Since then, suggestions have been made that the event was sparked by the appearance of a Japanese FU-GO balloon bomb that night. It was crucial that the event - a foreign powers weapon actually reaching the continental United States - be covered up. A similar event occurred in the Pacific Northwest and a several members of a family were killed when they touched something they happened upon on a picnic in the woods. That action triggered the bomb.
On February 25, 1945 citizens in Bigelow, Marshall County, Kansas found a FU-GO balloon bomb. That community is located in NE Kansas south of the Nebraska line but also close to significant military bases in the SE corner of Nebraska (Omaha) and NW Missouri (Kansas City).
[Public Domain. 342-FH-3B23424:
Japanese balloon, Fu-Go, with bombs attached was found near Bigelow,
Kansas, February 23, 1945. Print received August 1945 from Publications
Sec., AC/AS, Intelligence. Used in August 1945 issue of Impact. Copied
August 27, 1945. U.S. Army Air Corps (Air Force) photograph, now in the
collections of the National Archives. (5/26/2015).]
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