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Introduction
The key Wisconsin cases include Coral Lorenzen’s early sighting at Barron, the 1961 Eagle River “alien pancakes” case, the Elmwood police-officer sightings of the 1970s, Belleville’s 1987 flap, and the Dundee/Long Lake cluster that helped create UFO Daze. Wisconsin also appears in Project Blue Book-era records and in modern databases such as the National UFO Reporting Center, where reports continue into 2026. [Wisconsin Frights]wisconsinfrights.comWisconsin Frights The Wisconsin Flying Saucer that Changed UFO ResearchWisconsin Frights The Wisconsin Flying Saucer that Changed UFO Research [2Fold3]

Why Wisconsin became a UFO state
Wisconsin’s UFO reputation comes from more than witness reports. It also comes from place-making: small towns turned sightings into annual events, local researchers preserved stories, and radio, newspapers and later web archives gave scattered accounts a second life. Elmwood, Belleville and Dundee have all claimed some version of “UFO capital” status, which matters because those labels helped keep local cases visible long after the original evidence had gone cold. [2bellevillewi.com]bellevillewi.comSource details in endnotes.
That does not mean the claims are all equally strong. A festival, sign or town nickname is evidence of cultural memory, not proof of an anomalous craft. But it does show why Wisconsin is important in state-level UFO history: it is one of the places where UFO reports became part of community identity, tourism and local folklore rather than staying only in military files or specialist newsletters.
The state also has the right geography for repeated sky reports. Large lakes, dark rural areas, aviation corridors, military training activity, hunting and fishing communities, and long winter nights all increase the chance that people will notice unusual lights. Those same conditions also increase the chance of misidentifying aircraft, satellites, meteors, flares, drones, balloons, astronomical objects and distant lights over water. That tension — sincere reports, limited evidence, plausible ordinary explanations — runs through almost every Wisconsin UFO story.
The early thread: Coral Lorenzen and APRO
One of Wisconsin’s most important contributions to UFO history is not a single landing claim, but a researcher. Coral Lorenzen, later a co-founder of the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization, traced her interest in UFOs to a childhood sighting in Barron, Wisconsin, in 1934. In her own later writing, she described the beginning of her UFO interest as occurring on a summer day in Barron when she was nine years old. [Internet Archive]archive.orgSource details in endnotes.
Lorenzen and her husband Jim founded APRO in January 1952 while living in Sturgeon Bay. APRO became one of the best-known civilian UFO organisations of the post-war period, publishing the APRO Bulletin and collecting witness reports at a time when many UFO believers thought official Air Force explanations were too quick or dismissive. [Internet Archive]archive.orgSource details in endnotes.
This matters for Wisconsin because it gives the state a structural role in UFO history. Wisconsin was not merely a setting for alleged sightings; it helped produce one of the civilian networks that shaped how sightings were collected, compared and argued over. Even sceptics of APRO’s conclusions can recognise that its reports, newsletters and case files became part of the documentary backbone of mid-century UFO research.
The weakness is also clear. Lorenzen’s original Barron sighting was a childhood memory, not a multi-instrument case. It cannot be tested now. Its historical importance lies less in proving what crossed the sky in 1934 and more in showing how one experience helped lead to organised civilian UFO investigation.
Eagle River, 1961: Wisconsin’s strangest famous case
The Eagle River case is the Wisconsin UFO story most likely to sound invented at first hearing. On 18 April 1961, Joe Simonton, a retired plumber living near Eagle River, said a craft landed near his property and that short occupants asked him for water. He claimed they were cooking food and gave him several pancake-like objects. The case entered UFO literature because it mixed a close-encounter narrative with alleged physical material. [wxpr.org]wxpr.orgA Northwoods Case for the X-FilesA Northwoods Case for the X-Files
Project Blue Book files exist for the case, and Fold3’s Project Blue Book index lists an April 1961 Eagle River, Wisconsin file. The Center for UFO Studies also preserves case material, including references to a pancake sample, a map, a site drawing, a sheriff’s report and a local newspaper item. [Fold3]fold3.comOpen source on fold3.com.
The strongest point in favour of taking the case seriously as a report is that Simonton appears to have been reluctant rather than publicity-hungry. Local accounts say he kept quiet for several days, then reported it to authorities, after which investigators and journalists disrupted his routine. A second local man, Savino Borgo, has been cited in later retellings as having seen an object in the area at around the relevant time. [wxpr.org]wxpr.orgA Northwoods Case for the X-FilesA Northwoods Case for the X-Files
The strongest point against the case is the material evidence. The “pancakes” were reportedly analysed and found to be ordinary, earthly foodstuffs. That does not explain why Simonton told the story, but it badly weakens the idea that the objects were exotic physical evidence. [wxpr.org]wxpr.orgA Northwoods Case for the X-FilesA Northwoods Case for the X-Files
The fairest reading is that Eagle River is a classic high-strangeness UFO case, not a solved extraterrestrial event. It is historically important because it shows how 1960s UFO reports could combine witness sincerity, local law enforcement, Air Force attention, physical-sample claims and an ending that left believers and sceptics with very different lessons.
Elmwood and the police-witness problem
Elmwood became Wisconsin’s best-known UFO town after a cluster of 1970s sightings, especially those associated with relief police officer George Wheeler. Local historical and tourism sources identify an April 1976 incident at Tuttle Hill in which Wheeler reported a UFO, with several other residents also said to have witnessed related activity. [Pierce County Tours]backroadspiercecounty.comPierce County Tours UFO Sightings (Tuttle HillPierce County Tours UFO Sightings (Tuttle Hill
The Wheeler story is powerful because police witnesses are often treated as more credible than anonymous reports. According to later accounts, Wheeler was on duty when he investigated an orange glow near a quarry, saw a large object and radioed a dramatic message before being found in distress or unconscious in his cruiser. [Milwaukee Magazine]milwaukeemag.comMilwaukee Magazine Stories of Strange and Unusual UFO Sightings in WisconsinMilwaukee Magazine Stories of Strange and Unusual UFO Sightings in Wisconsin
That credibility should not be overstated. A police officer can be honest and still misperceive distance, size, altitude or speed at night. Local retellings have also had decades to sharpen the drama. The case is not equivalent to a modern multi-sensor investigation with radar, calibrated imagery and preserved chain-of-custody evidence.
What makes Elmwood important is the combination of witness status and community aftermath. The sightings helped establish Elmwood UFO Days, and the town’s identity became tied to the story. By 2024, local coverage still described historical displays of newspaper clippings from the 1970s and 1980s, including the famous proposal for a UFO landing pad that became part of Elmwood lore. [Western Wisconsin News]westernwisconsin.newsWestern Wisconsin News45th Annual Elmwood UFO Days Celebration was hot andWestern Wisconsin News45th Annual Elmwood UFO Days Celebration was hot and
Elmwood is therefore best understood as a case cluster with cultural durability. The original sightings remain contested, but the town’s response made them a lasting part of Wisconsin’s UFO map.
Belleville, 1987: when a local flap became a civic ritual
Belleville’s UFO reputation began with sightings in January 1987, reportedly witnessed by a Belleville police officer and Dane County sheriff’s officers. The town’s own public-facing site says the incident attracted national attention and that Belleville now hosts UFO Day on the last Saturday in October. [bellevillewi.com]bellevillewi.comSource details in endnotes.
Later accounts say lights were seen west of Belleville on several occasions by residents and law enforcement, and that UFO investigators Don Schmitt and Richard Heiden of the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies visited the area. One local retrospective says hundreds gathered in Belleville High School to hear investigators discuss the case. [Wisconsin Frights]wisconsinfrights.comWisconsin Frights The Wisconsin Flying Saucer that Changed UFO ResearchWisconsin Frights The Wisconsin Flying Saucer that Changed UFO Research
Belleville’s case is useful because it shows how a “flap” works. A few reports, especially when law enforcement is involved, generate attention. More witnesses come forward. Investigators arrive. Media coverage increases. The town then absorbs the story into public ritual: parades, costumes, local humour and a yearly calendar event. [AP News]apnews.comAP News Wisconsin community remembers strange lights with UFOAP News Wisconsin community remembers strange lights with UFO
The evidence problem is familiar. Public summaries do not provide enough technical detail to determine what the witnesses saw. Night lights can be aircraft, planets, stars, satellites, balloons, reflections, searchlights or combinations of objects seen under unusual conditions. But the Belleville case remains significant because the witnesses were not presented simply as fringe believers; the involvement of local officers gave the reports social weight.
Dundee and Long Lake: a hotspot built from sightings and storytelling
Dundee, near Long Lake and the Kettle Moraine State Forest, has a different flavour from Elmwood and Belleville. Its reputation rests less on one official incident and more on recurring local accounts, gatherings at Benson’s Hide-A-Way, and the annual UFO Daze event associated with Bill Benson. [Cult of Weird]cultofweird.comCult of Weird Dundee, Wisconsin: UFO Capital of the WorldCult of Weird Dundee, Wisconsin: UFO Capital of the World
Reports around Dundee include glowing orbs, triangular or Y-shaped light patterns, objects over Long Lake, alleged crop-circle-like marks, and stories linked to Dundee Mountain. A 2004 UFO Daze account describes a crowd seeing a low, silent object with bluish-green lights and a Y-shaped pattern. [Cult of Weird]cultofweird.comCult of Weird Dundee, Wisconsin: UFO Capital of the WorldCult of Weird Dundee, Wisconsin: UFO Capital of the World
Dundee’s evidential value is mixed. Crowd sightings can be powerful because they reduce the chance of a single-person hallucination or private fabrication. But crowd settings can also increase suggestion, expectation and contagion: if people gather hoping to see UFOs, ambiguous lights may be interpreted through that frame. Photographs of lights over water or dark tree lines rarely establish distance, size or identity unless they include reliable reference points and metadata.
The most cautious assessment is that Dundee is a regional folklore hotspot with repeated witness claims rather than a single landmark solved-or-unsolved case. Its value for Wisconsin UFO history lies in how it sustained a public reporting culture. People came to talk, watch the sky and compare experiences, which is exactly how many local UFO traditions survive.
Project Blue Book and official records
Project Blue Book is essential for understanding Wisconsin UFO reports from the mid-20th century because it was the U.S. Air Force’s main public UFO investigation programme. The National Archives states that Project Blue Book records have been declassified and are available for examination, while also noting that the project closed in 1969 and that the Archives has no information on sightings after that date. [National Archives]archives.govNational Archives Project BLUE BOOKNational Archives Project BLUE BOOK
The Air Force says it investigated UFOs from 1947 to 1969, with Project Blue Book headquartered at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Of 12,618 reports, 701 remained “unidentified” at closure. The Air Force’s stated conclusions were that no investigated UFO showed evidence of a threat to national security, no evidence showed technological principles beyond known science, and no evidence indicated extraterrestrial vehicles. [U.S. Air Force]af.milSource details in endnotes.
For Wisconsin, this means two things. First, some state cases are not just campfire tales; they intersect with official records. The Eagle River file is one example, and Wisconsin Public Radio has highlighted Project Blue Book material involving places such as Eau Claire and Wausau. [Fold3]fold3.comOpen source on fold3.com.
Second, Blue Book’s conclusions should not be treated as a perfect final word. Critics have long argued that Blue Book was under-resourced and sometimes too eager to reduce unexplained cases. Even so, the existence of unresolved files does not by itself prove extraordinary origin. “Unidentified” often means insufficient data, not alien technology.
Modern Wisconsin reports and what databases can tell us
Modern UFO reporting in Wisconsin is dominated by public databases rather than official state investigations. The National UFO Reporting Center provides a browsable Wisconsin index with reports continuing into 2026, including recent entries from Milwaukee, Kiel, DeForest and other places. [nuforc.org]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org.
NUFORC is valuable because it preserves first-hand accounts quickly and openly. It is also limited because most reports are self-submitted and vary widely in quality. A short report of a light moving over Milwaukee is not equivalent to a pilot radar-visual case, and a database count is not a count of verified anomalous objects. NUFORC itself describes its databank as a large independently collected set of UFO/UAP witness reports, not a catalogue of confirmed extraterrestrial events. [nuforc.org]nuforc.orgData Bank | NUFORCData Bank | NUFORC
Recent counts also change depending on the dataset, date and filtering method. One local 2025 analysis using NUFORC figures listed 2,544 Wisconsin sightings since 1947, while another data site using geocoded NUFORC-derived material through 2023 listed 3,234 reported UFO and UAP sightings for Wisconsin. Those differences are a reminder that raw totals should be handled carefully. [Tone Madison]tonemadison.comTone Madison Oddsconsin: UFOs and alien abductionsTone Madison Oddsconsin: UFOs and alien abductions
The best use of modern databases is not to ask, “How many aliens visited Wisconsin?” It is to ask: where do reports cluster, what shapes and behaviours are commonly described, how often are explanations suggested, and which cases include multiple witnesses, images, law-enforcement involvement or other corroboration?
The most common doubts and explanations
Most Wisconsin UFO reports face the same problems seen across the United States: distance is hard to judge at night, bright planets can appear to hover, aircraft lights can seem silent at range, and objects over lakes or rural horizons can be difficult to scale. Drones, satellites, Starlink trains, military flares, meteors, balloons and Chinese lanterns have added more possible explanations in recent decades.
Official UAP work has moved in the same direction: better data, not stronger claims. NASA’s UAP study focused on what data exist, how future data should be collected, and how scientific tools could improve understanding. Its report emphasised the limits of available data, including the fact that high-resolution satellite coverage is not continuous everywhere at all times. [NASA Science]science.nasa.govSource details in endnotes.
The Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office has also argued that many historical claims lack empirical support. Its 2024 historical report found no empirical evidence that U.S. government, academic, private or foreign investigatory efforts had uncovered verifiable information about extraterrestrial beings or craft. [U.S. Department of War]media.defense.govDOPSR 2024 0263 AARO HISTORICAL RECORD REPORT VOLUME 1 2024DOPSR 2024 0263 AARO HISTORICAL RECORD REPORT VOLUME 1 2024
For Wisconsin cases, that national context matters. It does not debunk every witness account. It does mean that a responsible state-level history should avoid turning “unexplained to the witness” into “confirmed non-human craft”. The strongest unsolved cases remain interesting because they resist easy explanation, not because they prove the most dramatic explanation.
How to judge a Wisconsin UFO case
A useful Wisconsin UFO case is not necessarily the weirdest one. It is the one with the best evidence trail. For readers comparing cases, these criteria help separate strong, weak and folkloric material:
- Multiple independent witnesses: A group can still be wrong, but independent reports from different locations are stronger than one anonymous sighting.
- Named, accountable witnesses: Police officers, pilots, dispatchers and local officials can add weight, though they are not immune to error.
- Contemporaneous records: Newspaper reports, sheriff’s notes, Blue Book files, photographs with provenance and dated witness statements matter more than late retellings.
- Physical or instrumental evidence: Radar, calibrated imagery, trace evidence and samples are potentially important only if their chain of custody is clear.
- Good ordinary-explanation checks: Strong investigation asks about aircraft, astronomy, weather, balloons, drones, military exercises, satellites and hoaxes before reaching for exotic interpretations.
- Stability over time: Cases that become more elaborate with each retelling should be treated more cautiously than accounts whose core details remain stable.
On those criteria, Eagle River is historically famous but evidentially weakened by the ordinary analysis of the alleged food sample. Elmwood and Belleville are stronger as social and witness clusters than as technical cases. Dundee is compelling as a living folklore hotspot, but its public evidence is usually too loose to resolve individual sightings.
What Wisconsin adds to wider UFO history
Wisconsin’s UFO history matters because it shows the whole life cycle of American UFO belief at state level. There is an early personal sighting that helped motivate a major civilian research organisation. There is a Blue Book-era close encounter with alleged physical evidence. There are police-witness flaps. There are small towns that turned unsettling reports into festivals. There are modern online databases where new reports keep arriving.
That mixture makes Wisconsin unusually useful for understanding the difference between an incident, an investigation and a legend. An incident is what a witness says happened. An investigation is what can be checked. A legend is what a community remembers, repeats and celebrates. Wisconsin has all three, often layered on top of each other.
The balanced conclusion is not that Wisconsin has been proved to host extraterrestrial craft. It is that the state has produced several durable UFO stories whose significance comes from witness sincerity, official and civilian investigation, local memory and unresolved ambiguity. For a careful reader, the most interesting question is not whether every light was alien or ordinary, but why some reports survived long enough to become part of Wisconsin’s public history while thousands of others faded into the dark.
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to What Really Made Wisconsin a UFO State?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects
Provides historical context for UFO reporting and investigation.
Flying Saucers: the Startling Evidence of the Invasion from O...
Connects to Coral Lorenzen and organized UFO research in Wisconsin.
The Ufo Encyclopedia
Covers many major American UFO cases and researchers connected to Wisconsin history.
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Endnotes
-
Source: fold3.com
Link: https://www.fold3.com/document/8680116/eagle-river-wisconsin-blank-page-73-us-project-blue-book-ufo-investigations-1947-1969 -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/subndx/?id=lWI -
Source: authenticwisconsin.com
Title: Notable Places | Elmwood, Wisconsin
Link: https://authenticwisconsin.com/elmwood.html -
Source: bellevillewi.com
Link: https://bellevillewi.com/ufo/ -
Source: authenticwisconsin.com
Link: https://authenticwisconsin.com/dundee.html -
Source: archive.org
Link: https://archive.org/stream/1966CoralLorenzenFlyingSaucersTheStartlingEvidenceOfTheInvasionFromOuterSpacenotOCR/%281966%29%20Coral%20Lorenzen%20-%20Flying%20Saucers%2C%20The%20Startling%20Evidence%20of%20the%20Invasion%20From%20Outer%20Space%20%28not%20OCR%29_djvu.txt -
Source: archive.org
Link: https://archive.org/details/apro-bulletin -
Source: wxpr.org
Title: A Northwoods Case for the X-Files
Link: https://www.wxpr.org/arts-life/2019-07-24/a-northwoods-case-for-the-x-files -
Source: archives.gov
Title: National Archives Project BLUE BOOK
Link: https://www.archives.gov/research/military/air-force/ufos -
Source: nuforc.org
Title: Data Bank | NUFORC
Link: https://nuforc.org/databank/ -
Source: science.nasa.gov
Link: https://science.nasa.gov/uap/ -
Source: science.nasa.gov
Link: https://science.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/uap-independent-study-team-final-report.pdf -
Source: science.nasa.gov
Link: https://science.nasa.gov/uap/faqs/ -
Source: archives.gov
Link: https://www.archives.gov/research/topics/uaps/photographs -
Source: prologue.blogs.archives.gov
Link: https://prologue.blogs.archives.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/9/2018/03/report.pdf -
Source: archives.gov
Title: nara documents2
Link: https://www.archives.gov/research/foreign-policy/cold-war/1961-berlin-crisis/nara-documents2 -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/ -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/ndx/?id=loc -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/subndx/?id=p260325 -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/sighting/?id=197364 -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/sighting/?id=196051 -
Source: war.gov
Title: dod examining unidentified anomalous phenomena
Link: https://www.war.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/Article/3965403/dod-examining-unidentified-anomalous-phenomena/ -
Source: fold3.com
Link: https://www.fold3.com/document/8407087/williams-bay-wisconsin-blank-page-13-us-project-blue-book-ufo-investigations-1947-1969 -
Source: wisconsinfrights.com
Title: Wisconsin Frights The Wisconsin Flying Saucer that Changed UFO Research
Link: https://www.wisconsinfrights.com/coral-lorenzen-ufo-research/ -
Source: backroadspiercecounty.com
Title: Pierce County Tours UFO Sightings (Tuttle Hill)
Link: https://backroadspiercecounty.com/historic-site/ufo-sightings-tuttle-hill/ -
Source: milwaukeemag.com
Title: Milwaukee Magazine Stories of Strange and Unusual UFO Sightings in Wisconsin
Link: https://www.milwaukeemag.com/stories-of-strange-and-unusual-ufo-sightings-in-wisconsin/ -
Source: westernwisconsin.news
Title: Western Wisconsin News45th Annual Elmwood UFO Days Celebration was hot and ‘
Link: https://westernwisconsin.news/45th-annual-elmwood-ufo-days-celebration-was-hot-and-out-of-this-world/ -
Source: wisconsinfrights.com
Title: Wisconsin Frights UFO Capital of Wisconsin? Explore these 3 UFO Hotspots
Link: https://www.wisconsinfrights.com/wisconsin-ufo-festivals/ -
Source: apnews.com
Title: AP News Wisconsin community remembers strange lights with UFO
Link: https://apnews.com/general-news-48bd7339f9ef4c3aaa367fb0046bdbb8 -
Source: cultofweird.com
Title: Cult of Weird Dundee, Wisconsin: UFO Capital of the World
Link: https://www.cultofweird.com/ufo-sightings/dundee-wisconsin-ufo-capital/ -
Source: wisconsinfrights.com
Title: ufo daze
Link: https://www.wisconsinfrights.com/ufo-daze/ -
Source: af.mil
Link: https://www.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/104590/unidentified-flying-objects-and-air-force-project-blue-book/ -
Source: tonemadison.com
Title: Tone Madison Oddsconsin: UFOs and alien abductions
Link: https://tonemadison.com/articles/oddsconsin-ufos-and-alien-abductions/ -
Source: ufodatalive.com
Link: https://www.ufodatalive.com/states/wisconsin/ -
Source: media.defense.gov
Title: DOPSR 2024 0263 AARO HISTORICAL RECORD REPORT VOLUME 1 2024
Link: https://media.defense.gov/2024/Mar/08/2003409233/-1/-1/0/DOPSR-2024-0263-AARO-HISTORICAL-RECORD-REPORT-VOLUME-1-2024.PDF -
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Project Blue Book
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Blue_Book -
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Aerial Phenomena Research Organization
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerial_Phenomena_Research_Organization -
Source: hardcorezen.info
Title: alien pancakes
Link: https://hardcorezen.info/alien-pancakes/7894 -
Source: mufon.com
Link: https://mufon.com/history/ -
Source: cufos.org
Title: project blue book
Link: https://cufos.org/resources/project-blue-book/ -
Source: slideshare.net
Title: Coral Lorenzen
Link: https://www.slideshare.net/DirkTheDaring11/coral-lorenzen-flying-saucers-the-startling-evidence-of-the-invasion-from-outer-space -
Source: cultofweird.com
Title: wisconsin alien pancakes
Link: https://www.cultofweird.com/ufo-sightings/wisconsin-alien-pancakes/ -
Source: wisconsinfrights.com
Title: elmwood ufo sightings sign
Link: https://www.wisconsinfrights.com/elmwood-ufo-sightings-sign/ -
Source: wisconsinfrights.com
Title: dundee ufo daze documentary
Link: https://www.wisconsinfrights.com/dundee-ufo-daze-documentary/ -
Source: wisconsinfrights.com
Title: Wisconsin UFO Zine
Link: https://www.wisconsinfrights.com/zine/cosmic-encounters/ -
Source: the-sun.com
Title: us air forces secret probe alien pancakes
Link: https://www.the-sun.com/news/7625220/us-air-forces-secret-probe-alien-pancakes/ -
Source: vault.fbi.gov
Link: https://vault.fbi.gov/Project%20Blue%20Book%20%28UFO%29%20/Project%20Blue%20Book%20%28UFO%29%20Part%2001%20%28Final%29/at_download/file -
Source: milwaukeemag.com
Title: milwaukees flying saucer outbreak alien pancakes and other ufo tales
Link: https://www.milwaukeemag.com/milwaukees-flying-saucer-outbreak-alien-pancakes-and-other-ufo-tales/
Additional References
-
Source: youtube.com
Title: WEIRD WISCONSIN: Eagle River & Joe Simonton’s BIZARRE UFO Pancakes
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXw0AN9S_5ASource snippet
The BIZARRE & EERIE tales behind a Wisconsin town's yearly celebration...
-
Source: archivesfoundation.org
Link: https://archivesfoundation.org/documents/50-years-ago-government-stops-investigating-ufos/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/whntnews19/posts/mysterious-lights-a-strange-sight-captured-above-milwaukee-has-created-a-viral-s/10155429232136045/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/MPRnews/posts/a-string-of-lights-that-rolled-across-the-sky-in-parts-of-the-us-on-recent-night/10158745734988591/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/foxokc/posts/aliens-or-no-a-new-batch-of-declassified-pentagon-ufo-materials-is-fueling-fresh/1408666034639929/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/WIONews/posts/are-these-ufosresidents-in-the-us-state-of-wisconsin-have-shared-videos-of-stran/2251715988372357/ -
Source: cufos.org
Link: https://cufos.org/PDFs/cases/1961_04_18_US_WI_Eagle-River_MEBANE_Simonton-CE-III.pdf -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/mirrormuseum/posts/check-it-out-heres-the-actual-scan-of-the-newspaper-article-regarding-the-ufo-tr/1295352799042558/ -
Source: instagram.com
Link: https://www.instagram.com/reel/C0KpEbZO6aw/?hl=en -
Source: instagram.com
Link: https://www.instagram.com/reel/C0KpEbZO6aw/?hl=en-gb
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