posted on Oct, 4 2007 @ 01:19 PM
Hi I am new to the forum, though I very much enjoy listening to the show. I am hoping to finish my dissertation next year. It is about American-German
relations around 1900.
The reason I am writing is that I remember reading several threads in which the "Airship Craze of 1897" was referenced. I wanted to weigh in on this
since it is one of the few areas of paranormal research I am able to talk about in a somewhat informed manner. I did some preliminary research because
I was thinking about writing a dissertation on it. I didn't because (if I may be frank) if I am going to invest 5 years of my life to writing the
project, I want to be able to get a job afterwards. I've got a family I need to support. Maybe I can do it in a later book if I'm lucky enough to
get tenure, but it absolutely couldn't be my first. I am not sure what I could really write about it other than a discursive analysis or something
like that. All I could say is that these people claimed to have seen it.
Using random newspaper clippings from the 1890s as one's main primary sourcebase wouldn't really be useful historical data, and are probably
doubtful. Let me tell you why I think any historical account about this would be very difficult to do and probably unconvincing.
1. The late nineteenth century was a very wierd time. If anyone reads local American newspapers during the time (to a lesser extent in the German
press, but still there) it becomes immediately apparent that journalists commonly reported as fact things that I think is safe to say were patently
false. It was very common practice to go to the local town idiots, get them to say something ridiculous, and report it. It was entertainment --
terrible entertainment revealing that society didn't understand mental illness -- but entertainment nonetheless. You did it so the local town people
could laugh and say, "did you see what Old Man Joe said..." Especially in smaller towns were people knew one another. If you go to small town press,
you will constantly find reports about people seeing sea monsters in small mill ponds. There was an airship craze, but in the nineteenth century there
was also similar craze in which people claimed to have invented perpetual motion machines. I would tend to see the airship craze in this context
rather than necessarily seeing it as an objective truth.
2. I've already motioned toward this, but mental illness was simply not understood at the time. No one would have been able to diagnose someone with
schizophrenia, much less treat it with thearpy/medicine/etc. They didn't have the basic language to deal with mental illness, let alone treat it.
There might have been two or three "psychologists" in a state and they either worked at a university or were in charge of an asylum. By the time
crazy people got to them they were already off the deep end (very much so). This was doubly the case in rural areas where even the most basic medicine
was often unavailable. Mental illnesses went untreated (presumably getting worse) until the sufferer killed himself, killed someone else or died. Even
for people in the 1890s who had no biological presuposition to illness could have it foisted upon them by a number of toxins that were simply a part
of daily life in rural America. Lead, Mercury, Arsenic were commonplace. I am not meaning to call every one of these people crazy, but it is an
undeniable fact that most of these sightings occurred in rural areas.
3. The way in which the craze geographically progressed, it seems like a case of mass hysteria. The craze started in Texas and slowly spread north
from there through Kansas and eventually reaching Wisconsin/Illinois/Iowa. Why did the 1897 craze dissappear? After the Spanish American War dominated
the headlines the events quit being reported. Perhaps the Alien visitors feared their ships would be shot down by stray bullets from McKinnley's
skirmishes in Cuba, but I doubt it.
[edit on 4-10-2007 by XBadger]