
A curious UFO incident, dubbed the ‘Aurora UFO Case’, is related to a mysterious “alien grave” according to revelations from some whistleblowers.

According to a story published in the April 19, 1897 issue of the Dallas Morning News, a “mysterious aircraft,” as UFOs were known in those days, came out of the sky and crashed into a windmill belonging to Judge James Spencer. Proctor.
The rubble also destroyed the good judge’s flower garden. Unfortunately, the pilot was also killed in the collision, but locals were able to drag what was described as a “small” and “Martian” body from the debris.
The body was allegedly buried under a tree branch in the Aurora cemetery, with Christian rites.
The wreckage from the crash site was reportedly dumped into a nearby well located under the damaged windmill, while some ended up with the alien in the grave.
Between April 15 and April 19, 1897, the Dallas Morning News published reports of sightings from 21 different cities.
The aircraft’s occupant was reported to be small and humanoid, and the Dallas Morning News said it was “not an inhabitant of this world.”
In some accounts strange hieroglyphs are mentioned among the remains.
In the 1920s, people wanted to unearth the alien body, but the locals stopped them with shotguns.
In addition to the mystery, a new story emerged: Mr. Brawley Oates, who bought the property from Judge Proctor around 1935. According to Ms. Oates said nothing grew for years at the place where the aircraft crashed.
The Oates family, particularly Brawley Oates, cleared the well debris to use as a water source, but he suffered an extremely severe case of arthritis, which he claimed to be the result of contaminated water from the debris dropped into the well.
As a result, Oates sealed the well with a concrete slab and placed a dependency on the slab. (As written on the slab, this was done in 1945).
A strange little tombstone was the only marker for the alien pilot, but it disappeared in 1973.

In 1973, an investigation led by Bill Case, an aviation writer for the Dallas Times Herald and the Texas State Director of the Mutual UFO Network ( MUFON ), uncovered additional data.
MUFON discovered two new eyewitnesses to the accident.
Mary Evans, who was 15 years old at the time, recounted how her parents went to the crash site (forbidden her to go) and also the details of the discovery of the alien body.
10-year-old Charlie Stephens recounted how he saw the aircraft trailing a trail of smoke as it headed north toward Aurora.
He wanted to see what would happen, but his father made him finish his chores; later, he recounted how his father went to town the next day and saw the wreckage of the accident.
Bill Case used a metal detector on the grave. It detected three metallic areas that could have been pieces of debris or personal belongings.
The weekend after the tombstone disappeared in 1973, someone removed the metal pieces from the grave using a 3-inch pipe and a special tool for that purpose.
After the grave was removed in 1973, cemetery officials hired an attorney to fight UFO researchers who wanted the alien body exhumed.
In 2010, an ad hoc “headstone” with an engraved UFO mysteriously appeared in the cemetery, but it equally mysteriously disappeared in 2012, said Aurora City Manager Toni Wheeler, a longtime resident of the area.
The marker was an asymmetrical stone that featured a crude engraving of a cigar-shaped ship with three holes.
Today, the grave is marked only by a rock, although some visitors to the cemetery have used ink to inscribe the rock with messages such as “Rest in peace, my alien brother.”