1 00:00:03,760 --> 00:00:08,000 Speaker 1: Our world is full of the unexplainable, and if history 2 00:00:08,039 --> 00:00:11,480 Speaker 1: is an open book, all of these amazing tales right 3 00:00:11,520 --> 00:00:16,640 Speaker 1: there on display, just waiting for us to explore. Welcome 4 00:00:17,760 --> 00:00:29,920 Speaker 1: to the cabinet of curiosities. New technology unlocks something inside 5 00:00:29,960 --> 00:00:34,159 Speaker 1: of us, hope, wonder, a sense of what if. And 6 00:00:34,200 --> 00:00:36,680 Speaker 1: the mid nineteenth century was a great example of an 7 00:00:36,720 --> 00:00:39,479 Speaker 1: era full of hope and wonder, as men, women, and 8 00:00:39,600 --> 00:00:43,839 Speaker 1: families packed up their lives to pursue golden dreams. In California, 9 00:00:45,440 --> 00:00:48,040 Speaker 1: the gold Rush drew folks from all walks of life 10 00:00:48,040 --> 00:00:50,840 Speaker 1: to the West Coast, risking their future on a bet. 11 00:00:51,159 --> 00:00:54,279 Speaker 1: There was no guarantee of fortune or success, but there 12 00:00:54,360 --> 00:00:58,120 Speaker 1: was a chance, a possibility, which is honestly all it took. 13 00:00:58,600 --> 00:01:02,360 Speaker 1: And once they arrived, wasn't hard to see that possibility 14 00:01:02,600 --> 00:01:05,959 Speaker 1: was everywhere. But while many saw it along the river 15 00:01:06,040 --> 00:01:09,360 Speaker 1: beds or deep inside the countless minds, a small group 16 00:01:09,400 --> 00:01:13,080 Speaker 1: of dreamers noticed it quite a bit higher up. They 17 00:01:13,160 --> 00:01:15,880 Speaker 1: found each other due to their love for the sky. 18 00:01:15,920 --> 00:01:19,199 Speaker 1: That was their goal, not to sift for flakes along 19 00:01:19,240 --> 00:01:22,680 Speaker 1: the water, but to explore the great unknown. Among their 20 00:01:22,760 --> 00:01:26,200 Speaker 1: ranks was a man named Charles August Albert Delshu, who 21 00:01:26,240 --> 00:01:29,440 Speaker 1: had come to California from Prussia by way of Texas. 22 00:01:29,760 --> 00:01:32,800 Speaker 1: He was an enthusiastic participant in what can only be 23 00:01:32,880 --> 00:01:38,559 Speaker 1: described as wishful experiments. Charles and all the other members 24 00:01:38,640 --> 00:01:41,399 Speaker 1: of the Aero Club dreamt of soaring high above the 25 00:01:41,440 --> 00:01:47,080 Speaker 1: clouds and designed all manner of machinery to get them there. Rutterers, motors, 26 00:01:47,160 --> 00:01:50,760 Speaker 1: and landing gear were attached to machines powered by balloons 27 00:01:50,960 --> 00:01:54,600 Speaker 1: or in some cases a liquid fuel they called lifting fluid. 28 00:01:54,880 --> 00:01:57,800 Speaker 1: But these high flying contraptions weren't just fantasies to the 29 00:01:57,800 --> 00:02:00,800 Speaker 1: Aero Club. They were real aircraft meant to be flown, 30 00:02:00,960 --> 00:02:05,919 Speaker 1: and according to Charles, some actually were. The group constructed 31 00:02:05,920 --> 00:02:09,200 Speaker 1: several of them, testing their viability among the nearby desert 32 00:02:09,280 --> 00:02:12,440 Speaker 1: and mountains. Of course, none of these inventions have survived, 33 00:02:12,480 --> 00:02:14,919 Speaker 1: so it's only fair to ask what happened to them 34 00:02:15,160 --> 00:02:17,280 Speaker 1: and why most of us have never heard of the 35 00:02:17,320 --> 00:02:21,120 Speaker 1: Sonora Aero Club and its aspiring pilots. Part of the 36 00:02:21,160 --> 00:02:25,000 Speaker 1: reason is because of their secrecy. Club members behaved like 37 00:02:25,200 --> 00:02:28,440 Speaker 1: c I A spies. They donned disguises when meeting in 38 00:02:28,520 --> 00:02:32,840 Speaker 1: public and traveled under aliases. They use codes to communicate 39 00:02:32,880 --> 00:02:36,720 Speaker 1: important information or even portions of their top secret plans. 40 00:02:38,040 --> 00:02:40,320 Speaker 1: In fact, the special fuel they used to power their 41 00:02:40,400 --> 00:02:43,680 Speaker 1: machines that lifting fluid, was the reason for the group's 42 00:02:43,720 --> 00:02:47,440 Speaker 1: break up. Its creator, Peter Menace, died without having told 43 00:02:47,480 --> 00:02:49,800 Speaker 1: anyone else how to make it, and that might have 44 00:02:49,840 --> 00:02:52,720 Speaker 1: been how the history of the Sonora Aero Club perished 45 00:02:53,080 --> 00:02:56,520 Speaker 1: as a secret kept by several dozen men with sky 46 00:02:56,600 --> 00:03:00,640 Speaker 1: high dreams. Charles, it seems, didn't even tell his family 47 00:03:00,680 --> 00:03:03,239 Speaker 1: about how he'd spent his days in the California desert, 48 00:03:03,480 --> 00:03:06,520 Speaker 1: and unfortunately he never got the chance. Just a few 49 00:03:06,600 --> 00:03:09,320 Speaker 1: years later, he lost his wife and daughter to yellow fever. 50 00:03:09,880 --> 00:03:13,000 Speaker 1: He remarried, of course, but his new wife also quickly 51 00:03:13,040 --> 00:03:16,400 Speaker 1: passed away, followed by another daughter. It seemed that there'd 52 00:03:16,400 --> 00:03:20,440 Speaker 1: be no one left to carry on his legacy. Fate, however, 53 00:03:21,160 --> 00:03:25,800 Speaker 1: had a different plan. Long after Charles passed away, his 54 00:03:26,000 --> 00:03:29,840 Speaker 1: estate became the responsibility of his descendants. Among his property 55 00:03:30,040 --> 00:03:32,200 Speaker 1: was his home in Houston, where he had first lived 56 00:03:32,200 --> 00:03:35,200 Speaker 1: before coming to California, but the house caught fire in 57 00:03:35,240 --> 00:03:38,240 Speaker 1: the nineteen sixties and much of what was inside was lost, 58 00:03:38,920 --> 00:03:42,280 Speaker 1: except for a collection of unusual scrap books that he kept. 59 00:03:43,840 --> 00:03:48,160 Speaker 1: They featured complex illustrations of dirigibles and aircraft, using the 60 00:03:48,240 --> 00:03:50,720 Speaker 1: kinds of technology that we can find on airplanes and 61 00:03:50,760 --> 00:03:54,360 Speaker 1: helicopters today. He also kept journals where he documented his 62 00:03:54,400 --> 00:03:57,120 Speaker 1: travels with the Aero Club. It seems that after his 63 00:03:57,160 --> 00:04:00,000 Speaker 1: wife and daughter had passed away, Charles had started keep 64 00:04:00,040 --> 00:04:03,080 Speaker 1: be notebooks, hundreds of them in fact, by working for 65 00:04:03,200 --> 00:04:06,280 Speaker 1: hours at a time to paint, draw and write about 66 00:04:06,280 --> 00:04:10,560 Speaker 1: his life. His family managed to rescue twelve of those 67 00:04:10,560 --> 00:04:13,800 Speaker 1: scrap books, comprising of more than two thousand double sided 68 00:04:13,840 --> 00:04:18,480 Speaker 1: pages of designs and blueprints for fantastical flying machines. They 69 00:04:18,520 --> 00:04:21,720 Speaker 1: didn't see the value in them, though. They were pretty drawings, sure, 70 00:04:22,000 --> 00:04:25,280 Speaker 1: but not worth anything to his surviving descendants, so they 71 00:04:25,320 --> 00:04:29,680 Speaker 1: decided to trash them. A local used furniture dealer named 72 00:04:29,680 --> 00:04:33,120 Speaker 1: Fred Washington stumbled upon these scrap books in journals and 73 00:04:33,200 --> 00:04:36,200 Speaker 1: took them for himself. A few years later, around nineteen 74 00:04:36,279 --> 00:04:39,000 Speaker 1: sixty eight, to the notebooks were found again, this time 75 00:04:39,040 --> 00:04:41,720 Speaker 1: by a young art student. She believed the books were 76 00:04:41,760 --> 00:04:44,560 Speaker 1: too important to be stowed away in a dark closet somewhere, 77 00:04:44,760 --> 00:04:48,320 Speaker 1: so she acquired the collection. Then she set about making 78 00:04:48,360 --> 00:04:50,760 Speaker 1: them public so that they could be admired and studied 79 00:04:50,760 --> 00:04:54,120 Speaker 1: by flight enthusiasts from all over the world. Charles del 80 00:04:54,200 --> 00:04:57,599 Speaker 1: Sho's illustrations had been very well organized, although it was 81 00:04:57,680 --> 00:05:00,920 Speaker 1: clear that they weren't the only ones created. These were 82 00:05:00,960 --> 00:05:05,400 Speaker 1: just the few that had survived. Imagine how history might 83 00:05:05,400 --> 00:05:07,840 Speaker 1: have been changed. Had Charles simply let the world in 84 00:05:08,000 --> 00:05:11,159 Speaker 1: on his little secret, he and Peter Menace could have 85 00:05:11,200 --> 00:05:16,160 Speaker 1: made names for themselves or launched human innovation into the stratosphere. Instead, 86 00:05:16,680 --> 00:05:19,119 Speaker 1: they kept it all to themselves, which meant the world 87 00:05:19,200 --> 00:05:22,279 Speaker 1: had to wait for another group of innovative builders to 88 00:05:22,360 --> 00:05:25,760 Speaker 1: push it into the age of aviation. That's why the 89 00:05:25,760 --> 00:05:28,919 Speaker 1: pages of history only seemed to remember the Wright brothers 90 00:05:29,360 --> 00:05:32,599 Speaker 1: rather than Charles and his secret group of friends who 91 00:05:32,600 --> 00:05:49,039 Speaker 1: took to the sky fifty years before. Jeffrey Morris was 92 00:05:49,120 --> 00:05:51,719 Speaker 1: not a name anyone at McGuire Air Force Base in 93 00:05:51,720 --> 00:05:55,440 Speaker 1: New Jersey would have recognized. It was a pseudonym provided 94 00:05:55,480 --> 00:05:58,479 Speaker 1: by a man in a tricky predicament. Morris had joined 95 00:05:58,520 --> 00:06:01,800 Speaker 1: the military expecting to defer and his country against all threats, 96 00:06:01,920 --> 00:06:07,839 Speaker 1: foreign and domestic. However, one January evening, he confronted something 97 00:06:07,920 --> 00:06:11,320 Speaker 1: unlike he'd ever expected, and lived to tell the tale. 98 00:06:13,040 --> 00:06:16,080 Speaker 1: Between three and five am that day, Morse had spotted 99 00:06:16,160 --> 00:06:20,080 Speaker 1: numerous unidentified objects flying over the base. They had also 100 00:06:20,200 --> 00:06:23,400 Speaker 1: been seen flying over nearby Fort Dix and seemed to 101 00:06:23,480 --> 00:06:27,360 Speaker 1: hover between the two compounds. A Fort Dicks Military Police 102 00:06:27,400 --> 00:06:30,000 Speaker 1: officer had spotted one of the flying objects low to 103 00:06:30,040 --> 00:06:33,839 Speaker 1: the ground before stopping right over his car. The officer 104 00:06:33,920 --> 00:06:36,960 Speaker 1: described it as an oval shape that glowed a bright 105 00:06:37,080 --> 00:06:41,599 Speaker 1: blue green. The MP's radio also died, and when he 106 00:06:41,600 --> 00:06:44,320 Speaker 1: looked through his windshield, he noticed someone standing in front 107 00:06:44,400 --> 00:06:49,640 Speaker 1: of his car. No, not someone something. It was grayish brown, 108 00:06:49,880 --> 00:06:53,960 Speaker 1: roughly four ft tall, with an enlarged head and gangly arms. 109 00:06:54,920 --> 00:06:58,479 Speaker 1: The officer had never seen such a creature. Not knowing 110 00:06:58,520 --> 00:07:00,920 Speaker 1: if it was friendly or danger us, he got out 111 00:07:00,920 --> 00:07:03,640 Speaker 1: of his car and drew his forty five caliber handgun 112 00:07:03,680 --> 00:07:07,280 Speaker 1: from its holster, and then he fired five rounds. Four 113 00:07:07,320 --> 00:07:09,640 Speaker 1: of them hit the creature, while the last one was 114 00:07:09,680 --> 00:07:14,720 Speaker 1: aimed directly at the flying object above. In response, the 115 00:07:14,760 --> 00:07:18,160 Speaker 1: glowing vessel suddenly flew straight up and then nestled itself 116 00:07:18,200 --> 00:07:21,119 Speaker 1: among eleven other ovals just like it in the sky. 117 00:07:21,760 --> 00:07:25,320 Speaker 1: A person or creature he just shot, however, fled toward 118 00:07:25,360 --> 00:07:28,560 Speaker 1: a wooded area between the two vases. Others at Fort 119 00:07:28,640 --> 00:07:31,480 Speaker 1: Dix and McGuire Air Force Base had watched the objects 120 00:07:31,480 --> 00:07:35,320 Speaker 1: in the sky fly off in a tight formation. The MP, though, 121 00:07:35,640 --> 00:07:38,200 Speaker 1: took off through the shortcut in the woods via the runway. 122 00:07:38,640 --> 00:07:43,200 Speaker 1: He had to see what it was that had escaped him. 123 00:07:43,320 --> 00:07:46,080 Speaker 1: Several men on duty joined him, driving toward the fence 124 00:07:46,120 --> 00:07:48,800 Speaker 1: line separating the base from the woods in search of 125 00:07:48,800 --> 00:07:51,640 Speaker 1: the wounded being. They didn't have to go far, though, 126 00:07:51,960 --> 00:07:55,200 Speaker 1: as it had scaled the fence and died several feet away, 127 00:07:55,600 --> 00:07:57,640 Speaker 1: and it was then that the men realized that they 128 00:07:57,640 --> 00:08:00,360 Speaker 1: were face to face with a creature not of this world. 129 00:08:00,840 --> 00:08:03,160 Speaker 1: It's corpse even filled the air with the smell of 130 00:08:03,160 --> 00:08:07,440 Speaker 1: ammonia that stung their noses. Their revelation, though, would be 131 00:08:07,520 --> 00:08:11,040 Speaker 1: short lived. Troops and authorities quickly arrived to rope off 132 00:08:11,080 --> 00:08:13,880 Speaker 1: the area from views. Teams were brought in to collect 133 00:08:13,880 --> 00:08:17,040 Speaker 1: the deceased creature and flied away to an undisclosed location, 134 00:08:17,160 --> 00:08:19,440 Speaker 1: where it was sealed off from the rest of the world, 135 00:08:19,680 --> 00:08:22,320 Speaker 1: including the men who had confronted it near Fort Dicks, 136 00:08:23,280 --> 00:08:25,600 Speaker 1: the MP who had shot it, as well as Jeffrey 137 00:08:25,640 --> 00:08:28,480 Speaker 1: Morse and anyone else present. At the time were all 138 00:08:28,520 --> 00:08:32,200 Speaker 1: sworn to secrecy. No report was ever written about the event, 139 00:08:32,520 --> 00:08:35,199 Speaker 1: and each person involved was threatened with a court martial 140 00:08:35,240 --> 00:08:37,920 Speaker 1: if they ever told anyone about what they had witnessed. 141 00:08:40,080 --> 00:08:43,280 Speaker 1: Years later, in a letter to a researcher named Leonard Stringfield, 142 00:08:43,440 --> 00:08:45,920 Speaker 1: Jeffrey Morris explained that he would be leaving the Air 143 00:08:45,960 --> 00:08:48,680 Speaker 1: Force soon and could talk more about the incident then 144 00:08:49,120 --> 00:08:52,400 Speaker 1: when he got out. Morrise did in fact speak with Stringfield, 145 00:08:52,640 --> 00:08:57,319 Speaker 1: giving him a military report about the shooting to establish credibility. However, 146 00:08:57,480 --> 00:09:00,040 Speaker 1: the report was a photocopy and not an origin and 147 00:09:00,120 --> 00:09:04,720 Speaker 1: all anyone could have fabricated it, which hurt his credibility. 148 00:09:04,760 --> 00:09:07,680 Speaker 1: But even without the report, Morse and his story did 149 00:09:07,679 --> 00:09:11,199 Speaker 1: have other merits. As recently as two thousand fifteen U. S. 150 00:09:11,320 --> 00:09:15,880 Speaker 1: Navy pilots had documented their experiences with UFOs over American airspace. 151 00:09:16,320 --> 00:09:18,760 Speaker 1: Lieutenant Ryan Graves had been in the Navy for ten 152 00:09:18,840 --> 00:09:23,040 Speaker 1: years and reported seeing strange objects overhead nearly every day. 153 00:09:23,120 --> 00:09:25,920 Speaker 1: They would scream across the sky as high as thirty 154 00:09:26,000 --> 00:09:29,400 Speaker 1: thousand feet without leaving any trails in their wake. Some 155 00:09:29,520 --> 00:09:31,960 Speaker 1: even hovered in place for up to twelve hours, more 156 00:09:32,000 --> 00:09:34,720 Speaker 1: than any man made vessel was capable of at the time. 157 00:09:35,520 --> 00:09:38,920 Speaker 1: One year earlier, in two thousand fourteen, another pilot almost 158 00:09:38,960 --> 00:09:41,719 Speaker 1: flew straight into what he described as a sphere in 159 00:09:41,880 --> 00:09:45,760 Speaker 1: casing a cube. Another spotted something on his radar system 160 00:09:45,840 --> 00:09:48,560 Speaker 1: and infrared camera, but couldn't see it at all with 161 00:09:48,640 --> 00:09:50,960 Speaker 1: the naked eye or through the use of his helmet. 162 00:09:51,000 --> 00:09:56,040 Speaker 1: Cam Ufo encounters have become fairly common occurrences among pilots 163 00:09:56,080 --> 00:09:59,360 Speaker 1: since the nineteen eighties, when radar systems were upgraded to 164 00:09:59,400 --> 00:10:02,600 Speaker 1: pick up small, learn faster aircraft. And while that's not 165 00:10:02,679 --> 00:10:06,559 Speaker 1: to say they're all of alien origin, the military still 166 00:10:06,600 --> 00:10:11,560 Speaker 1: refuses to confirm or deny any of the reports, whether 167 00:10:11,679 --> 00:10:14,520 Speaker 1: or not those reports have been true. At least we 168 00:10:14,559 --> 00:10:18,000 Speaker 1: can all agree on one thing. All of the stories 169 00:10:18,559 --> 00:10:25,120 Speaker 1: are certainly curious. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour 170 00:10:25,280 --> 00:10:29,360 Speaker 1: of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, 171 00:10:29,440 --> 00:10:32,959 Speaker 1: or learn more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast 172 00:10:33,200 --> 00:10:37,240 Speaker 1: dot com. The show was created by me Aaron Manky 173 00:10:37,280 --> 00:10:40,720 Speaker 1: in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make another award 174 00:10:40,760 --> 00:10:44,319 Speaker 1: winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, 175 00:10:44,400 --> 00:10:47,000 Speaker 1: and television show, and you can learn all about it 176 00:10:47,080 --> 00:10:50,640 Speaker 1: over at the World of lore dot com, and until 177 00:10:50,679 --> 00:10:53,480 Speaker 1: next time, stay curious, ye