Showing posts with label Gallipolis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gallipolis. Show all posts

Monday, July 8, 2024

1897 Gallipolis Phantom Airship

Gallipolis, OH ca. 1914

As previous discussed here on Theresa's Haunted History, 1896-1897 was a huge couple of years for phantom airships flying mysteriously over the continental United States. In April of 1897, the phenomenon finally reached the Ohio Valley, when nearly the whole town of Sistersville, WV saw a strange craft over the town (Sistersville Airship). Two days later, it was reported that 12 foot tall humanoids had invaded the small town of Ogden in Wood County, only about 35 miles south of Sistersville (Ogden Humanoids). But...apparently the phantom airships weren't done traveling South down the Ohio River just yet!

I recently ran across an article published in the Lancaster (Ohio) Eagle-Gazette, dated 31 October 1984. The article relates the experience of Jacob Soden, a man who claimed to have seen a phantom airship over the skies of Gallipolis, OH (directly across the river from Point Pleasant, WV) way back in the year 1897. 

Although no specific date was given, I'm going to tenuously guess that Soden's experience came around the time of the Sistersville airship experience. As the story goes, Soden was coming home from church one Sunday evening. He was downtown, near the Hotel Laska/Gallia Hotel, when he heard a noise like a traction engine blowing steam. He looked up, and about 20 feet over the hotel, he saw what he described as a locomotive with wings, coming out of a train tunnel through a rift in the clouds. The vision temporarily paralyzed him, yet unfortunately he was the only person to have allegedly seen the aerial anomaly. 

So, what do you think? Did Jacob Soden witness the same unexplained aerial phenomena that plagued the citizens of Sistersville in April...or did he witness something else entirely? And why was he the only one to have reported seeing it?  I think its important to point out that Jacob Soden had passed away sometime prior to 1911, so the article in question (which was published in several different newspapers around Ohio) wasn't him reminiscing something that had happened almost 90 years before. Rather, it apparently was quoting an article from the Gallipolis Tribune from the time of the original sighting. 

And...it wouldn't be the only time that Gallipolis was the site of a phantom airship! In 1931, quite a few witnesses saw a phantom airship in both the Gallipolis area and across the river, just outside of Pt. Pleasant (Pt. Pleasant Phantom Airship). I'm not sure what it is about the Ohio River that seems to attract these types of things, but along with Mothman, MIB, and traditional UFOs, we can certainly include phantom airships into the area's collection of High Strangeness! 


Lancaster Eagle-Gazette
31 October 1984



Thursday, April 5, 2018

Gallipolis Hairy Man: A Bigfoot Throwback Thursday

Gallipolis, Ohio is located directly across the Ohio River from Pt. Pleasant, WV---another area filled with ghosts, cryptozoological creatures, and of course, Mothman!  In early January of 1869, however, it wasn't Pt. Pleasant that was the focus of high strangeness. Instead,  the Gallipolis area was buzzing with reports of a Wild Man, or Hairy Man in the area. Not only had it been sighted by several people, but the beast actually ATTACKED a man riding in a carriage with his daughter.  The story was reported in several newspapers around the country, with the clipping below taken from the 23 January 1869 edition of the Minnesota Weekly Record.  This tale is a staple of early tri-state Bigfoot lore, but was it really a Sasquatch...or perhaps a gorilla as suggested in the title of the article?

(Article also found in the Hillsdale Standard)

From Pinterest


I also found this little blurb from a more local publication. It's from the 14 January 1869 edition of the Gallipolis Journal. It's rather interesting---the brief text mentions that the beast hasn't been seen since January 1st---and at that time, THERE WAS MORE THAN ONE?!

Source: Newspapers.com