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|
"Last evening between the hours of six and seven o'clock, in
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the year of our Lord eighteen hudred and ninety-six, a most
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startling exhibition was seen in the sky in this city of
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Sacramento.
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People standing on the sidewalks at certain points in the
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city between the hours stated, saw coming through the sky
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over the housetops, what appeared to them to be merely an
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electric arc lamp propelled by some mysterious force.
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|
Page 6
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|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It came out of the east and sailed unevenly toward the
|
|||
|
southwest, dropping now nearer to the earth, and now suddenly
|
|||
|
rising into the air again as if the force that was whirling
|
|||
|
it through space was sensible of the dangers of collision
|
|||
|
with objects upon the earth..."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hundreds of persons saw it. Those who got the closest look said the
|
|||
|
object was huge and cigar-shaped and had four large wings attached
|
|||
|
to an aluminum body. Some insisted they heard voices and raucous
|
|||
|
laughter emanating from the ship. A man identified as R. L. Lowry
|
|||
|
and a companion allegedly saw four men pushing the craft along the
|
|||
|
ground by its wheels. Lowry's friends asked them where they were
|
|||
|
going. "To San Francisco," they replied. "We hope to be there by
|
|||
|
midnight."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One J. H. Vogel, who was in the vicinity, confirmed the story and
|
|||
|
added that the vessel was "egg-shaped." The next afternoon an
|
|||
|
airship passed over Oak Park, Calif., leaving a trail of smoke and
|
|||
|
soon San Francisco, Oakland and other cities and town in the north-
|
|||
|
cantral part of California had their own stories in all the
|
|||
|
newspapers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Several persons now stepped forward to tell of earlier sightings.
|
|||
|
One was a fruit rancher near Bowman, Placer County, who said he and
|
|||
|
members of his family had watched an airship fly by at 100 miles an
|
|||
|
hour in late October.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Even more remarkable was the statement of a man who claimed that in
|
|||
|
August he and fellow hunters had tracked a wounded deer across
|
|||
|
Tamalpais Mountain until they came to a clearing where six men were
|
|||
|
working on an airship.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The most baffling part of the whole flap, which lasted well into
|
|||
|
December 1896, was the role of "E. H. Benjamin," a dentist whose
|
|||
|
name the newspapers always enclosed in quotation marks, as if they
|
|||
|
had reason to doubt his identity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It was either Benjamin or his uncle who that November approached
|
|||
|
George D. Collins, a San Francisco lawyer, and asked him to
|
|||
|
represent his interests in the patenting of an airship. He told the
|
|||
|
incredulous Collins that he had come from Maine to California seven
|
|||
|
years before in order to conduct his experiments without danger of
|
|||
|
interruption.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Collins told reporters that his wealthy client (whom he never
|
|||
|
identified) did his work near Oroville where Collins himself had
|
|||
|
viewed the invention -- an enormous construction 150 feet long. "It
|
|||
|
is built on the aeroplane system and has two canvas wings 18 feet
|
|||
|
wide and rudder shaped like a bird's tail," the attorney said. "I
|
|||
|
saw the thing ascend about 90 feet under perfect control."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On November 17, Collins went on, the airship had flown the 60 miles
|
|||
|
between Oroville and Sacramento in 45 minutes. This was not the
|
|||
|
first flight the inventor had made. For two weeks he had been
|
|||
|
flying in attempts to perfect the craft's navigational apparatus.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This led to the story in the _Sacramento Bee_ for November 23,
|
|||
|
datelined Oroville: "The rumor that the airship which is alleged to
|
|||
|
have passed over Sacramento was constructed near this town seems to
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Page 7
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
have a grain of truth in it. The parties who could give information
|
|||
|
if they would are extremely reticent. They give evasive answers or
|
|||
|
assert they know absolutely nothing about it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Not a single person that saw or knew of an airship being
|
|||
|
constructed near here can be found and yet there is a rumor that
|
|||
|
some man has been experimenting with different kinds of gas and
|
|||
|
testing those which are lighter than air. The experiments were made
|
|||
|
some miles east of the town and no one is able to give any names of
|
|||
|
the parties, who are evidently strangers and seeking to avoid
|
|||
|
publicity."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The _San Francisco Call_ established that "Benjamin," a native of
|
|||
|
Carmel, Me., had been seen in the Orville area visiting a wealthy
|
|||
|
uncle and confiding to friends that he had invented something which
|
|||
|
would "revolutionize the world."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Several days into the controversy, the inventor dispensed with the
|
|||
|
services of lawyer Collins because he was talking too much. W. H.
|
|||
|
H. Hart, a former state attorney general and a highly respected man,
|
|||
|
took over Collins' job. In subsequent newspaper interviews Hart
|
|||
|
revealed that *two* airships existed, one in the east and the other
|
|||
|
in California. "I have been concerned in the eastern invention for
|
|||
|
some time personally," he said. "The idea is to consolidate both
|
|||
|
interests."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The western craft would be used as a weapon of war. "From what I
|
|||
|
have seen of it," Hart said, "I have not the least doubt that it
|
|||
|
will carry four men and 1,000 pounds of dynamite. I am quite
|
|||
|
convinced that two or three men could destroy the city of Havana in
|
|||
|
48 hours."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hart thus represented both airship inventors, one in California and
|
|||
|
one in New Jersey. The former had Hart say, "...if the Cubans would
|
|||
|
give him $10 million he would wipe out the Spanish stronghold." This
|
|||
|
was not the last time airships and Cuba* would be mentioned in the
|
|||
|
same breath, as we shall see.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
* [In this period the then-new "yellow journalism" was keeping
|
|||
|
American public opinion aroused over Cuba's desire for
|
|||
|
independence. After the Cuban insurection of 1895, public
|
|||
|
sentiment was running high against Spain and the mysterious
|
|||
|
destruction of the U. S. S. Maine in Havana harbor on February
|
|||
|
15, 1898, triggered the Spanish-American war.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Early in December 1896 a stranger appeared at a business
|
|||
|
establishment in Fresno, Calif., and inquired for a George Jennings.
|
|||
|
Covered with dust, the man looked as if he had traveled a long
|
|||
|
distance. When Jennings stepped out of a back room he greeted the
|
|||
|
visitor like an old friend. The two men engaged in whispered
|
|||
|
conversation and the persons standing nearby were nonplussed to
|
|||
|
overhear the word "airship" spoken more than once.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Later Jennings talked freely to a reporter for the _Fresno Semi-
|
|||
|
Weekly Expositor_, balking only at giving his friends' name.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"It is true the airship is in Fresno County," he said. "Just where
|
|||
|
I do not know myself. It is also true that the man who was in here
|
|||
|
a short time ago is one of the inventors. He told me the trip to
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Page 8
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
this country was involuntary upon the part of the men in the
|
|||
|
airship.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In other words the machine came itself and they couldn't stop it.
|
|||
|
(I was told) that they were flying, as usual, around Contra Costa
|
|||
|
County hills and rose to a height of about 1,000 feet. Suddenly the
|
|||
|
airship struck a current of air and refused to answer to its
|
|||
|
steering gear. It was borne rapidly southward against all efforts
|
|||
|
to change its course until suddenly the current of air seemed to
|
|||
|
lessen and the machine once more became manageable. The men aboard
|
|||
|
at once descended and flew about looking for a hiding place, which
|
|||
|
they at length found."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Jennings said he was sure that individuals in nearby Watertown and
|
|||
|
Selma must have observed the craft as it limped through the county
|
|||
|
in search of a "hiding place." Sure enough, the day before his
|
|||
|
encounter with the aeronaut, the _San Francisco Call_ had published
|
|||
|
a letter from five Watertown men who said they had seen an enormous
|
|||
|
airship nearly collide with a cornice on the city's post office
|
|||
|
building the evening of November 20. The craft had an "intensely
|
|||
|
brilliant" light and the witnesses could see human forms aboard.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The evening of December 5 Selma citizens were treated to the
|
|||
|
unnerving spectacle of a low-flying brilliantly-illuminated object
|
|||
|
sailing rapidly toward the southeast.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"The character of the witnesses is such as to leave no doubt that
|
|||
|
they saw just what they described," the _Selma Irrigator_
|
|||
|
editorialized.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After the first week of December the airships seemed to have
|
|||
|
disappeared, the "inventors" were heard from no more and everything
|
|||
|
returned to normal -- but not for long. The incredible part was yet
|
|||
|
to come.
|
|||
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
Vangard note...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We are looking into the Dellschau manuscripts and further
|
|||
|
researches on this mysterious N.B. gas.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
From the work of Walter Russell and his development of the
|
|||
|
Octave Periodic Progression of elements, there would appear to
|
|||
|
be somewhere on the order of 26 elements BELOW HYDROGEN. This
|
|||
|
is TOTALLY CONTRARY to any modern understanding of chemistry.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As we understand it, the N.B. gas had incredible lifting power
|
|||
|
(not anti-gravity per se.). An apt analogy would be that one
|
|||
|
could fill a basketball with the N.B. gas, hold it in your arms
|
|||
|
and be carried off into the upper stratosphere.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When such an understanding is applied to the majority of cases
|
|||
|
of the airships, it is seen how they are identical to ships on
|
|||
|
water or submarines underwater. A simple change in ballast
|
|||
|
would determine the height to which the airship would rise and
|
|||
|
remain. Subject of course to wind.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When perusing the many fascinating reports from this era, we
|
|||
|
note several describing winged men flying through the air.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Page 9
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Some have the equivalent of a backpack for thrust, some simply
|
|||
|
the wings. N.B. could very well stand for Neutral Buoyancy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SHADES OF THE ROCKETEER!!!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Page 205 of Bullards book,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On July 28th, around 6 to 7 AM?, Two Louisville, Kentucky men
|
|||
|
saw an object in the distance which drew nearer and resolved
|
|||
|
into the appearance of a man surrounded by machinery. (Note
|
|||
|
no gasbag or canopy supported by one)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If the man slacked his efforts (he was peddling) the machine
|
|||
|
dropped, but if he once again worked the treadles (peddles) and
|
|||
|
wings HE ROSE AGAIN; but the machine seemed under perfect
|
|||
|
control and executed a turn over the city.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Remember when the comedian Gallagher built and flew a bicycle
|
|||
|
type device suspended from a small dirigible.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Page 206 of Bullards book,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In September an object like a black-clad man WITH BAT'S WINGS
|
|||
|
AND FROGS LEGS FLAPPED over Coney Island.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Can we not here clearly see that the use of N.B. gas could so
|
|||
|
balance or completely cancel one's weight that flying in air
|
|||
|
would be analogous to swimming in water? Is this not worth
|
|||
|
pursuing? It would turn our concept of air travel completely
|
|||
|
upside down.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ninety percent of the problem with air travel is the extra
|
|||
|
power required to sustain lift. Propulsion is a piece of cake
|
|||
|
in comparision. Imagine airships or flying suits literally
|
|||
|
"floating" like boats on water..........
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you have comments or other information relating to such topics
|
|||
|
as this paper covers, please upload to KeelyNet or send to the
|
|||
|
Vangard Sciences address as listed on the first page.
|
|||
|
Thank you for your consideration, interest and support.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Jerry W. Decker.........Ron Barker...........Chuck Henderson
|
|||
|
Vangard Sciences/KeelyNet
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
If we can be of service, you may contact
|
|||
|
Jerry at (214) 324-8741 or Ron at (214) 242-9346
|
|||
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Page 10
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|