LET'S GET POWN TO BRASS TACKS ABOUT
"FLYING SAUCERS"
HERE ARE THE FACTS«
More than 20SS of all sightings are classified as "Unknowns." These are
objects seen in our sides that cannot be_ identified as balloons, man-made
aircraft or meteors, and that cannot be attributed to weather or atmospheric
illusions. Neither can they be explained away as hoaxes or hallucinations.
IF THEY ARE NONE OF THESE, THEN WHAT ARE THE
"ILF.O.'S"?
In this meticulously documented book, Edward
Rup-pelt gives first-hand quotes of the opinions of the top military brass, the
most eminent scientists, and hundreds of reputable pilots. Study their comments
carefully—the answers they come up with may well determine humanity's future.
Quotes
from reviews:
"It is without question the most
satisfactory and satisfying evaluation of saucer sightings to appear in
print."
—Cleveland
Plain Dealer
"Ruppelt's
book is an objective, calmly written work that should be in the hands of every
sober student of the UFO mystery."
—Baltimore
Sun
"His investigations, as his writings
indicate, were thorough, unbiased and competent I can think of no one better qualified
to write on the Air Force activities in this regard. His book is a splendid
account of this work, readable and enjoyable. It should be of wide interest to
both the professional and the layman."
-F. C. Durant III, President, International Astronautical Fed.
"Let's face it, this book reviewer is a sucker for 'flying saucers' and with the publication of Ruppelt's book we at long last have something we can get
our teeth into."
—Los Angeles Herald-Express
THE REPORT ON
UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECTS
by
EDWARD J. RUPPELT
Former Head of the Air Force Project Blue
Book
ACE BOOKS, INC. 1120 Avenue of the Americas New York 36, N.Y.
the report on unidentified
flying objects
Copyright ©,
1956, by Edward Ruppelt An Ace Book,
by arrangement
with Doubleday & Co., Inc.
To Elizabeth
and Kris
About
the Author:
From early 1951
until September 1953, Edward J. Ruppelt was
chief of the United States
Air For
e's Project Blue
Book, an operation of
the Air
Technical Intelligence Center. Since
1953 the author has been
in close
contact with the present project staff
and recently
made a trip across the
country to check current
developments. Mr. Ruppelt
is now
a research engineer
for the
Northrop Aircraft Company.
Printed in U.S.A.
FOREWORD
This
is a book about
unidentified flying objects—UFO's—"flying
saucers." It is
actually more than a book;
it is
a report
because it is the first
time that anyone, either military
or civilian, has brought together in
one document
all the
facts about this fascinating subject. With
the exception
of the
style, this report is written exactly
the way
I would
have written it had I been
officially asked to do so
while I was chief of
the Air Force's project
for investigating
UFO reports—Project
Blue Book.
In many instances
I have left
out the
names of the people who reported seeing UFO's, or
the names
of certain
people who were associated with the
project, just as I would
have done in an official report.
For the
same reason I have changed the locale in which
some of the UFO sightings
occurred. This is especially true in chapter
fifteen, the
story of how some of our
atomic scientists detected radiation whenever UFO's
were reported near their "UFO-detection
stations." This policy
of not
identifying the "source,"
to borrow
a term from military intelligence, is insisted on by
the Air
Force so that the
people who have co-operated with them will not get
any unwanted
publicity. Names are considered to be "classified information."
But the greatest
care has been taken to
make sure that the omission of names and changes
in locale
has in
no way
altered the basic facts because this
report is based on the
facts—all of the facts—nothing of significance
has been
left out.
It was only
after considerable deliberation
that I put this report together, because it had
to be
told accurately, with no holds barred.
I finally
decided to do it for
two reasons.
First, there is world-wide
interest in flying saucers; people
want to know the
facts. But more often than
not these
facts have been obscured by secrecy
and confusion,
a situation
that has led to
wild speculation on one end
of the
scale and an almost dangerously blase attitude on the other.
It is
only when all of the facts
are laid
out that
a correct evaluation
can be made.
Second, after spending
two years
investigating and analyzing UFO reports,
after talking to the people
who have
seen UFO's—industrialists, pilots, engineers,
generals, and just the plain man-on-the-street,
and after
discussing the subject with many very
capable scientists, I felt that
I was
in a
position to be able to put
together the complete account of
the Air
Force's struggle with the
flying saucer.
The report has
been difficult to write because
it involves
something that doesn't officially
exist. It is well known
that ever since the first flying
saucer was reported in June
1947 the Air Force has officially
said that there is no
proof that such a thing as
an interplanetary
spaceship exists. But what is not
well known is that this
conclusion is far from being
unanimous among the military
and their
scientific advisers because of the one
word, proof; so the UFO investigations continue.
The hassle
over the word "proof boils down to one
question: What constitutes proof? Does
a UFO have
to land
at the River Entrance to the
Pentagon, near the Joint Chiefs
of Staff offices? Or is it
proof when a ground radar
station detects a UFO, sends
a jet
to intercept
it, the
jet pilot
sees it, and locks on with
his radar,
only to have the UFO
streak away at a phenomenal speed?
Is it
proof when a jet pilot
fires at a UFO
and sticks
to his
story even under the threat
of court-martial? Does this
constitute proof?
The at times
hotly debated answer to this
question may be the answer to
the question,
"Do the UFO's really exist?"
I'll give
you the
facts—all the facts—you decide. July 19S5
E. j. Ruppelt
chapter one
Project
Blue Book and the UFO Story
In
the summer of
1952 a United States Air
Force F-86 jet interceptor shot at
a flying
saucer.
This fact,
like so many others that
make up the full flying
saucer story, has never
before been told.
I know the
full story about flying saucers
and I know that it
has never
before been told because I organized and
was chief of the Air Force's
Project Blue Book, the special
project set up to investigate and analyze unidentified flying object, or UFO, reports.
(UFO is the official term
that I created to replace
the words
"flying saucers.")
There, is a
fighter base in the United
States which I used to visit
frequently because, during 1951, 1952,
and 1953,
it got more than its share
of good
UFO reports.
The commanding officer of the fighter
group, a full colonel and command pilot, believed that
UFO's were real. The colonel believed in UFO's because
he had
a lot
of faith
in his
pilots—and they had chased
UFO's in their F-86's. He
had seen UFO's on the scopes
of his
radar sets, and he knew
radar.
The colonel's
intelligence officer, a captain, didn't
exactly believe that UFO's
were real, but he did
think that they warranted careful investigation.
The logic
the intelligence
officer used in
investigating UFO reports—and in getting
answers to many of them—made
me wish
many times that he worked for
me on
Project Blue Book.
One day the
intelligence officer called me at
my base
in Dayton, Ohio. He wanted to
know if I was planning
to make
a trip his way soon. When
I told
him I
expected to be in his
area in about a
week, he asked me to
be sure
to look
him up.
There was no special
hurry, he added, but he
had something
very interesting to show
me.
When we got
wind of a good story,
Project Blue Book liked to start
working on it at once,
so I
asked the intelligence officer
to tell
me what
he had.
But nothing doing.
He didn't
want to discuss it
over the phone. He even
vetoed the idea of putting it
into a secret wire. Such
extreme caution really stopped me, because
anything can be coded and
put in
a wire.
When I left
Dayton about a week later
I decided
to go
straight to the fighter
base, planning to arrive there
in mid-morning.
But while
I was
changing airlines my reservations got fouled up, and I
was faced
with waiting until evening to
get to the base. I called
the intelligence
officer and told him about the
mix-up. He told me to
hang on right there and
he would fly over and pick
me up
in a
T-33 jet.
As soon as
we were
in the
air, on the return trip,
I called
the intelligence officer on
the interphone
and asked
him what
was going on? What
did he
have? Why all the mystery?
He tried to tell me, but
the interphone
wasn't working too well and I
couldn't understand what he was
saying. Finally he told me to
wait until we returned to
his office
and I
could read the report myself.
Report! If
he had
a UFO
report why hadn't he sent
it in
to Project Blue Book
as he
usually did?
We landed at
the fighter
base, checked in our parachutes,
Mae Wests, and helmets,
and drove
over to his office. There
were several other people
in the
office, and they greeted me
with the usual question,
"What's new on the flying
saucer front?" I talked
with them for a while,
but was
getting impatient to find out
what was on the intelligence
officer's mind. I was just about
to ask
him about
the mysterious
report when he took me to
one side
and quietly
asked me not to mention
it until everybody had
gone.
Once we
were alone, the intelligence officer shut the door,
went over to his
safe, and dug out a
big, thick report. It was the
standard Air Force reporting form
that is used for all
intelligence reports, including UFO
reports. The intelligence officer
told me that this was
the only
existing copy. He said that he
had been
told to destroy all copies,
but had
saved one for me to read.
With great curiosity,
I took
the report
and started
to read.
What had happened at
this fighter base?
About ten
o'clock in the morning, one
day a
few weeks
before, a radar station near
the base
had picked
up an
unidentified target. It was an
odd target
in that
it came
in very
fast-about 700 miles per hour—and
then slowed down to about
100 miles per hour.
The radar
showed that it was located
northeast of the airfield,
over a sparsely settled area.
Unfortunately the radar
station didn't have any height-finding
equipment. The operators knew the
direction of the target and
its distance
from the station but they
didn't know its altitude. They reported
the target,
and two
F-86's were scrambled.
The radar
picked up the F-86's soon
after they were airborne, and had begun to
direct them into the target
when the target started to fade
on the
radarscope. At the time several
of .the operators thought
that this fade was caused
by the
target's losing altitude rapidly
and getting
below the radar's beam. Some of
the other
operators thought that it was
a highflying
target and that it was
fading just because it was
so high.
In the debate
which followed, the proponents of the highflying theory won out, and
the F-86's
were told to go up
to 40,000 feet. But before the
aircraft could get to that
altitude, the target had been completely
lost on the radarscope.
The F-86's continued
to search
the area
at 40,000
feet, but could see nothing. After
a few
minutes the aircraft ground controller called the F-86's and
told one to come down
to 20,000 feet, the other to
5,000 feet, and continue the
search. The two jets made a
quick letdown, with one pilot
stopping at'20,000 feet and
the other
heading for the deck.
The second
pilot, who was going down
to 5,000
feet, was just beginning to pull
out when
he noticed
a flash
below and ahead of him. He
flattened out his dive a
little and headed toward the spot
where he had seen the
light. As he closed on
the spot he suddenly
noticed what he first thought
was a
weather balloon. A few
seconds later he realized that
it couldn't be a balloon because
it was
staying ahead of him. Quite an achievement for a
balloon, since he had built
up a lot of speed in
his dive
and now
was flying
almost straight and level at 3,000
feet and was traveling "at
the Mach."
Again the
pilot pushed the nose of
the F-86
down and started after the object.
He closed
fairly fast, until he came
to within an estimated
1,000 yards. Now he could
get a
good look at the
object. Although it had looked
like a balloon from above, a
closer view showed that it
was definitely
round and flat—saucer-shaped. The pilot describing it as being "like
a doughnut without a
hole."
As his rate
of closure
began to drop off, the
pilot knew that the object was
picking up speed. But he
pulled in behind it and started
to follow.
Now he
was right
on the
deck.
About this time
the pilot
began to get a little
worried. What should he do? He
tried to call his buddy,
who was
flying above him somewhere in the
area at 20,000 feet. He
called two or three times but
could get no answer. Next
he tried
to call the ground
controller but he was too
low for
his radio
to carry that far.
Once more he tried his
buddy at 20,000 feet, but again
no luck.
By now
he had
been following the object for
about two minutes and during this
time had closed the gap
between them to approximately 500 yards.
But this
was only
momentary. Suddenly the object began
to pull
away, slowly at first, then faster. The pilot, realizing
that he couldn't catch it,
wondered what to do
next.
When the
object had traveled out about
1,000 yards, the pilot suddenly made
up his
mind—he did the only thing
that he could do to stop
the UFO.
It was
like a David about to
do battle with a Goliath, but
he had
to take
a chance.
Quickly charging his guns,
he started
shooting. ... A moment later
the object pulled up
into a climb and in
a few
seconds it was gone. The pilot
climbed to 10,000 feet, called
the other
F-86, and now was able to
contact his buddy. They joined
up and
went back to their
base.
As soon
as he
had landed
and parked,
the F-86
pilot went into operations to tell
his story
to his
squadron commander. The mere fact that
he had
fired his guns was enough
to require
a detailed
report, as a matter of
routine. But the circumstances under which the guns
actually were fired created a major
disturbance at the fighter base
that day.
After the
squadron commander had heard the
pilot's story, he called the group"
commander, the colonel, and the
intelligence officer. They heard the pilot's story.
For some
obscure reason there was a
"personality clash," the intelligence officer's term, between
the pilot
and the
squadron commander. This was
obvious, according to the report
I was
reading, because the squadron commander
immediately began to tear the
story apart and accuse the
pilot of "cracking up,"
or of
just "shooting his guns for
the hell
of it and using the wild
story as a cover-up."
Other pilots in
the squadron,
friends of the accused pilot-including
the intelligence
officer and a flight surgeon—were
called in to "testify."
All of
these men were aware of
the fact that in certain instances
a pilot
can "flip"
for no
good reason, but none of them
said that he had noticed
any symptoms of mental crack-up in
the unhappy
pilot.
None, except
the squadron
commander. He kept pounding home his idea—that the pilot
was "psycho"—and
used a few examples of what
the report
called "minor incidents"
to justify
his stand.
Finally the pilot
who had
been flying with the "accused"
man was called in.
He said
that he had been monitoring
the tactical radio channel but that
he hadn't heard
any calls
from his buddy's low-flying
F-86. The squadron commander triumphantly jumped on
this point, but the accused
pilot tended to refute it by
admitting he was so jumpy
that he might not have been
on the
right channel. But when he
was asked if he had checked
or changed
channels after he had lost the
object and before he had
finally contacted the other F-86, he couldn't remember.
So ended the
pilot's story and his interrogation.
The intelligence officer wrote up his
report of a UFO sighting, but at the last
minute, just before sending it,
he was
told to hold it
back. He was a little
unhappy about this rum of events,
so he
went in to see why
the group
commander had decided to delay sending
the report
to Project
Blue Book.
They talked
over the possible reactions to
the report.
If it went out it would
cause a lot of excitement,
maybe unnecessarily. Yet, if the
pilot actually had seen what
he claimed, it was vitally important
to get
the report
in to
ATIC immediately. The group
commander said that he would make
his decision
after a talk with his
executive officer. They decided not to
send the report and ordered
it destroyed.
When I finished
reading, the intelligence officer's first
comment was, "What do you think?"
Since the evaluation
of the
report seemed to hinge upon
conflicts between personalities I didn't know, I
could venture no opinion, except that
the incident
made up the most fascinating
UFO report
I'd ever
seen. So I batted the
intelligence officer's question back
to him.
"I know the
people involved," he replied, "and
I don't
think the pilot was
nuts. I can't give you
the report,
because
Colonel------- told me
to destroy
it. But
I did
think you should
know about it." Later he burned
the report.
The problems involved
in this
report are typical. There are
certain definite facts that
can be
gleaned from it; the pilot
did see something and
he did
shoot at something, but no
matter how thoroughly you investigate the incident
that something can never
be positively
identified. It might have been a
hallucination or it might have
been some vehicle from outer space; no one will
ever know. It was a
UFO.
The UFO
story started soon after June
24, 1947,
when newspapers all over
the United
States carried the first flying
saucer report. The story
told how nine very bright,
disk-shaped objects were seen by
Kenneth Arnold, a Boise, Idaho,
businessman, while he was
flying his private plane near
Mount Rainier, in the
state of Washington. With journalistic
license, reporters converted Arnold's
description of the individual motion of each of
the objects—like
"a saucer skipping across water"—into
"flying saucer," a name for
the objects themselves. In the eight
years that have passed since
Arnold's memorable sighting, the
term has become so common
that it is now in
Webster's Dictionary and is known
today in most lauguages in the
world.
For a while after
the Arnold
sighting the term "flying saucer" was used
to describe
all disk-shaped
objects that were seen flashing through
the sky
at fantastic
speeds. Before long, reports were
made of objects other than
disks, and these were also called
flying saucers. Today the words
are popularly applied to anything seen
in the
sky that
cannot be identified as a common,
everyday object.
Thus a flying saucer
can be
a formation
of lights,
a single
light, a sphere, or
any other
shape; and it can be
any color.
Performance wise, flying saucers can
hover, go fast or slow,
go high or low,
turn 90-degree corners, or disappear
almost instantaneously.
Obviously the
term "flying saucer"
is misleading
when applied to objects of every
conceivable shape and performance. For this reason the
military prefers the more general,
if less colorful name:
unidentified flying objects. UFO (pronounced Yoo-foe) for
short.
Officially the military
uses the term "flying saucer" on only two occasions.
First in an explanatory sense, as when briefing
people who are unacquainted
with the term "UFO": "UFO —you know— flying saucers."
And second
in a
derogatory sense, for purposes
of ridicule,
as when
it is
observed, "He says he saw a
flying saucer."
This second form
of usage
is the
exclusive property of those persons who positively know that
all UFO's
are nonsense.
Fortunately, for the sake
of good
manners if for no other
reason, the ranks of
this knowing category are constantly
dwindling. One by one
these people drop out, starting with
the instant they see
their first UFO.
Some weeks after
the first
UFO was
seen on June 24, 1947,
the Air Force established
a project
to investigate
and analyze
all UFO reports. The
attitude toward this task varied
from a state of near panic,
early in the life of
the project,
to that of complete contempt for
anyone who even mentioned the words "flying saucer."
This contemptuous attitude toward "flying saucer nuts" prevailed
from" mid-1949 to mid-1950. During
that interval many of the people
who were,
or had
been, associated with the project believed
that the public was suffering
from "war nerves."
Early in
1950 the project, for all
practical purposes, was closed out; at
least it rated only minimum
effort. Those in power now reasoned
that if you didn't mention
the words
"flying saucers" the people
would forget them and the
saucers would go away. But this
reasoning was false, for instead
of vanishing, the UFO
reports got better and better.
Airline pilots,
military pilots, generals, scientists, and dozens of other people
were reporting UFO's, and in
greater detail than in reports of
the past.
Radars, which were being built
for air defense, began
to pick
up some
very ususual targets, thus lending technical corroboration
to the
unsubstantiated claims of human
observers.
As a result of
the continuing
accumulation of more impressive UFO reports, official interest
stirred. Early in 1951 verbal orders came down from
Major General Charles P. Cabell, then Director of Intelligence
for Headquarters,
U.S. Air Force, to make a
study reviewing the UFO situation
for Air Force Headquarters.
I had
been back in the Air
Force about six months when
this happened. During the
second world war
I had
been a B-29 bombardier and radar
operator. I went to India,
China, and later to the Pacific,
with the original B-29 wing.
I flew
two DCF's, and some
Air Medals'
worth of missions, got out of
the Air
Force after the war, and
went back to college. To keep my reserve status
while I was in school,
I flew
as a navigator in an Air Force Reserve
Troop Carrier Wing.
Not long after
I received
my degree
in aeronautical
engineering, the Korean War started,
and I
went back on active duty. I
was assigned
to the
Air Technical
Intelligence Center at Wright-Patterson
Air Force
Base, in Dayton, Ohio. ATIC is responsible for keeping
track of all foreign aircraft
and guided missiles. ATIC
also had the UFO project.
I had
just finished organizing a new intelligence group when General Cabell's order to
review past UFO reports came down. Lieutenant Colonel Rosengarten,
who received
the order at ATIC,
called me in and wanted
to know
if I'd
take the job of
making the review. I accepted.
When the
review was finished, I went
to the
Pentagon and presented my findings to
Major General Samford, who had replaced
General Cabell as Director of
Intelligence.
ATIC soon got
the word
to set
up a completely new project for the investigation
and analysis
of UFO
reports. Since I had made the
review of past UFO reports
I was
the expert,
and I
got the
new job.
It was
given the code name Project Blue Book, and I
was in
charge of it until late
in 1953. During this time members
of my
staff and I traveled close to a half a million miles. We
investigated dozens of UFO reports, and
read and analyzed several thousand
more. These included every report ever
received by the Air Force.
For the
size of the task involved
Project Blue Book was always understaffed, even though I
did have
ten people
on my regular staff plus many
paid consultants representing every
field of science. All of
us on
Project Blue Book had Top
Secret security clearances so that security was
no block
in our investigations. Behind this organization
was a
reporting network made up
of every
Air Force
base intelligence officer and
every Air Force radar station
in the
world, and the Air Defense Command's Ground Observer Corps.
This reporting net sent Project
Blue Book reports on every
conceivable type of UFO, by
every conceivable type of person.
What did
these people actually see when
they reported that they had observed
a UFO?
Putting aside truly unidentifiable flying objects for the
present, this question has several
answers.
In many instances
it has
been positively proved that people have reported balloons, airplanes,
stars, and many other common objects
as UFO's.
The people
who make
such reports don't recognize these common
objects because something in their
surroundings temporarily assumes an unfamiliar
appearance.
Unusual lighting
conditions are a common cause
of such
illusions. A balloon will
glow like a "ball of fire" just at
sunset. Or an airplane that
is not
visible to the naked eye
suddenly starts to reflect the
sun's rays and appears to
be a
"silver ball." Pilots in
F-94 jet interceptors chase Venus
in the daytime and fight with
balloons at night, and people
in Los Angeles see weird lights.
On October 8,
1954, many Los Angeles newspapers
and newscasters carried an
item about a group of
flying saucers, bright lights,
flying in a V formation.
The lights
had been
seen from many locations
over Southern California. Pilots saw them while bringing their
airplanes into Los Angeles International Airport, Air
Force pilots flying out of
Long Beach saw them, two CBS
reporters in Hollywood gave an
eyewitness account, and countless
people called police and civil defense
officials. All of them excitedly
reported lights they could not identify.
The next
day the
Air Force
identified the UFO's; they
were Air Force airplanes, KC-97 aerial tankers, refueling B-47
jet bombers
in flight.
The reason
for the weird effect that startled
so many
Southern Califomians was that when the
refueling is taking place a
floodlight on the bottom of the
tanker airplane lights up the
bomber that is being refueled. The
airplanes were flying high, and
slowly, so no sound
was heard;
only the bright floodlights could be seen. Since most
people, even other pilots, have
never seen a night
aerial refueling operation and could
not identify the odd lights they
saw, the lights became UFO's.
In other instances
common everyday objects look like
UFO's because of some
odd quirk
in the
human mind. A star or planet
that has been in the
sky every
day of
the observer's
life suddenly "takes off at high speed
on a
highly erratic flight path."
Or a
vapor trail from a high-flying
jet—seen a hundred times before by
the observer—becomes
a flying
saucer.
Some psychologists
explain such aberrations as being
akin to the crowd behavior mechanism
at work
in the
"bobby-sox craze." Teen-agers don't know why
they squeal and swoon when their
current fetish sways and croons.
Yet everybody else is squealing, so they squeal too.
Maybe that great comedian, Jimmy Durante,
has the
answer: "Everybody wants to get
into the act." I am
convinced that a certain percentage
of UFO
reports come from people who
see flying saucers because others report
seeing them.
But this "will
to see"
may have
deeper roots, almost religious implications, for some people.
Consciously or unconsciously, they want
UFO's to be real and
to come
from outer space. These individuals, frightened perhaps by threats
of atomic destruction, or lesser fears—who
knows what—act as if nothing that
men can
do can
save the earth. Instead, they
seek salvation from outer
space, on the forlorn premise
that flying saucer men, by their
very existence, are wiser and
more advanced than we.
Such people may reason that
a race
of men capable of interplanetary travel have lived well
into, or through, *an atomic age.
They have survived and they
can tell us their secret of
survival. Maybe the threat of
an atomic
war unified their planet
and allowed
them to divert their war effort
to one
of social
and technical
advancement. To such people a searchlight
on a
cloud or a bright star
is an
interplanetary spaceship.
If all
the UFO
reports that the Air Force
has received
in the past eight years could
be put
in this
"psychological quirk" category, Project Blue
Book would never have been
organized. It is another class
of reports
that causes the Air Force
to remain interested in UFO's. This class of
reports are called "Unknowns."
In determining
the identity
of a
UFO, the project based its method
of operation
on a well-known psychological premise. This
premise is that to get
a reaction
from one of the senses there must be a stimulus. If you
think you see a UFO
you must have seen
something. Pure hallucinations are extremely
rare.
For anything
flying in the air the stimulus could be
anything that is normally seen
in the
air. Balloons, airplanes, and astronomical bodies are the commoner
stimuli. Birds and insects are common
also, but usually are seen
at such
close range that they are nearly
always recognized. Infrequently
observed things, such as
sundogs, mirages, huge fireballs, and a host of other
unusual flying objects, are also
known stimuli.
On Project
Blue Book our problem was
to identify
these stimuli. We had
methods for checking the location,
at any
time, of every balloon
launched anywhere in the United
States. To a certain
degree the same was true
for airplanes.
The UFO observer's estimate of where the object was located in the sky helped us to
identify astronomical bodies. Huge files of UFO characteristics, along with up-to-the minute
weather data, and advice
from specialists, permitted us to
identify such things as
sundogs, paper caught in updrafts,
huge meteors, etc.
This determination of the stimuli that
triggered UFO sightings, while not an
insurmountable task, w:is a long,
tedious process. The identification
of known
objects was routine, and caused
no excitement.
The excitement
and serious
interest occurred when we
received UFO reports in which
the observer was reliable
and the
stimuli could not be identified.
These were the reports that
challenged the project and caused me to spend hours
briefing top U.S. officials. These were the reports that
we called
"Unknowns."
Of the several
thousand UFO reports that the
Air Force
has received since 1947,
some 15 to 20 per
cent fall into this category called
unknown. This means that the
observer was not affected by any
determinable psychological quirks and
that after exhaustive investigation the object that was
reported could not be
identified. To be classed as
an unknown,
a UFO report also had to
be "good,"
meaning that it had to come
from a competent observer and
had to
contain a reasonable amount of data.
Reports are often
seen in the newspapers that say: "Mrs. Henry Jones, of 5464 South
Elm, said that at 10:00
a.m. she was shaking her
dust mop out of the
bedroom window when she saw a
flying saucer"; or, "Henry Armstrong was driving between Grundy Center and Reinbeck
last night when he saw a
light. Henry thinks it was
a flying
saucer." This is not a good
UFO report.
This type of
UFO report,
if it
was received
by Project
Blue Book, was stamped
"Insufficient Data for
Evaluation" and dropped into
the dead'
file, where it became a
mere statistic.
Next to
the "Insufficient
Data" file was a file marked "CP."
This meant crackpot.
Into this file went all
reports from people who had talked
with flying saucer crews, who
had inspected flying saucers that had
landed in the United States,
who had ridden in
flying saucers, or who were
members of flying saucer crews. By
Project Blue Book standards, these were not "good" UFO reports either.
But here is
a "good"
UFO reports
with an "unknown"
conclusion:
On July 24,
1952, two Air Force colonels,
flying a B-25, took off from
Hamilton Air Force Base, near
San Francisco,
for Colorado Springs, Colorado.
The day
was clear,
not a cloud in the sky.
The colonels
had crossed
the Sierra
Nevada between Sacramento and Reno
and were
flying east at 11,000 feet
on "Green 3," the
aerial highway to Salt Lake
City. At 3:40 p.m.
they were
over the Carson Sink area
of Nevada,
when one of the colonels noticed
three objects ahead of them
and a little to their right.
The objects
looked like three F-86's flying a_
tight V formation. If they
were F-86's they should have been
lower, according to civil air
regulations, but on a
clear day some pilots don't
watch their altitude too closely.
In a matter of
seconds the three aircraft were
close enough to the B-25 to
be clearly
seen. They were not F-86's.
They were three bright silver, delta
wing craft with no tails
and no
pilot's canopies. The only
thing that broke the sharply
defined, clean upper suface pf the triangular
wing was a definite ridge
that ran from the nose
to the
tail.
In another
second the three deltas made
a slight
left bank and shot by the
B-25 at terrific speed. The
colonels estimated that the speed was
at least
three times that of an
F-86. They got a good look
at the
three deltas as the unusual
craft passed within 400 to 800
yards of the B-25.
When they landed
at Colorado
Springs, the two colonels called the intelligence people at
Air Defense
Command Headquarters to make
a UFO
report. The suggestion was offered that they might _have
seen three F-86's. The colonels
promptly replied that if
the objects
had been
F-86's they
would have easily been recognized as such. The colonels knew what F-86's looked
like.
Air Defense Command relayed the report to
Project Blue Book. An investigation was started at once.
Flight
Service, which clears all military aircraft flights, was contacted and asked
about the location of aircraft near the Carson Sink area at 3:40 p.m. They had no record of the presence of
aircraft in that area.
Since the colonels had mentioned delta wing aircraft, and both the Air
Force and the Navy had a few of this type, we double-checked. The Navy's deltas
were all on the east coast, at least all of the silver ones were. A few deltas
painted the traditional navy blue were on the west coast, but not near Carson
Sink. The Air Force's one delta was temporarily grounded.
Since balloons once in a while can appear to
have an
odd shape, all balloon
flights were checked For both standard weather
balloons and the big 100-foot-diameter
research balloons. Nothing was found.
A quick check on the two colonels revealed that both of them were
command pilots and that each had several thousand hours of flying time. They
were stationed at the Pentagon. Their highly classified assignments were such
that they would be in a position to recognize anything that the United States knows to be flying
anywhere in the world.
Both men had friends who had "seen
flying saucers" at some time, but both had openly voiced their skenticism. Now, from what the colonels said when they were
interviewed after landing at Colorado Springs, they had changed their opinions.
Nobody knows-what the two colonels saw over
Carson Sink. However, it is always possible to speculate. Maybe they just
thought they were close enougb to the three objects
to see them plainly. The objects might have been three F-86's: maybe Flight
Service lost the records. It could be that the three F-86's had taken off to
fly in the local area of their base but had decided to do some illegal
sight-seeing. Fl.'ght Service would have no record of
a flight like this. Maybe both of the colonels had hallucinations.
There is a certain mathematical probability
that any of the above speculative answers is correct—correct for this one case. If
you try
this type of speculation on hundreds of sightings with "unknown"
answers, the probability that the
speculative answers are correct
rapidly approaches zero.
Maybe the
colonels actually did see what
they thought they did, a type of
craft completely foreign to them.
Another good UFO
report provides an incident in
which there is hardly room for
any speculation
of this
type. The conclusion is more simply,
"Unknown," period.
On January
20, 1952,
at seven-twenty
in the
evening, two master sergeants, both intelligence
specialists, were walking down a street
on the
Fairchild Air Force Base, close
to Spokane,
Washington.
Suddenly both men
noticed a large, bluish-white, spherical-shaped object
approaching from the east. They
stopped and watched the object carefully,
because several of these UFO's had been reported by
pilots from the base over
the past few. months. The
sergeants had written up the
reports on these earlier sightings.
The object was
traveling at a moderately fast speed on a
horizontal path. As it
passed to the north of
their position and disappeared
in the
west, the sergeants noted that
it had a long blue tail.
At no
time did they hear any
sound. They noted certain landmarks that
the object
had crossed
and estimated the time
taken in passing these landmarks.
The next day they
went out and measured the
angles between these landmarks in
order to include them in
their report.
When we
got the
report at ATIC, our first
reaction was that the master sergeants
had seen
a large
meteor. From the evidence I had
written off as meteors, all
previous similar UFO reports from this
air base.
The sergeants' report, however, contained one
bit of
information that completely changed the
previous picture. At the time of
the sighting
there had been a solid
6,000-foot-thick overcast at
4,700 feet. And meteors don't
go that
low.
A few quick
calculations gave a rather fantastic
answer. If the object was just
at the
base of the clouds it
would have been 10,000 feet from
the two
observers and traveling 1,400 miles per
hour.
But regardless of the speed, the
story was still fantastic. The object was no jet
airplane because there was no
sound. ' It was not a searchlight
because there were none on
the air
base. It was not
an automobile
spotlight because a spotlight will not produce the type
of light
the sergeants
described. As a double check, however,
both men were questioned on this point. They stated
firmly that they had seen
hundreds of searchlights and spotlights playing on clouds, and
that this was not what they
saw.
Beyond these limited
possibilities the sergeants' UFO discourages
fruitful speculation. The object remains
unidentified.
The UFO
reports made by the two
colonels and the two master sergeants are typical of
hundreds of other good UFO
reports which carry the
verdict, "Conclusion unknown."
Some of
these UFO reports have been
publicized, but many have not. Very
little information pertaining to UFO's
was withheld from the press—if the
press knew of the occurrence
of specific sightings. Our policy on releasing
information was to answer
only direct questions from the
press. If the press didn't know
about a given UFO incident,
they naturally couldn't ask questions
about it. Consequently such stories
were never released. In
other instances, when the particulars
of a UFO sighting were released,
they were only the bare
facts about what was
reported. Any additional information that might have been developed
during later investigations and analyses
was not
released.
There is
a great
deal of interest in UFO's
and the
interest shows no signs
of diminishing.
Since the first flying saucer
skipped across the sky
in the
summer of 1947, thousands of words on this subject
have appeared in every newspaper
and most magazines in
the United
States. During a six-month period in 1952 alone, 148
of the
nation's leading newspapers carried
a total
of over
16,000 items about flying saucers.
During July 1952
reports of flying saucers sighted
over Washington, D.C., cheated
the Democratic
National Convention out of precious
headline space.
The subject
of flying
saucers, which has generated more
unscientific behavior than any
other topic of modern times,
has been debated at
the meetings
of professional
scientific societies, causing scientific
tempers to flare where unemotional
objectivity is supposed to reign
supreme.
Yet these thousands
of written
words and millions of spoken words—all
attesting to the general interest—have
generated more heat than light.
Out of
this avalanche of print and talk,
the full,
factual, true story of UFO's
has emerged
only on rare occasions.
The general
public, for its interest in UFO's, has been paid
off in
misinformation.
Many civilian groups
must have sensed this, for
while I was chief of Project
Blue Book I had dozens
of requests
to speak on the subject of
UFO's. These civilian requests had
to be turned down because of
security regulations.
I did give
many official briefings, however, behind
closed doors, to certain groups associated
with the government—all of them upon
request.
The subject of
UFO's was added to a
regular series of intelligence briefings given
to students
at the
Air Force's
Command and Staff School,
and to
classes at the Air Force's
Intelligence School.
I gave briefings
to the
technical staff at the Atomic
Energy Commission's Los Alamos
laboratory, where the first atomic
bomb was built. The
theater where this briefing took
place wouldn't hold all
of the
people who tried to get
in, so
the briefing was recorded and replayed
many times. The same tiling happened at AEC's Sandia
Base, near Albuquerque.
Many groups in
the Pentagon
and the
Office of Naval Research requested UFO
briefings. Civilian groups, made up
of some of the
nation's top scientists and industrialists,
and formed to study special military
problems, worked in a UFO
briefing. Top Air Force
commanders were given periodic briefings.
Every briefing
I gave
was followed
by a
discussion that lasted anywhere from one
to four
hours.
In addition to
these, Project Blue Book published
a classi-lied monthly report on
UFO activity.
Requests to be put on
distribution for this report
were so numerous that the
distribution had to be restricted
to major
Air Force
Command Headquarters.
This interest was
not caused
by any
revolutionary information that was revealed
in the
briefings or reports. It stemmed only from a desire
to get
the facts
about an interesting subject.
Many aspects of
the UFO
problem were covered in these
official briefings. I would
give details of many of
the better
reports we received, our
conclusions about them, and how
those conclusions were reached.
If we
had identified
a UFO,
the audience was told
how the
identification was made.
If we concluded that the answer
to a'UFO sighting was "Unknown," the audience
learned why we were convinced
it was
unknown.
Among the better
sightings that were described fully
to interested
government groups were: the complete
story of the Lubbock Lights, including
the possible
sighting of the same V-shaped light
formations at other locations on
the same night; the story of
a group
of scientists
who detected
mysterious nuclear radiation when
UFO's were sighted; and all of
the facts
behind such famous cases as
the Mantell incident, the Florida scoutmaster
who was
burned by a "flying saucer," and headline-capturing
sightings at Washington, D.C.
I showed
them what few photographs we had, the majority
of which
everyone has seen, since they
have been widely published in magazines
and newspapers.
Our collection
of photographs was always
a disappointment
as far
as positive
proof was concerned because,
in a
sense, if you've seen one
you've seen them all.
We had
no clear
pictures of a saucer, just an assortment of blurs,
blotches, and streaks of light.
The briefings
included a description of how
Project Blue Book operated and a
survey of the results of
the many
studies that were made of the
mass of UFO data we
had collected.
Also covered were our
interviews with a dozen North
American astronomers, the story of
the unexplained
green fireballs of New Mexico, and
an account
of how
a committee
of six
distinguished United States scientists
spent many hours attempting to answer the question,
"Are the UFO's from outer
space?"
Unfortunately the
general public was never able
to hear
these briefings. For a
long time, contrary to present
thinking in military circles, I
have believed that the public
also is entitled to know the
details of what was covered
in these
briefings (less, of course,
the few
items pertaining to radar that were classified "Secret," and the names of
certain people. But withholding
these will not alter the
facts in any way).
A lot has
already been written on the
subject of UFO's, but none of
it presents
the true,
complete story. Previous forays into the UFO field have
been based on inadequate information and have been
warped to fit the personal
biases of the individual writers. Well
meaning though these authors may be, the
degree to which their books
have misinformed the public is incalculable.
It is
high time that we let
the people
know. .
The following chapters
present the true and complete
UFO story, based on what I
learned about UFO's while I
was chief of Project Blue Book,
the Air
Force's project for the investigation and analysis of UFO
reports. Here is the same
information that I gave
to Secretary
of the
Air Force,
Thomas K. Finletter, to the Air
Force commanders, to scientists and industrialists. This
is what
the Air
Force knows about unidentified flying objects.
You may not
agree with some of the
official ideas or conclusions—neither did a
lot of
people I briefed—but this is
the story.
chapter two
The
Era of Confusion Begins
On September
23, 1947,
the chief
of the
Air Technical
Intelligence Center, one of the
Air Force's
most highly specialized intelligence units, sent a letter
to the
Commanding General of the
then Army Air Forces. The
letter was in answer to the
Commanding General's verbal request to
make a preliminary study of the
reports of unidentified flying objects.
The letter
said that after a preliminary
study of UFO reports, ATIC concluded
that, to quote from the
letter, "the reported phenomena
were real." The letter strongly
urged that a permanent project be
established at ATIC to investigate
and analyze
future UFO reports. It requested
a priority
for the project, a
registered code name, and an
over-all security classification. ATIC's request was granted
and Project
Sign, the forerunner of Project
Grudge and Project Blue Book, was launched. It was
given a 2A priority, 1A
being the highest priority an Air
Force project could have. With
this the Air Force dipped into
the most
prolonged and widespread controversy it has ever, or
may ever, encounter.
The Air Force grabbed the proverbial
bear by the tail and
to this day it hasn't been
able to let loose.
The letter to
the Commanding
General of the Army Air
Forces from the chief
of ATIC
had used
the word
"phenomena." History has
shown that this was not
a too
well-chosen word. But on
September 23, 1947, when the
letter was written, ATIC's intelligence specialists were confident that
within a few months
or a
year they would have the
answer to the question, "What are UFO's?" The question,
"Do UFO's exist?" was never mentioned.
The only
problem that confronted the people
at ATIC
was, "Were the UFO's of
Russian or interplanetary origin?" Either case called for
a serious,
secrecy-shrouded project. Only top
people at ATIC were assigned
to Project
Sign.
Although a formal project
for UFO
investigation wasn't
set up until September 1947, the
Air Force
had been
vitally interested in UFO
reports ever since June 24,
1947, the day Kenneth Arnold made
the original
UFO report.
As Arnold's story
of what
he saw
that day has been handed down by the bards of saucerism, the
true facts have been warped, twisted,
and changed.
Even some points in Arnold's own account of his
sighting as published in his
book, The
Coming of the Saucers, do not
jibe with what the official files say he told
the Air
Force in 1947. Since this
incident was the original
UFO sighting,
I used to
get many
inquiries about it from
the press
and at
briefings. To get the true and
accurate story of what did
happen to Kenneth Arnold on June
24, 1947,
I had
to go
back through old newspaper files, official reports, and
talk to people who had
worked on Project Sign.
By cross-checking
these data and talking to people
who had
heard Arnold tell about his
UFO sighting soon after it happened,
I finally came
up with
what I believe is the accurate
story.
Arnold had
taken off from Chehalis, Washington,
intending to fly to Yakima, Washington.
About 3:00 p.m. he
arrived in the vicinity of Mount
Rainier. There was a Marine
Corps C-46 transport plane lost in
the Mount
Rainier area, so Arnold decided to fly around awhile
and look
for it.
He was
looking down at the ground when
suddenly he noticed a series
of bright flashes off to his
left. He looked for the
source of the flashes and saw
a string
of nine
very bright disk-shaped objects, which
he estimated
to be
45 to
50 feet
in length.
They were traveling from north to
south across the nose of
his airplane. They were flying in
a reversed
echelon (i.e., lead object high with'
the rest
stepped down), and as they
flew along they weaved in and
out between
the mountain
peaks, once passing behind one of
the peaks.
Each individual object had a
skipping motion described by Arnold
as a
"saucer skipped across water."
During the time
that the objects were in
sight, Arnold had clocked their speed.
He had
marked his position and their
position on the map
and again
noted the time. When he
landed he sketched in
the flight
path that the objects had
Hown and
computed their speed, almost 1,700
miles per hour. He estimated that
they had been 20 to
25 miles
away and had traveled 47 miles
in 102
seconds.
I found that
there was a lot of
speculation on this report. Two factions at ATTC had
joined up behind two lines
of reasoning. One side said that
Arnold had seen plain, everyday
jet airplanes
flying in formation. This side's
argument was based on the physical
limitations of the human eye,
visual acuity, the eye's
ability to see a small,
distant object. Tests, they showed, had
proved that a person with
normal vision can't "see" an object
that subtends an angle of
less than 0.2 seconds of arc.
For example,
a basketball can't
be seen at a distance of
several miles but if you
move the basketball closer and closer,
at some
point you will be able
to see it. At this point
the angle
between the top and bottom
of the ball and your eye
will be about 0.2 of
a second
of arc.
This was applied to
Arnold's sighting. The "Amold-saw-air-planes"
faction maintained that since Arnold
said that the objects were 45
to 50
feet long they would have
had to
be much closer than he had
estimated or he couldn't even
have seen them at all. Since
they were much closer than
he estimated,
Arnold's timed speed was all
wrong and instead of going 1,700
miles per hour the objects
were traveling at a speed closer to 400
miles per hour, the speed
of a
jet. There was no reason to
believe they weren't jets. The
jets appeared to have a skipping
motion because Arnold had looked
at them through layers of warm
and cold
air, like heat waves coming from a hot pavement
that cause an object to
shimmer.
The other side
didn't buy this idea at
all. They based their argument on
the fact
that Arnold knew where the
objects were when he timed
them. After all, he was
an old
mountain pilot and was
as familiar
with the area around the Cascade Mountains as he
was with
his own
living room. To cinch this point
the fact
that the objects had passed
behind a mountain
peak was brought up. This
positively established the distance the
objects were from Arnold and
confirmed his calculated 1,700-miles-per-hour speed.
Besides, no airplane can weave
in and
out between
mountain peaks in the
short time that Arnold was
watching them. The
visual acuity factor only
strengthened the "Arnold-saw-a-flying-saucer" faction's
theory that what he'd seen
was a spaceship. If he could see the
objects 20 to 25 miles
away, they must have been about
210 feet
long instead of the poorly estimated 45 to 50
feet.
In 1947
this was a fantastic story,
but now
it is
just another UFO report marked "Unknown."
It is
typical in that if the
facts are accurate, if
Arnold actually did see the
UFO's go behind
a mountain
peak, and if he knew
his exact
position at the time, the UFO
problem cannot be lightly sloughed
off; but there are
always "ifs" in UFO reports.
This is the type of report
that led Major General John
A Samford,
Director of Intelligence for Headquarters,
Air Force,
to make
the following comment during
a press
conference in July 1952: "However, there have remained a
percentage of this total [of all
UFO reports
received by the Air Force],
about 20 per cent
of the
reports, that have come from
credible observers of relatively
incredible things. We keep on being
concerned about them."
In warping,
twisting, and changing the Arnold
incident, the writers of saucer lore
haven't been content to confine
themselves to the incident
itself; they have dragged in
the crashed Marine Corps' C-46. They
intimate that the same flying saucers that Arnold saw
shot down the C-46, grabbed
up the bodies of the passengers
and crew,
and now
have them pickled at the University
of Venus Medical
School. As proof they apply the
same illogical reasoning that they
apply to most everything.
The military
never released photos of the bodies
of the
dead men, therefore there were
no bodies.
There were photographs and there were bodies.
In consideration
of the
families of air crewmen and
passengers, photos of air crashes showing
dead bodies are never released.
Arnold himself seems
to be
the reason
for a
lot of
the excitement that heralded
in flying
saucers. Stories of odd incidents
that occur in this world
are continmlly being reported by newspapers,
but never
on the
scale of the first UFO
report. Occasional stories of
the "Himalayan
snowmen," or the "Malayan
monsters," rate only
a few
inches or a column on the
back pages of newspapers. Arnold's story, if it
didn't make the headlines, at least
made the front page. I
had the
reason for this explained
to me
one day
when I was investigating a series of UFO
reports in California in the
spring of 1952.
I was making my headquarters
at an
air base
where a fighter-bomber wing was stationed.
Through a mutual friend I met one of the fighter-bomber pilots who had known
Arnold. In civilian life the
pilot was a newspaper reporter
and had worked on the original
Arnold story. He told me
that when the story first broke
all the
newspaper editors in the area were thoroughly convinced that the
incident was a hoax, and that
they intended to write the
story as such. The more they
dug into
the facts,
however, and into Arnold's reputation, the more
it appeared
that he was telling the
truth. Besides having an
unquestionable character, he was an excellent mountain
pilot, and mountain pilots are
a breed
of men who know every nook
and cranny
of the
mountains in their area. The most
fantastic part of Arnold's Story
had been the 1,700-miles-per-hour
speed computed from Arnold's timing the objects between two
landmarks. "When Arnold told us how
he computed
the speed,"
my chance
acquaintance told me, "we all
put a
lot of
faith in his story." He went on to say
that when the editors found
out that
they were wrong about the hoax,
they did a complete about-face,
and were very much
impressed by the story. This
enthusiasm spread, and since the
Air Force
so quickly
denied ownership of the objects,
all of
the facts
built up into a story
so unique that papers
all over
the world
gave it front-page space.
There was an
old theory
that maybe Arnold had seen
wind whipping snow along the mountain
ridges, so I asked about
this. I got a
flat "Impossible." My
expert on the early Arnold
era said, "I've lived in the Pacific
Northwest many years and have flown
in the
area for hundreds of hours.
It's impossible to get powder
snow low in the mountains
in June.
Personally, I believe Arnold
saw some
kind of aircraft and they weren't
from this earth." He went
on to
tell me about two other very
similar sightings that had happened
the day
after Arnold saw the
nine disks. He knew the
people who made these sightings and
said that they weren't the
kind to go off
"half cocked."
He offered
to get
a T-6
and fly
me up to Boise to talk
to them
since they had never made
a report to
the military,
but I
had to
return to Dayton so I declined.
Within a few
days of Arnold's sighting, others
began to come
in. On
June 28 an Air Force
pilot in an F-51 was flying near Lake Meade,
Nevada, when he saw a
formation of five or six circular
objects off his right wing.
This was about three-fifteen in the afternoon.
That night
at nine-twenty,
four Air Force officers, two pilots, and
two intelligence
officers from Maxwell AFB in
Montgomery, Alabama, saw a
bright fight traveling across the sky. It was first seen just
above the horizon, and as
it traveled
toward the observers it
"zigagged,"
with bursts of high speed.
When it was directly
overhead it made a sharp
90-degree turn and was
lost from view as it
traveled south.
Other reports
came in. In Milwaukee a
lady saw ten go over her
house Tike blue blazes," heading south. A school
bus driver in Clarion, Iowa, saw
an object
streak across the sky. In a
few seconds
twelve more followed the first one. White Sands Proving Ground in New
Mexico chalked up the first
of the many sightings that this
location would produce when several people riding in an
automobile saw a pulsating light
travel from
horizon to
horizon in thirty seconds. A
Chicago housewife saw one
"with legs."
The week of
July 4, 1947, set a
record for reports that was not
broken until 1952. The center
of activity
was the
Portland, Oregon, area. At
11:00 a.m. a carload of
people driving near Redmond
saw four
disk-shaped objects streaking past Mount
Jefferson. At 1:05 p.m. a policeman was
in the parking lot behind the
Portland City Police Headquarters when he noticed some pigeons
suddenly begin to flutter around as if they were scared. He looked
up and
saw five large disk-shaped
objects, two going south and
three going east. They were traveling
at a
high rate of speed and
seemed to be oscillating about their
lateral axis. Minutes
liter two other policemen,
both ex-pilots, reported three of the same things ■ flying
in trail.
Before long the harbor patrol
called into headquarters. A crew of four
patrolmen had seen three to six
of the
disks, "shaped likeN
chrome hub caps," traveling very fast. They also oscillated
as they
flew. Then the citizens of Portland began to see
them. A man saw one
going east and two going north.
At four-thirty
a woman
called in and had just seen
one that
looked like "a new dime
flipping around." Another man
reported two, one going southeast,
one northeast. From Milwaukee,
Oregon, three were reported going northwest. In Vancouver, Washington, sheriff s deputies
saw twenty to thirty.
The first photo
was taken
on July
4 in
Seattle. After much publicity it turned
out to
be a
weather balloon.
That night a
United Airlines crew flying near
Emmett, Idaho, saw five.
The pilots
report read:
Five "somethings," which
were thin and smooth on
the bottom and rough-appearing on top,
were seen silhouetted against
the sunset
shortly after the plane took
off from
Boise at 8:04 p.m. We
saw them
clearly. We followed them in
a northeasterly direction for
about 45 miles. They finally
disappeared. We were unable to
tell whether they outsped us or
disintegrated. We can't say
whether they were "smearlike,"
oval, or anything else
but whatever
they were they were not
aircraft, clouds or smoke.
Civilians did
not have
a comer
on the
market. On July 6 a staff sergeant in Birmingham, Alabama, saw several "dim,
glowing lights" speeding across
the sky
and photographed
one of them. Also on the
sixth the crew of an
Air Force
B-25 saw a bright,
disk-shaped object 'low at nine
o'clock." This is one
of the
few reports
of an
object lower than the aircraft. At Fairfield-Suisun AFB in
California a pilot saw something travel three quarters of
the way
across the sky in a few
seconds. It, too, was oscillating
on its
lateral axis.
According to the
old hands
at ATIC,
the first
sighting that really made the Air
Force take a deep interest
in UFO's
occurred on July 8
at Muroc Air Base (now Edwards
AFB), the supersecret Air Force test center
in the
Mojave Desert of California. At 10:10
a.m. a test pilot was running
up the
engine of the then
new XP-84
in preparation
for a
test flight. He happened to look
up and
to the
north he saw what first appeared to be a
weather balloon traveling in a
westerly direction. After watching
it a
few seconds,
he changed
his mind. He had been briefed
on the
high-altitude winds, and the object he
saw was
going against the wind. Had
it been
the size of a
normal aircraft, the test pilot
estimated that it would have been
at 10,000
to 12,000
feet and traveling 200 to 225
miles per hour. He described
the object
as being
spherically shaped and yellowish
white in color.
Ten minutes
before this several other officers
and airmen
had seen
three objects. They were similar
except they had more of a
silver color. They were also
heading in a westerly direction.
Two hours
later a crew of technicians
on Rogers
Dry Lake,
adjacent to Muroc Air Base,
observed another UFO. Their report went as follows:
On the
8 July
1947 at 11:50 we were
sitting in an observation truck located in Area
number 3, Rogers Dry Lake.
We were gazing upward
toward a formation of two P-82's and an
A-26 aircraft flying at 20,000
feet. They were preparing to carry out a
seat-ejection experiment. We observed a
round object, white aluminum
color, which at first resembled
a parachute
canopy. Our first impression was that a premature ejection of the seat
and dummy
had occurred
but this was not
the case.
The object
was lower
than 20,000 feet, and was falling
at three
times the rate observed for
the test parachute, which ejected thirty seconds
after we first saw the object.
As the
objefct fell it
drifted slightly north of due west
against the prevailing wind. The
speed, horizontal motion, could not
be determined,
but it
appeared to be slower than the
maximum velocity F-80 aircraft.
As this object
descended through a low enough
level to permit observation of its
lateral silhouette, it presented a
distinct oval-shaped outline, with
two projections
on the
upper surface which might
have been thick fins or
nobs. These crossed
each other at intervals, suggesting either rotation or
oscillation of slow type.
No smoke,
flames, propeller arcs, engine noise,
or other
plausible or visible means
of propulsion
were noted. The color was silver,
resembling an aluminum-painted fabric, and did not appear as
dense as a parachute canopy.
When the object
dropped to a level such
that it came into line of
vision of the mountain tops,
it was
lost to the vision of the observers.
It is estimated
that the object was in
sight about 90 seconds. Of
the five
people sitting in the observation
truck, four observed this object.
The following
is our
opinion about this object:
It was man-made,
as evidenced
by the
outline and functional appearance.
Seeing this
was not
a hallucination
or other
fancies of sense.
Exactly four
hours later the pilot of
an F^Sl was flying at 20,000 feet
about 40 miles south of
Muroc Air Base
when he sighted a "flat object of
a light-reflecting
nature." He reported that it had
no vertical
fin or
wings. When he first saw it,
the object
was above
him and
he tried
to climb
up to it, but his F-51
would not climb high enough.
All air
bases in the area
were contacted but they had
no aircraft
in the area.
By the
end of
July 1947 the UFO security
lid was
down tight. The few members of
the press
who did
inquire about what the Air Force
was doing
got the
same treatment that you would get
today if you inquired about
the number
of thermonuclear weapons
stock-piled in the U.S.'s atomic
arsenal. No one, outside of
a few
high-ranking officers in the Pentagon, knew what the people
in the
barbed-wire enclosed Quonset huts that housed
the Air
Technical Intelligence Center were
thinking or doing.
The memos and
correspondence that Project
Blue Book inherited from the old
UFO projects
told the story of the
early flying saucer era.
These memos and pieces of
correspondence showed that
the UFO
situation was considered to be serious;
in fact,
very serious. The paper work
of that
period also indicated the
confusion that surrounded the investigation;
confusion almost to the point
of panic.
The brass
wanted an answer quickly,
and people
were taking off in all directions.
Everyone's theory was as good
as the
next and each person with any
weight at ATIC was plugging
and investigating his own
theory. The ideas as to
the origin
of the UFO's fell into two
main categories, earthly and non-earthly.
In the
earthly category the Russians led,
with the U.S. Navy and their
XF-5-U-1, the "Flying Flapjack," pulling a not too
close second. The desire to
cover all leads was graphically pointed up by a
personal handwritten note I found in
a file.
It was
from ATIC's chief to a
civilian intelligence specialist. It said, "Are you
positive that the Navy junked the XF-5-U-1 project?" The non-earthly category ran the gamut of theories,
with space animals trailing interplanetary
craft about the same distance
the Navy
was behind
the Russians.
This confused
speculation lasted only a few
weeks. Then the investigation narrowed down
to the
Soviets and took off on a
much more methodical course of
action.
When World War
II ended,
the Germans
had several
radical types of aircraft
and guided
missiles under development. The majority
of these
projects were in the most
preliminary stages but they were
the only
known craft that could even approach
the performance
of the
objects reported by UFO observers. Like the Allies, after
World War II the Soviets had obtained complete sets
of data
on the
latest German developments. This, coupled with
rumors that the Soviets were franctically developing the German ideas,
caused no small degree of alarm.
As more
UFO's were observed near the Air
Force's Muroc Test Center, the Army's
White Sands Proving Ground, and atomic
bomb plants, ATIC's efforts became more
concentrated.
Wires were
sent to intelligence agents in
Germany requesting that they find
out exactly
how much
progress has been made on the
various German projects.
The last possibility,
of course,
was that
the Soviets
had discovered some completely
new aerodynamic
concept that would give saucer performance.
While ATIC technical
analysts were scouring the United
States for data on
the German
projects and the intelligence agents in Germany were seeking
out the
data they had been asked for, UFO reports continued
to flood
the country.
The Pacific Northwest still led with
the most
sightings, but every state in the
Union was reporting a few
flying saucers.
At first there
was no
co-ordinated
effort to collect data on
the UFO reports. Leads
would come from radio reports
or newspaper items. Military intelligence agencies outside of ATIC were
hesitant to investigate on their
own initiative
because, as is so typical
of the
military, they lacked specific orders. When no orders were
forthcoming, they took this to
mean that the military
had no
interest in the UFO's. But
before long this placid
attitude changed, and changed drastically.
Classified orders came down to
investigate all UFO sightings. Get
every detail and send it
direct to ATIC at Wright Field.
The order
carried no explanation as to
why the information was wanted. This
lack of an explanation and the fact that the
information was to be sent
direcdy to a
high-powered intelligence group within
Air Force
Headquarters stirred the imagination of every potential cloak-and-dagger
man in
the military
intelligence system. Intelligence people
in the
field who had previously been free with opinions now clammed up tight.
The era of
confusion was progressing. Early statements to the press, which
shaped the opinion of the public,
didn't reduce the confusion factor.. While ATIC was grimly
expending maximum effort in a
serious study, "certain high-placed
officials" were officially
chuckling at the mention of UFO's.
In July 1947
an International
News Service wire story quoted the public relations officer
at Wright
Field as saying, "So far
we haven't
found anything to confirm that
saucers exist. We don't
think they are guided missiles."
He went
on to say, "As things are
now, they appear to be
either a phenomenon or a
figment of somebody's imagination."
A few
weeks later a lieutenant colonel who was Assistant
to the Chief of Staff of
the Fourth
Air Force,
was widely
quoted as saying, "There
is no
basis for belief in flying
saucers in the Tacoma era
[referring to a UFO sighting
in the
area of Tacoma, Washington],
or any
other area."
The "experts,"
in their
stories of saucer lore, have
said that these brush-offs of the
UFO sightings
were intentional smoke screens
to cover
the facts
by adding
confusion. This is not true; it
was merely
a lack
of co-ordination.
But had
the Air
Force tried to throw
up a
screen of confusion, they couldn't have done a better job.
When the lieutenant
colonel from the Fourth Air
Force made his widely publicized denunciation of saucer believers
he specifically
mentioned a UFO report from
the Ta-coma,
Washington, area.
The report of
the investigation
of this
incident, the Maury Island Mystery, was
one of
the most
detailed reports of the early UFO
era. The report that we
had in
our files
had been pieced together by Air
Force Intelligence and other agencies because the two intelligence
officers who started the investigation couldn't finish it. They
were dead.
For the Air
Force the story started on
July 31, 1947, when Lieutenant Frank Brown, an intelligence
agent at Hamilton AFB, California, received a long-distance phone call. The caller was a man whom
111 call
Simpson, who had met Brown
when Brown investigated an earlier UFO sighting,
and he
had a hot lead on another
UFO incident.
He had
just talked to two Tacoma Harbor
patrolmen. One of them had
seen six UFO's hover over his
patrol boat and spew out
chunks of odd metal. Simpson had
some of the pieces of
the metal.
The story sounded
good to Lieutenant Brown, so
he reported
it to
his chief.
His chief
OK'd a trip and within
an hour Lieutenant Brown and Captain
Davidson were flying to Tacoma in
an Air
Force B-25. When they arrived
they met Simpson and an airline
pilot friend of his in
Simpson's hotel room. After
the usual
round of introductions Simpson told Brown and Davidson that
he had
received a letter from a Chicago
publisher asking him, Simpson, to
investigate this case. The publisher had
paid him $200 and wanted
an exclusive
on the
story, but things were getting
too hot,
Simpson wanted the military to
take over.
Simpson went on
to say
that he had heard about
the experience
off Maury
Island but that he wanted
Brown and Davidson to hear it
firsthand. He had called the
two harbor
patrolmen and they were
on their
way to
the hotel.
They
arrived and they told
their story. —
111 call these
two men
Jackson and Richards although these aren't their real names.
In June, 1947.
Jackson said, his crew, his son,
and the
son's dog were on his
patrol boat patrolling near Maury Island,
an island
in Puget
Sound, about 3 miles from Tacoma.
It was
a gray
day, with a solid cloud deck down at about
2,500 feet. Suddenly everyone on
the boat noticed six
"doughnut-shaped" objects, just
under the clouds, headed toward the
boat. They came closer and
closer, and when they were abqut 500 feet over the
boat they stopped. One of the
doughnut-shaped objects seemed
to be
in trouble as the
other five were hovering around
it. They
were close, and everybody
got a
good look. The UFO's were about 100 feet in
diameter, with the "hole in the doughnut" "being about 25 feet in
diameter. They were a silver color and made absolutely no noise. Each object
had large portholes around the edge.
As the five
UFO's circled the sixth, Jackson
recalled, one of them came in
and appeared
to make
contact with the disabled craft. The
two objects
maintained contact for a few minutes, then began
to separate.
While this was going on, Jackson
was taking
photos. Just as they began
to separate,
there was a dull
"thud" and the
next second the UFO began to
spew out sheets of very
light metal from the hole
in the center. As these were
fluttering to the water, the
UFO began to throw
out a
harder, rocklike material. Some of it
landed on the beach of Maury
Island. Jackson took his crew and
headed toward the beach of Maury
Island, but not before the boat
was damaged,
his son's
arm had
been injured, and the dog killed.
As they
reached the island they looked up and saw that
the UFO's
were leaving the area at high
speed. The harbor patrolman went
on to
tell how he scooped up several
chunks of the metal from
the beach
and boarded the patrol
boat. He tried to use
his radio
to summon aid, but for some
unusual reason the interference was so bad he couldn't
even call the three miles
to his
headquarters in Tacoma. When they
docked at Tacoma, Jackson got first aid for his
son and
then reported to his superior
officer, Richards, who, Jackson
added to his story, didn't
believe the tale. He didn't
believe it until he went
out to
the island himself and saw the
metal. Jackson agreed.
Jackson's trouble wasn't
over. The next morning a
mysterious visitor told Jackson to
forget what he'd seen.
Later that same
day the
photos were developed. They showed the six objects, but
the film
was badly
spotted and fogged, as if the
film had been exposed to
some kind of radiation.
Then Simpson told
about his brush with mysterious
callers. He said that Jackson was
not alone
as far
as mysterious
callers were concerned, the Tacoma newspapers had been getting calls from
an anonymous
tipster telling exactly what was going
on in
Simpson's hotel room. This was
a very
curious situation because no one
except Simpson, the airline pilot,
and the two harbor
patrolmen knew what was taking
place. The room had even been
thoroughly searched for hidden microphones.
That is the
way the
story stood a few hours
after Lieutenant Brown and Captain
Davidson arrived in Tacoma.
After asking Jackson
and Richards
a few
questions, the two intelligence agents left,
reluctant even to take any
of the fragments. As some writers
who have
since written about this incident have
said, Brown and Davidson seemed
to be anxious to leave and
afraid to touch the fragments
of the UFO, as if they
knew something more about them.
The two officers went to McChord AFB, near Tacoma, where
their B-25 was parked,
held a conference with the
intelligence officer at McChord, and
took off for their home
base, Hamilton. When they
left McChord they had a good
idea as. to the
identity of the UFO's. Fortunately
they told the McChord
intelligence officer what they had
determined from their interview.
In a few hours
the two
officers were dead. The B-25
crashed near Kelso, Washington.
The crew
chief and a passenger had parachuted
to safety.
The newspapers
hinted diat
the airplane
was sabotaged
and that
it was
carrying highly classified material. Authorities at McChord AFB confirmed this latter
point, the airplane
was carrying
classified material.
In a few
days the newspaper publicity on
the crash
died down, and the Maury Island
Mystery was never publicly solved.
Later reports say
that the two harbor patrolmen
mysteriously disappeared soon after the
fatal crash.
They should have
disappeared, into Puget Sound. The
whole Maury Island Mystery
was a
hoax. The first,
possibly the second-best, and the dirtiest
hoax in the UFO history. One passage
in the
detailed official report of the
Maury Island Mystery says:
Both (the two
harbor patrolmen) admitted that the
rock fragments
had nothing
to do
with flying saucers. The
whole thing was a
hoax. They had sent in
the rock
frag-
ments [to
a magazine
publisher] as a joke. -------------------- One of the
patrolmen wrote
to ---------- [the
publisher] stating that the rock
could have been part of a
flying saucer. He had said
the
rock came
from a flying saucer because
that's what----------------------
[the
publisher] wanted
him to
say.
The publisher,
mentioned above, who, one of
the two
hoaxers said, wanted him
to say
that the rock fragments had come from a flying
saucer, is the same one
who paid
the man I called
Simpson $200 to investigate the case.
The report
goes on to explain more
details of the incident. Neither one of the
two men
could ever produce the photos. They "misplaced"
them, they said. One of
them, I forget which, was the
mysterious informer who called the
newspapers to report the
conversations that were going on
in the hotel room. Jackson's mysterious
visitor didn't exist. Neither of the
men was
a harbor
patrolman, they merely owned a couple
of beat-up
old boats
that they used to salvage
floating lumber from Puget Sound.
The airplane
crash was one of those unfortunate
things. An engine caught on
fire, burned off, and
just before the two pilots
could get out, the wing and
tail tore off, making it
impossible for them to escape. The
two dead
officers from Hamilton AFB smelled a hoax, accounting for their short interview
and hesitancy in bothering to take
the "fragment."
They confirmed their convictions when they talked to
the intelligence
officer at McChord. It had already
been established, through an
informer, that the fragments were
what Brown and Davidson thought,
slag. The classified material on
the B-25
was a file of reports the
two officers
offered to take back to
Hamilton and had nothing
to do
with the Maury Island Mystery, or better, the Maury
Island Hoax.
Simpson and
his airline
pilot friend weren't told about
the hoax for one reason. As
soon as it was discovered
that they had been "taken," thoroughly, and were not
a party
to the
hoax, no one wanted
to embarrass
them.
The majority
of the
writers of saucer lore have
played this sighting to the hilt,
pointing out as their main
premise the fact that the story
must be true because the
government never openly exposed
or prosecuted
either of the two hoaxters. This is a logical
premise, but a false one.
The reason
for the thorough investigation of the
Maury Island Hoax was that the
government had thought seriously of
prosecuting the men. At
the last
minute it was decided, after
talking to the two men, that
the hoax
was a
harmless joke that had mushroomed, and that the loss
of two
lives and a B-25 could not be directly blamed
on the
two men.
The story
wasn't even printed because
at the
time of the incident, even
though in this case
the press
knew about it, the facts
were classed as evidence. By the
time the facts were released
they were yesterday's news. And nothing
is deader
than yesterday's news.
As 1947
drew to a close, the
Air Force's
Project Sign had outgrown its initial
panic and had settled down
to a
routine operation. Every intelligence
report dealing with the Germans'
World War II aeronautical research had been studied
to find out if
the Russians
could have developed any of
the late German designs into flying
saucers. Aerodynamicists at ATIC
and at
Wright Field's Aircraft Laboratory computed the maximum performance
that could be expected from
the German designs. The
designers of the aircraft themselves-
were contacted. "Could the Russians
develop a flying saucer from their
designs?" The answer
was, "No, there was no conceivable way any
aircraft could perform that would
match the reported maneuvers
of the
UFO's." The Air Force's Aeromedical Laboratory concurred. If the aircraft
could be built, the
human body couldn't stand the
violent maneuvers that were
reported. The aircraft-structures
people seconded this, no material known could stand the loads
of the reported maneuvers and heat
of the
high speeds.
Still convinced that
the UFO's
were real objects, the people
at ATIC
began to change their thinking.
Those who were convinced that the
UFO's were of Soviet origin
now began to eye outer space,
not because
there was any evidence that
the UFO's
did come
from outer space but because
they were convinced that UFO's
existed and only some unknown race
with a highly developed state
of technology
could build such vehicles. As
far as
the effect
on the human body was concerned,
why couldn't
these people, whoever they might be,
stand these horrible maneuver forces? Why judge them by
earthly standards? I found a
memo to this effect
was in
the old
Project Sign files.
Project Sign ended
1947 with a new problem.
How do
you collect interplanetary intelligence? During World War
II the organization that was ATIC's
forerunner, the Air Matériel Command's secret "T-2," had developed highly effective
means of wringing out every
possible bit of information about the technical aspects
of enemy
aircraft. ATIC knew these methods, but
how could
this be applied to spaceships?
The problem was tackled
with organized confusion.
If the confusion
in the
minds of Air Force people
was organized the confusion in the
minds of the public was
not. Publicized statements regarding the UFO were
conflicting.
A widely printed
newspaper release, quoting an unnamed
Air Force
official in the Pentagon, said:
The "flying
saucers" are one of three
things:
1.
Solar reflections on low-hanging clouds.
2.
Small meteors that
break up, their crystals catching
the rays of the
sun.
3.
Icing conditions could have formed large
hailstones and they might
have flattened out and glided.
A follow-up,
which quoted several scientists, said in essence that
the unnamed
Air Force
official was crazy. Nobody had
ever heard of crystallized meteors, or huge, flat
hailstones, and the solar-reflection theory was absurd.
Life,
Time, Newsweek, and many other
news magazines carried articles
about the UFO's. Some were
written with tongue in cheek, others
were not. AH the articles
mentioned the Air Force's mass-hysterical induced hallucinations.
But a
Veteran's Administration psychiatrist publicly pooh-poohed this.
"Too many people are seeing
things," he said.
It was widely
suggested that all the UFO's
were meteors. Two Chicago astronomers queered this. Dr. Gerard
Kuiper, director of the University of Chicago observatory, was quoted as flatly saying
the UFO's
couldn't be meteors. "They are probably man-made,"
he told
the Associated
Press. Dr. Oliver Lee, director
of Northwestern
University's observatory, agreed with
Dr. Kuiper and he threw in
an additional
confusion factor that had been
in the
back of many people's minds. Maybe they were our
own aircraft.
The government had been denying that
UFO's belonged to the U.S. from
the first,
but Dr.
Vannevar Bush, the
world-famous scientist, and Dr. Merle
Tuve, inventor
of the
proximity fuse, added their weight.
"Impossible," they said.
All of this
time unnamed Air Force officials
were disclaiming serious interest in
the UFO
subject. Yet every time a newspaper
reporter went out to interview
a person
who had seen a UFO, intelligence
agents had already been flown
in, gotten the detailed
story complete with sketches of
the UFO, and sped
back to their base to
send the report to Project Sign.
Many people had supposedly been "warned" not
to talk
too much.
The Air
Force was mighty interested in hallucinations.
Thus 1947
ended with various-sized question marks
in the mind of the public.
If you
followed flying saucers closely the
question mark was big, if
you just
noted the UFO story titles in
the papers
it was
smaller, but it was there
and it was growing. Probably none
of the
people, military or civilian, who had
made the public statements were at
all qualified to do so but
they had done it, their
comments had been printed, and their
comments had been read. Their
comments formed the question
mark.
chapter three
The Classics
1948 was
only one hour
and twenty-five
minutes old when a gentleman from
Abilene, Texas, made the first
UFO report
of the
year. What he
saw, "a fan-shaped glow" in the sky, was insignificant
as far
as UFO
reports go, but it ushered
in a year that was to
bring feverish activity to Project
Sign.
With the Soviets
practically eliminated as a UFO
source, the idea of interplanetary spaceships was becoming more
popular. During 1948 the
people in ATIC were openly
discussing the possibility of interplanetary visitors without
others tapping their heads
and looking
smug. During 1948 the novelty of
UFO's had worn off for
the press
and every
John and Jane Doe
who saw
one didn't
make the front page as in
1947. Editors were becoming hardened,
only a few of the best
reports got any space. Only
"The Classics" rated headlines.
"The Classics" were three historic
reports that were the highlights of 1948. They are
called "The Classics," a
name given them by the
Project Blue Book staff, because: (1) they are classic
examples of how the true
facts of a UFO
report can be twisted and
warped by some writers to prove
their point, (2) they are
the most
highly publicized reports of
this early era of the
UFO's and (3) they "proved" to ATIC's
intelligence specialists that UFO's were
real.
The apparent
lack of interest in UFO
reports by the press was not
a true
indication of the situation. I later found out,
from talking to writers,
that all during 1948 the
interest in UFO's was running high.
The Air
Force Press Desk in the Pentagon
was continually
being asked what progress was
being made in the
UFO investigation.
The answer
was, "Give us time. This job
can't be done in a
week." The press respected this and was giving
them time. But every writer
worth his salt has
contacts, those "usually reliable sources"
you read about, and
these contacts were talking. All
during 1948 contacts in the
Pentagon were telling how UFO
reports were rolling in
at the
rate of several per day
and how ATIC UFO investigation teams were flying out
of Dayton to investigate them. They
were telling how another Air Force investigative organization had been called in
to lighten ATIC's load and allow
ATIC to concentrate on the
analysis of the reports.
The writers
knew this was true because
they had crossed paths
with these men whom they
had mistakenly
identified as FBI agents. The
FBI was
never officially interested in
UFO sightings.
The writers'
contacts in the airline industry
told about the UFO talk
from V.P.'s down to the ramp
boys. Dozens of good, solid,
reliable, experienced airline pilots
were seeing UFO's. All of
this led to one conclusion:
whatever the Air Force had
to say,
when it was ready to talk,
would be newsworthy. But the
Air Force
wasn't ready to talk.
Project Sign personnel
were just getting settled down
to work after the New Year's
holiday when the "ghost rockets" came back
to the
Scandinavian countries of Europe. Air
attaches in Sweden, Denmark,
and Norway
fired wires to ATIC telling about
the reports.
Wires went back asking for
more information.
The "ghost rockets," so tagged by
the newspapers,
had first been seen in the
summer of 1946, a year
before the first UFO sighting in
the U.S.
There were many different descriptions for the
reported objects. They were usually
seen in the hours of darkness
and almost
always traveling at extremely high speeds. They were
shaped like a ball or
projectile, were a
bright green, white, red, or
yellow and sometimes made sounds. Like
their American cousins, they were
always so far away
that no details could be
seen. For no good reason, other
than speculation and circulation, the newspapers had soon begun
to refer
authoritatively to these
"ghost rockets" as guided
missiles, and implied that they
were from Russia. Peenemünde, the great German missile development
center and birthplace of the
V-l and
V-2 guided
missiles, came in for
its share
of suspicion
since it was held by the
Russians. By the end of
the summer
of 1946 the reports were widespread,
coming from Denmark, Norway, Spain, Greece, French Morocco, Portugal,
and Turkey.
In 1947, after no definite conclusions as to
identity of the "rockets"
had been
established, the reports died out.
Now in early January 1948 they broke out again. But Project
Sign personnel were too
busy to worry about European
UFO reports, they were busy at
home. A National Guard pilot
had just been killed
chasing a UFO.
On January 7 all of the late papers in
the U.S.
carried headlines similar to
thcfee in the
Louisville Courier: "F-51 and Capt.
Mantell Destroyed Chasing
Flying Saucer." This was Volume I
of "The
Classics," the Mantell Incident.
At one-fifteen
on that
afternoon the control tower operators
at Godman
AFB, outside Louisville, Kentucky, received
a telephone call
from the Kentucky State Highway
Patrol. The patrol wanted to know
if Godman Tower knew anything about any unusual aircraft in
the vicinity.
Several people from Maysville, Kentucky, a
small town 80 miles east
of Louisville, had reported
seeing a strange aircraft. Godman knew that they had
nothing in the vicinity so
they called Flight Service at Wright-Patterson
AFB. In a few minutes
Flight Service called back.
Their air Traffic control board
showed no flights in
the area.
About twenty minutes later the state
police called again. This time
people from the towns of Owensboro
and Irvington, Kentucky, west of Louisville, were reporting
a strange craft.
The report
from these two towns was a
little more complete. The townspeople
had described the object to the
state police as being "circular,
about 250 to 300
feet in diameter," and moving
westward at a "pretty good clip."
Codman Tower checked Flight Service again. Nothing.
All this
time the tower operators had been looking for the
reported object. They theorized that since the UFO had
had to
pass north of Godman to get
from Maysville to Owensboro
it might
come back.
At one forty-five
they saw it, or something
like it. Later, in his official
report, the assistant tower operator
said that he had seen the
object for several minutes before
he called
his chief s attention
to it.
He said
that he had been reluctant
to "make a flying
saucer report." As soon as
the two
men in the tower had assured
themselves that the UFO they
saw was not an airplane or
a weather
balloon, they called Flight Operations. They wanted the operations
officer to see the UFO. Before
long word of the sighting
had gotten
around to key personnel on the
base, and several officers, besides
the base operations officer and the
base intelligence officer, were in the
tower. All of them looked
at the
UFO through
the tower's 6 x 50 binoculars
and decided
they couldn't identify it. About
this time Colonel Hix, the
base commander, arrived. He looked and
he was
baffled. At two-thirty, they reported, they were discussing what should be done
when four F-51's came into view,
approaching the base from the south.
The tower called
the flight
leader, Captain Mantell, and
asked him to take
a look
at the
object and try to identify
it. One F-51 in
the flight
was lunning low on fuel, so
he asked permission to go on
to his
base. Mantell took his two remaining wing men, made a
turn, and started after the
UFO. The people in
Godman Tower were
directing him as none of the
pilots could see the object
at this
time. They gave Mantell
an initial
heading toward the south and
the flight was last seen heading
in the
general direction of the UFO.
By the time
the F-51's
had climbed
to 10,000
feet, the two wing men later
reported, Mantell had pulled out ahead
of them and they
could just barely see him.
At two
fortyfive Mantell called the
tower and said, "I see
something above and ahead
of me
and I'm
still climbing." All the people in the tower heard
Mantell say this
and they
heard one of the wing men
call back and ask, "What
the hell
are we
looking for?" The tower
immediately called Mantell
and asked him for a description
of what
he saw.
Odd as
it may
seem, no one can
remember exactly what he answered.
Saucer historians have credited
him with
saying, "I've sighted the thing. It looks metallic and
it's tremendous in size. .
. .
Now it's starting to
climb." Then in a few
seconds he is supposed to have
called and said, "It's above me and I'm
gaining on it. I'm
going to 20,000 feet." Everyone in the tower agreed
on this
one last
bit of
the transmission,
"I'm going to 20,000
feet," but didn't agree on
the first
part, about the UFO's being metallic
and tremendous.
The two wing
men were
now at
15,000 feet and trying frantically to call Mantell. He
had climbed
far above
them by this time and was
out of
sight. Since none of them
had any oxygen they were worried
about Mantell. Their calls were not answered. Mantell never talked
to anyone
again. The two wing men leveled
off at
15,000 feet, made another fruitless effort to call Mantell, and started to
come back down. As they pasesd Godmao- Tower on their
way to
their base, one of them said
something to the effect that
all he
had seen was a
reflection on his canopy.
When they landed
at their
base, Standiford Field, just north of Godman, one pilot had
his F-51
refueled and serviced with oxygen,
and took
off to
search the area again. He
didn't see anything.
At three-fifty
the tower
lost sight of the UFO.
A few
minutes later they got
word that Mantell
had crashed
and was dead.
Several hours
later, at 7:20 p.m., airfield
towers all over the Midwest sent in frantic reports
of another
UFO. In all about a dozen
airfield towers reported the UFO
as being
low on
the southwestern horizon and
disappearing after about twenty minutes. The
writers of saucer lore say
this UFO was what Mantell was chasing
when he died; the Air
Force says this UFO was Venus.
The people
on Project
Sign worked fast on the Mantell Incident. Contemplating a flood of
queries from the press as soon
as they
heard about the crash, they
realized that they had to get
a quick
answer. Venus had been the
target of a chase by an
Air Force
F-51 several weeks before and
there were similiarities between this
sighting and the Mantell Incident. So almost before the
rescue crews had reached the
crash, the word "Venus"
went out. This satisfied the
editors, and so it stood for
about a year; Mantell had unfortunately
been killed trying to
reach the planet Venus.
To the press,
the nonchalant,
offhand manner with which the sighting
was written
off by
the Air
Force public relations officer
showed great confidence in the
conclusion, Venus, but behind the barbed-wire
fence that encircled ATIC the
nonchalant attitude didn't exist
among the intelligence analysts. One man had already
left for Louisville and the
rest were jdoing some tall speculating. The story about the
tower-to-air talk, "It looks metallic
and it's
tremendous in size," spread fast. Rumor
had it
that the tower had carried
on a running conversation with the
pilots and that there was
more information than was
so far
known. Rumor also had it that
this conversation had been recorded.
Unfortunately neither of these
rumors was true.
Over a period
of several
weeks the file on the Mantell Incident grew
in size
until it was the most
thoroughly investigated sighting of that
time, at least the file
was the
thickest.
About a year later
the Air
Force released its official report
of the incident. To use a
trite term, it was a
masterpiece in the art of "weasel
wording." It said
that the UFO might have
been Venus or it
could have been a balloon.
Maybe two balloons. It probably
was Venus
except that this is doubtful
because Venus was too dim
to be
seen in the afternoon. This jolted writers who had
been following the UFO story.
Only a few weeks before, The Saturday Evening Post had published a two-part story
entitled "What You Can Believe
about Flying Saucers." The story had official
sanction and had quoted the Venus
theory as a positive solution.
To clear
up the situation, several writers were
allowed to interview a major in
the Pentagon,
who was
the Air
Force's Pentagon "expert" on
UFO's. The major was asked
directly about the conclusion of the
Mantell Incident, and
he flatly
stated that it was Venus. The
writers pointed out the official
Air Force
analysis. The major's answer
was, "They checked again and
it was Venus." He didn't know
who "they"
were, where they had checked, or
what they had checked, but
it was
Venus. The writers then
asked, "If there was a
later report they had made why
wasn't it used as a
conclusion?" "Was it available?" The answer to
the last
question was "No," and
the lid
snapped back down. This interview
gave the definite impression
that the Air Force was
unsuccessfully trying to cover
up some
very important information, using Venus as a front. Nothing
excites a newspaper or magazine
writer more than to think
he has
stumbled onto a big story and
that someone is trying to
cover it up. Many writers
thought this after the
interview with the major, and
many still think it. You can't
really blame them, either.
In early 1952
I got
a telephone
call on ATIC's direct line to the Pentagon. It
was a
colonel in the Director of
Intelligence's office. The Office
of .Public
Information had been getting a number
of queries
about all of the confusion
over the Mantell Incident. What was the
answer?
I dug out
the file.
In 1949
all of
the original
material on the incident had been
microfilmed, but something had been
spilled on the film.
Many sections were so badly
faded they were illegible. As I
had to
do with
many of the older sightings that were now history,
I collected
what I could from the file,
filling in the blanks by
talking to people who had been
at ATIC
during the early UFO era.
Many of these people were still
around, "Red" Honnacker, George Towles, Al Deyarmond, Nick
Post, and many others. Most
of them
were civilians,
the military
had been
transferred out by this time.
Some of the
press clippings in the file
mentioned the Pentagon major and his
concrete proof of Venus. I
couldn't find this concrete proof in
the file
so I
asked around about the major. The
major, I found, was an
officer in the Pentagon who had at one time
written a short intelligence summary about UFO's. He had
never been stationed at ATIC,
nor was he especially well versed
on the
UFO problem.
When the word of the press
conference regarding the Mantell Incident came
down, a UFO expert was
needed. The major, because of his
short intelligence summary on UFO's,
became the "expert."
He had
evidently conjured up "they" and "their later report" to support
his Venus
answer because the writers at the
press conference had him in
a corner.
I looked farther.
Fortunately the man
who had
done the most extensive work on the incident, Dr.
J. Allen
Hynek, head
of the
Ohio State University Astronomy Department, could be contacted. I called Dr. Hynek and arranged
to meet
him the
next day.
Dr. Hynek was one
of the
most impressive scientists I met while
working on the UFO project,
and I
met a
good many. He didn't do two
things that some of them
did: give you the answer before
he knew
the question;
or immediately
begin to expound on
his accomplishments
in the
field of science. I arrived at
Ohio State just before lunch,
and Dr.
Hynek invited
me to
eat with
him at
faculty club. He wanted to refer
to some
notes he had on the
Mantell Incident and
they were in his
office, so. we
discussed UFO's in general during lunch.
Back in
his office
he started
to review
the Mantell Incident. He had been
responsible for the weasel-worded report that the Air
Force released in late 1949,
and he
apologized for it. Had he
known that it was going
to cause
so much confusion, he said, he
would have been more specific.
He thought the incident
was a
dead issue. The reason that
Venus had been such
a strong
suspect was that it was
in almost the same spot in
the sky
as the
UFO. Dr. Hynek
referred to his notes and
told me that at 3.00
p.m., Venus had been south southwest of
Godman and 33
degrees above the southern horizon. At
3:00 p.m. the
people in the tower estimated
the UFO
to be
southwest of Godman
and at
an elevation
of about
45 degrees.
Allowing for human error in
estimating directions and angles,
this was close. I agreed.
There was one big
flaw in the theory, however.
Venus wasn't bright enough to be
seen. He had computed the
brilliance of the planet,
and on
the day
in question
it was
only six times as
bright as the surrounding sky. Then he explained what this meant. Six
times may sound like a
lot, but it isn't. When you
start looking for a pinpoint
of light
only six times as
bright as the surrounding sky, it's almost impossible to find it, even
on a
clear day.
Dr. Hynek said that
he didn't
think that the UFO was
Venus.
I later found
out that
although it was a relatively
clear day there was considerable haze.
I asked him
about some of the other
posibilities. He
repeated the balloon, canopy-reflection, and sundog theories but he refused to comment
on them
since, as he said, he
was an astrophysicist and would care
to comment
only on the astrophysical aspects of
the sightings.
I drove back
to Dayton
convinced that the UFO wasn't
Venus. Dr. Hynek had said Venus would
have been a pinpoint of
light. The people in the
tower had been positive of their descriptions, their statements
brought that out. They couldn't agree on a description,
they called the UFO "a
parachute," "an ice cream
cone tipped with red," "round and white,"
"huge and silver or metallic,"
"small white object," "one
fourth the size of the
full moon," but all the
descriptions plainly indicated a
large object. None of the
descriptions could even vaguely
be called
a pinpoint
of light.
This aspect of a
definite shape semed
to eliminate
the sundog theory too. Sundogs,
or parhelia, as they are
technically known, are caused by
ice particles
reflecting a diffused light. This would
not give
a sharp
outline. I also recalled two instances where Air Force
pilots had chased sundogs. In both instances when the
aircraft began to climb, the
sundog disappeared. This was
because the angle of reflection
changed as the airplane
climbed several thousand feet. These
sundog-caused UFO's also had
fuzzy edges.
I had
always heard a lot of
wild speculation about the condition of Mantell's
crashed F-51, so I wired
for a
copy of the accident report. It
arrived several days after my
visit with Dr. Hynek. The
report said that the F-51 had lost a wing due to excessive
speed in a dive after
Man tell had
"blacked out"
due to
the lack
of oxygen.
Mantell's body had
not burned, not disintegrated,
and was
not full
of holes;
the wreck was not'radioactive, nor
was it
magnetized.
One very important
and pertinent
question remained. Why did Mantell, an
experienced pilot, try to go
to 20,000
feet when he didn't even" have an oxygen mask?
If he
had run
out of oxygen, it would have
been different. Every pilot and crewman
has it
pounded into him, "Do not,
under any circumstances, go above 15,000
feet without oxygen." In high-altitude
indoctrination during World
War II,
I made
several trips up to 30,000 feet
in a
pressure chamber. To demonstrate anoxia we would leave
our oxygen
masks off until we became dizzy.
A few
of the
more hardy souls could get
to 15,000 feet, but
nobody ever got over 17,000.
Possibly Mantell
thought he could climb up
to 20,000
in a
hurry and get back down before
he got
anoxia and blacked out, but
this would be a
foolish chance. This point was
covered in the sighting report. A
long-time friend of Mantell's went on record
as saying
that he'd flown with him
several years and knew him personally.
He couldn't
conceive of Mantell's even thinking
about disregarding his lack of
oxygen. Mantell was one of the
most cautious pilots he knew.
"The only thing I can think,"
he commented,
"was that he was after
something that he believed
to be
more important than his life or
his family."
My next step
was to
try to
find out what Mantell's wing men had
seen or thought but this
was a
blind alley. All of this evidence
was in
the ruined
portion of the microfilm, even their names were missing.
The only
reference I could find to them
was a
vague passage indicating they hadn't
seen anything.
I concentrated on the canopy-reflection theory. It is widely believed
that many flying saucers appear
to pilots
who are actually chasing
a reflection
on their
canopy. I checked over all the
reports we had on file.
I couldn't
find one that had been written
off for
this reason. I dug back
into my own flying
experience and talked to a
dozen pilots. All of us had
momentarily been startled by a
reflection on the aircraft's canopy or
wing, but in a second
or two
it had
been obvious that it
was a
reflection. Mantell chased the object for at
least fifteen to twenty minutes,
and it
is inconceivable
that he wouldn't realize in
that length of time that he
was chasing
a reflection.
About the only
theory left to check was
that the object might have been
one of
the big,
100-foot-diameter, "skyhook" balloons. I
rechecked the descriptions of the
UFO made by the people in
the tower.
The first
man to
sight the object called it a
parachute; others said ice cream
cone, round, etc. All
of these
descriptions fit a balloon. Buried
deep in the file
were two more references to balloons that I had
previously missed. Not long after
the object
had disappeared from view
at Godman AFB, a man from
Madi-sonville, Kentucky,
called Flight Service in Dayton.
He had
seen an object traveling
southeast. He had looked at
it through a telescope and it
was a
balloon. At four
forty-five an astronomer living north of
Nashville, Tennessee, called in.
He had also seen a.UFO, looked
at it
through a telescope, and it was
a balloon.
In the thousands
of words
of testimony
and evidence
taken on the Mantell
Incident this was the only
reference to balloons. I had
purposely not paid too much
attention to this possibility because I
was sure
that it had been thoroughly
checked back in 1948.
Now I
wasn't sure.
I talked with
one of
the people
who had
been^in on the
Mantel] investigation. The possibility
of a
balloon's causing the sighting had been
mentioned but hadn't been followed
up for two reasons. Number one
was that
everybody at ATIC was convinced that
the object
Mantell was after
was a
spaceship and that this was
the only
course they had 'pursued. When the sighting grew older
and no
spaceship proof could be found, everybody
jumped on the Venus band
wagon, as this theory had "already
been established." It was an
easy way out. The second reason
was that
a quick
check had been made on weather
balloons and none were in
the area.
The big skyhook balloon
project was highly classified at that time, and since
they were all convinced that
the object
was of interplanetary origin (a minority
wanted to give the
Russians credit), they
didn't want to bother to
buck the red tape of security
to get
data on skyhook flights.
The group who supervise
the contracts
for all
the skyhook
research flights for the Air
Force are located at Wright
Field, so I called
them. They had no records
on flights
in 1948 but they did think
that the big balloons were
being launched from Clinton
County AFB in southern Ohio
at that
time. They offered to
get the
records of the winds on
January 7 and see what
flight path a balloon launched
in southwestern
Ohio would have taken. In
a ■ few
days they had the data for
me.
Unfortunately the
times of the first sightings,
from the towns outside Louisville, were not exact but
it was
possible to partially reconstruct the sequence
of events.
The winds
were such that a
skyhook balloon launched from Clinton
County AFB could be
seen from the town east
of Godman AFB, the town from
which the first UFO was
reported to the Kentucky State Police.
It is
not unusual
to be
able to see a large balloon
for 50
to 60
miles. The balloon could have traveled west for a
while, climbing as it moved
with the strong east winds that
were blowing that day and
picking up speed as the
winds got stronger at altitude.
In twenty
minutes it could have
been in a position where
it could
be seen from Owensboro
and Irvington,
Kentucky, the two towns west of
Godman. The
second reports to the state
police had come from these two
towns. Still climbing, the balloon
would have reached a
level where a strong wind
was blowing
in a
southerly direction. The jet-stream winds were not being plotted
in 1948
but the
weather chart shows strong indications of a southerly bend
in the
jet stream
for this
day. Jet stream or
not, the balloon would have
moved rapidly south, still climbing. At
a point
somewhere south or southwest of Godman it would have climbed
through the southerly-moving winds
to a
calm belt at about 60,000
feet. At this level it would
slowly drift south or southeast.
A skyhook balloon can be seen
at 60,000.
When first seen
by the
people in Godman
Tower, the UFO was south of
the air
base. It was relatively close and looked "like a parachute," which a
balloon does. During the two
hours that it was
in sight,
the observers
reported that it
seemed to hover, yet
each observer estimated the time
he
looked at the object
through the binoculars and timewise the
descriptions ran "huge," "small," "one
fourth the size of a
full moon," "one tenth
the size
of a
full moon." Whatever
the UFO was, it
was slowly
moving away. As the balloon
continued to drift in
a southerly
direction it would have
picked up strong winds,
and could
have easily been seen
by the astronomers in Madisonville, Kentucky, and north of
Nashville an hour after
it disappeared
from view at God-
man. \
Somewhere in
the archives
of the
Air Force
or the
Navy there are records that will
show whether or not a
balloon was launched from Clinton County
AFB, Ohio, on January 7, 1948. I never could
find these records. People who
were working with the early skyhook
projects "remember" operating
out of
Clinton County AFB in 1947
but refuse
to be
pinned down to a
January 7 flight. Maybe, they
said.
The Mantell Incident is
the same
old UFO
jigsaw puzzle. By assuming the shape
of one
piece, a balloon launched from southwestern Ohio, the whole
picture neatly falls together. It shows a huge
balloon that Captain Thomas Man-tell
died trying to reach. He
didn't know that he was
chasing a balloon because he had
never heard of a huge,
100-foot-diameter skyhook balloon,
let alone
seen one. 'Leave out the one
piece of the jigsaw puzzle
and the
picture is a UFO, "metallic and tremendous in size."
It could have been a balloon. This is
the answer
I phoned
back to the Pentagon.
During January
and February
of 1948
the reports
of "ghost rockets" continued to come from
air attaches
in foreign countries near the Baltic
Sea. People in North Jutland,
Norway, Denmark, Sweden, and Germany
reported "balls of fire
traveling slowly across the sky."
The reports
were very sketchy and
incomplete, most of them accounts
from newspapers. In a
few days
the UFO's
were being seen all over Em-ope and South America. Foreign
reports hit a peak in the
latter part of February and
U.S. newspapers began to pick up
the stories.
The Swedish
Defense Staff supposedly conducted a
comprehensive study of
the incidents
and concluded
that they were all explainable in terms of astronomical
phenomena. Since this was
UFO history,
I- made
several attempts to get some detailed
and official
information on this report and the sightings, but I
was never
successful.
The ghost rockets
left in March, as mysteriously
as they
had arrived.
All during
the spring
of 1948
good reports continued to come in.
Some were just run-of-the-mill but a large percentage
of them
were good, coming from people
whose reliability couldn't be questioned.
For example,
three scientists reported that
for thirty
seconds they had watched a
round object streak across' the sky
in a
highly erratic flight path near the
Army's secret White Sands Proving
Ground. And on May 28 the
crew of an Air Force
C-47 had three UFO's barrel in from "twelve o'clock high" to buzz
their transport.
On July 21 a curious report
was received
from the Netherlands. The day
before several persons reported seeing
a UFO
through high broken clouds
over The Hague. The object
was rocket-shaped, with two
rows of windows along"the side. It
was a
poor report, very sketchy and
incomplete, and it probably
would have been forgotten except
that four nights later a similar
TJFO almost collided with an
Eastern Airlines DC-3. This
near collision is Volume II
of "The
Classics."
On the
evening of July 24, 1948,
an Eastern
Airlines DC-3 took off from Houston,
Texas. It was on a
scheduled trip to Atlanta, with intermediate
stops in between. The pilots
were Clarence S. Chiles
and John
B. Whitted. At about 2:45 a.m., when
the flight
was 20
miles southwest of Montgomery, the captain, Chiles, saw
a light
dead ahead and closing fast.
His first
reaction, he later reported to
an ATIC
investigation team, was that
it was
a jet,
but in
an instant
he realized that even
a jet
couldn't close as fast as
this light was closing. Chiles said
he reached
over, gave Whitted, the other
pilot, a quick tap on
the arm,
and pointed.
The UFO was now almost on
top of
them. Chiles racked the DC-3
up into a tight
left turn. Just as the
UFO flashed
by about
700 feet to
the right,
the DC-3
hit turbulent
air. Whitted looked back just as
the UFO
pulled up in a steep
climb.
Both of the
pilots had gotten a good
look at the UFO and
were able to give
a good
description to the Air Force
intelligence people. It was a
B-29 fuselage. The underside had
a "deep blue glow." There were
"two rows of windows from
which bright lights glowed,"
and a
"50-foot trail or orange-red flame" shot out the
back.
Only one passenger
was looking
out of
the window
at the time. The ATIC investigators
talked to him. He said
he saw a "strange, eerie streak
of light,
very intense," but that
was all,
no details.
He said
that it all happened before
he could adjust his
eyes to the darkness.
Minutes later a
crew chief at Robins Air
Force Base in Macon, Georgia, reported
seeing an extremely bright light
pass overhead, traveling at
a high
speed. A few days later
another report from the
night of July 24 came
in. A
pilot, flying near the Virginia-North Carolina state line, reported
that he had seen
a "bright
shooting star" in the direction
of Montgomery, Alabama, at
about the exact time the
Eastern Airlines DC-3 was
"buzzed."
According to the
old timers
at ATIC,
this report shook them worse than
the Mantell incident. This was the
first time two reliable sources had
been really close enough to
anything resembling a UFO to
get a
good look and live to
tell about it. A quick check
on a
map showed
that the UFO that nearly collided with the airliner
would have passed almost over Macon, Georgia, after passing
the DC-3.
It had
been turning toward Macon when last
seen. The story of the
crew chief at Robins
AFB, 200 miles away, seemed
to confirm
the sighting,
not to
mention the report from near
the Virginia-North Carolina state
line.
In intelligence,
if you
have something to say about
some vital problem you write a
report that is known as
an "Estimate
of the Situation." A few days
after the DC-3 was buzzed,
the people at ATIC decided that
the time
had arrived
to make
an Estimate of the
Situation. The situation was the
UFO's; the estimate was that they
were interplanetary!
It was
a rather
thick document with a black
cover and it was printed on
legal-sized paper. Stamped across the
front were the words TOP SECRET.
It contained
the Air
Force's analysis of many of
the incidents
I have
told you about plus many
similar ones. All of them had
come from scientists, pilots, and
other equally credible observers,
and each
one was
an unknown.
The document pointed
out that
the reports
hadn't actually started with the Arnold
Incident. Belated reports from a weather observer in
Richmond, Virginia, who observed a "silver disk" through his
theodolite telescope; an FA7 pilot and three
pilots in his formation who
saw a
"silver flying wing," and the English
"ghost airplanes" that had been
picked up on radar
early in 1947 proved this
point. Although reports on them were
not received
until after the Arnold sighting, these incidents all had
taken place earlier.
When the
estimate was completed, typed, and
approved, it started up through channels
to higher-command
echelons. It drew considerable comment but
no one
stopped it on its way up.
A matter
of days
after the Estimate of the
Situation was signed, sealed, and sent
on its
way, the third big sighting
of 1948, Volume III of "The
Classics," took place.
The date
was October 1, and
the place
was Fargo,
North Dakota; it was the famous
Gorman Incident, in which a pilot fought a "duel of death" with a UFO.
The pilot was
George F. Gorman, a twenty-five-year-old second lieutenant
in the
North Dakota Air National Guard.
It was eight-thirty
in the
evening and Gorman was coming
into Fargo from a
cross-country flight. He flew around
Fargo for a while and about
nine o'clock decided to land.
He called-the
control tower for landing instructions
and was
told that a Piper Cub was
in the
area. He saw the Cub
below him. All of a sudden
what appeared to be the
taillight of another airplane passed him
on his
right. He called
the tower
and complained but they
assured him that no other
aircraft except the Cub were
in the
area. Gorman could still see
the light so he decided to
find out what it was.
He pushed
the F-51 over into a turn
and cut
in toward
the light.
He could
plainly see the Cub
outlined against the city fights
below, but he could see no
outline of a body near
the mysterious
light. He gave the
'51 more
power and closed to within a 1,000 yards, close enough
to estimate
that the light was 6 to
8 inches
in diameter,
was sharply
outlined, and was blinking on and
off. Suddenly the light became
steady as it apparently put on
power; it pulled into a sharp left bank
and made a pass
at the
tower. The light zoomed up
with the F-51 in hot pursuit.
At 7,000
feet it made a turn.
Gorman followed and tried
to cut
inside the light's turn to
get closer
to it but he couldn't do
it. The
light made another turn, and this
time the '51 closed on
a collision
course. The UFO appeared to try
to ram
the '51,
and Gorman
had to
dive to get out of the
way. The UFO passed over
the '51's
canopy with only a few feet
to spare.
Again both the F-51 and
the object turned and closed on
each other head on, and
again the pilot had to dive
out to
prevent a collision. All of
a sudden
the light
began to climb and disappeared.
"I had the
distinct impression that its maneuvers
were controlled by thought
or reason,"
Gorman later told ATIC investigators.
Four other
observers at Fargo partially corroborated
his story, an oculist, Dr. A.
D. Cannon,
the Cub's
pilot, and his passenger, Einar Neilson. They
saw a
light "moving fast," but
did not
witness all the maneuvers that
Gorman reported. Two CAA employees
on the
ground saw a light move
over the field once.
Project Sign investigators
rushed to Fargo. They had
wired ahead to ground
the plane.
They wanted to check it over
before it flew again. When
they arrived, only a matter of
hours after the incident, they
went over the airplane, from the prop spinner
to the
rudder trim tab,.with a Geiger counter. A chart
in the
official report shows where every Geiger counter reading was
taken. For comparison they took readings
on a similar airplane that hadn't
been flown for several days. Gorman's
airplane was more radioactive. They rushed around, got
sworn statements from the tower operators
and oculist,
and flew
back to Dayton.
In the file
on the
Gorman Incident I found an
old memo
reporting the meeting that
was held
upon the ATIC team's return from Fargo. The memo
concluded that some weird things were taking place.
The historians
of the
UFO agree.
Donald Keyhoe, a retired Marine
Corps major and a professional
writer, author of the two books
The Flying Saucers Are Real
and Flying Saucers
from Outer Space,
needles the
Air Force
about the Gorman Incident, pointing out
how, after feebly hinting that
the light could have
been a lighted weather balloon,
they dropped it like a hot
UFO. Some person by the
name of Wilkins, in an equally
authoritative book, says that the
Gorman Incident "stumped" the Air Force. Other
assorted historians point out
that normally the UFO's are
peaceful, Gorman and Mantell just got
too inquisitive,
"they" just weren't ready to be
observed closely. If the Air
Force hadn't slapped down the security
lid, these writers might not
have reached this conclusion. There have
been other and more lurid "duels of death."
On June
21, 1952,
at 10:58
p.m., a Ground Observer Corps spotter reported
that a slow-moving craft was
nearing the AEC's Oak Ridge Laboratory,
an area
so secret
that it is prohibited to aircraft.
The spotter
called the light into his
filter center and the
filter center relayed the message
to the
ground control intercept radar.
They had a target. But
before they could do more
than confirm the GOC spotter's
report, the target faded
from the radarscope.
An F-47 aircraft on combat
air patrol
in the
area was vectored in visually, spotted
a light,
and closed
on it.
They "fought" from 10,000
to 27,000
feet, and several times the
object made what seemed
to be
ramming attacks. The
light was described as white, 6
to 8
inches in diameter, and blinking
until put on power. The
pilot could see no silhouette
around the fight. The
similarity to the Fargo case
was striking.
On the night
of December
10, 1952,
near another atomic installation,
the Hanford
plant in Washington, the pilot
and radar observer of a patrolling
F-94 spotted a light while
flying at 26,000 feet. The crew called
their ground control station and were told that no
planes were known to be
in the
area. They closed on the object
and saw
a large,
round, white
"thing" with
a dim
reddish light coming from two
"windows." They lost
visual contact, but got a
radar lock-on. They reported that when
they attemtped to close on it
again it would reverse direction and
dive away. Several times the plane
altered course itself because collision
seemed imminent.
In each
of these
instances, as well as in
the case
narrated next, the sources
of the
stories were trained airmen with
excellent reputations. They were sincerely
baffled by what they had seen.
They had no conceivable motive for falsifying or "dressing up"
their reports.
The other dogfight
occurred September 24, 1952, between
a Navy pilot of a TBM
and a
light over Cuba.
The pilot
had just
finished making some practice passes
for night fighters when he sported
an orange
fight to the east of his
plane. He checked on aircraft
in the
area, learned that the object was
unidentified, and started after it.
Here is his report, written immediately
after he landed:
As it [the
light] approached the city from
the east
it started a left turn. I
started to intercept. During the
first part of the chase the
closest I got to the
light was 8 to 10
miles. At this time it appeared
to be
as large
as an
SNJ and
had a greenish tail that looked
to be
five to six times as
long as the light's diameter. This
tail was seen several times
in the
next 10 minutes in
periods of from 5 to
30 seconds
each. As I reached 10,000 feet
it appeared
to be
at 15,000
feet and in a left turn.
It took
40 degrees
of bank
to keep
the nose
of my plane on the light.
At this
time I estimated the^light to be
in a
10-to-15-mile orbit.
At 12,000
feet I stopped climbing, but
the light
was still
climbing faster than I
was. I then resersed my turn
from left to right and the
light also reversed. As I
was not
gaining distance, I held
a steady
course south trying to estimate
a perpendicular between the
light and myself. The light
was moving north, so I turned
north. As I turned, the
fight appeared to -move west,
then south over the base.
I again
tried to intercept but
the light
appeared to climb rapidly at
a 60-degree angle. It
climbed to 35,000 feet, then started a rapid descent.
Prior to
this, while the light was
still at approximately 15,000 feet,
I deliberately
placed it between the moon
and myself three times to try,
to identify
a solid
body. I and my two crewmen
all had
a good
view of the light as
it passed
the moon. We could
see no
solid body. We considered the fact that it might
be an
aerologist's balloon, but we did
not see a silhouette.
Also, we would have rapidly
caught up with and passed a
balloon.
During its descent, the light appeared
to slow
down at about 10,000 feet, at
which time I made three
runs on it. Two were
on a
90-degree collision course, and the
light traveled at tremendous
speed across my bow. On
the third
run I was so close that
the light
blanked out the airfield below me. Suddenly it started
a dive and
I followed,
losing it at 1,500 feet.
In this,
incident the
UFO was a balloon.
The following
night a lighted balloon was
sent up and the pilot was
ordered up to compare his., experiences. He duplicated
his dogfight—illusions
and all.
The Navy
furnished us with a long
analysis of the affair, explaining
how the pilot had been fooled.
In the
case involving the ground observer
and the
F-47 near the atomic installation, we plotted the winds
and calculated
that a lighted balloon was
right at the spot where
the pilot encountered the light.
In the other instance, the "white
object with two windows," we found that a
skyhook balloon had been plotted
at the exact
site of the "battle."
Gorman fought a lighted balloon too. An
analysis of the sighting by the
Air Weather
Service sent to ATIC in
a letter
dated January 24, 1949,
proved it. The radioactive F-51 was decontaminated
by a memo from a Wright Field laboratory
explaining that a recently flown
airplane will be more radioactive than one that has
been on the ground for
several days. An airplane
at 20,000
to 30,000
feet picks up more cosmic rays than one shielded
by the
earth's ever present haze.
Why can't
experienced pilots recognize a balloon when they see one?
If they
are flying
at night,
odd things
can hap-
pen to their vision. There is
the problem
of vertigo
as well
as disorientation brought on
by flying
without points of reference. Night fighters have told
dozens of stories of being
fooled by lights.
One night during
World War II we had
just dumped a load of bombs
on a
target when a "night fighter" started to make a
pass at us. Everyone in
the cockpit
saw the
fighter's red-hot exhaust stack
as he
bore down on us. I
cut loose
with six caliber .50 machine guns. Fortunately
I missed
the "night fighter"—if I'd shot it I'd
have fouled up the astronomers but good because the
"night fighter" was Venus.
While the people
on Project
Sign were pondering over Lieutenant Gorman's dogfight with the
UFO—at the time they weren't even
considering the balloon angle—the Top
Secret Estimate of the
Situation was working its way
up into the higher echelons of
the Air
Force. It got to the
late General Hoyt S. Vandenberg, then Chief of Staff,
before it was batted back down.
The general
wouldn't buy interplanetary vehicles. The
report lacked proof. A group
from ATIC went to the Pentagon
to bolster
their position but had no luck, the Chief of Staff
just couldn't be convinced.
The estimate died
a quick
death. Some months later it
was completely declassified and relegated to the
incinerator. A few copies,
one of
which I saw, were kept
as mementos
of the golden days of the
UFO's.
The top Air
Force command's refusal to buy
the interplanetary
theory didn't have any immediate
effect upon the morale of Project
Sign because the reports were
getting better.
A belated
report that is more of
a collectors'
item "than a good UFO sighting
came into ATIC in the
fall of 1948. It was from
Moscow. Someone, I could never
find out exactly who, reported
a huge
"smudge-like" object in
the sky.
Then radar came
into the picture. For months
the anti-saucer
factions had been pointing their
fingers at the lack of radar
reports, saying, "If they exist,
why don't
they show up on radarscopesr^ When
they showed up on radar-scopes,
the UFO
won some
converts.
On October
15 an
F-61, a World War II
"Black Widow" night fighter,
was on
patrol over Japan when it
picked up an unidentified target on
its radar.
The target
was flying
between 5,000 and 6,000 feet
and traveling
about 200 miles per hour. When
the F-61
tried to intercept it would
get to
within 12,000 feet of
the UFO
only to have it accelerate
to an estimated 1,200 miles per
hour, leaving the F-61 far
behind before slowing down
again. The F-61 crew made
six attempts to close on the
UFO. On one pass, the
crew said, they did get close
enough to see its silhouette.
It was
20 to 30 feet long and
looked "like a rifle bullet."
Toward the
end of
November a wire came into
Project Sign from Germany. It was
the first
report where a UFO was seen
and simultaneously
picked up on radar. This
type of report, the first of
many to come, is one
of the
better types of UFO reports. The
wire said:
At 2200
hours, local time, 23 November
1948, Capt. — saw an object
in the
air directly
east of this base. It
was at
an unknown altitude. It
looked like a reddish star
and was
moving in a southerly
direction across Munich, turning slightly to the southwest then
the southeast.
The speed
could have been between
200 to
600 mph,
the actual
speed
could not
be estimated,
not knowing-
the height.
Capt.,--------------------------
called base operations and they called
the radar
station. Radar reported that they
had seen
nothing on their scope but
would check again. Radar
then called operations to report
that they did have a
target at 27,000 feet, some
30 miles south of Munich, traveling
at 900
mph. Capt. — reported that
the object
that he saw was now
in that
area. A few minutes later radar
called again to say that
the target
had climbed to 50,000
feet, and was circling 40
miles south of Munich;
Capt. — is an
experienced pilot now flying F-80's
and is
considered to be completely
reliable. The sighting was verified
by Capt.
—, also
an F-80
pilot.
The possibility that this was a
balloon was checked but the answer
from Air Weather Service was
"not a balloon." No aircraft were
in the
area. Nothing we know of,
except possibly experimental aircraft, which are not
in Germany,
can climb 23,000 feet in a
matter of minutes and travel
900 miles
per hour.
By the end
of 1948,
Project Sign had received several
hundred UFO reports. Of
these, 167 had been saved
as good
reports. About three dozen
were "Unknown." Even
though the UFO reports were getting
better and more numerous, the enthusiasm over the interplanetary
idea was cooling off. The same
people who had fought to
go to
Godman AFB to talk
to Colonel
Hix and his
UFO observers
in January
now had to be
prodded when a sighting needed
investigating. More and more
work was being pushing off
onto the other investigative
organization that was helping ATIC.
The kickback
on the
Top Secret
Estimate of the Situation was
beginning to dampen a lot
of enthusiasms.
It was
definitely a bear market
for UFO's.
A bull
market was on the way,
however. Early 1949 was to bring
"little lights" and green fireballs.
The "little lights" were UFO's, but
the green
fireballs were real.
chapter four
Green Fireballs, Project Twinkle, Little
Lights, and Grudge
At exactly midnight on
September 18, 1954,
my telephone
rang. It was Jim
Phalen, a
friend of mine from the
Long Beach Press-Telegram, and he
had a
"good flying saucer report," hot off the wires.
He read
it to
me. The
lead line was: "Thousands
of people
saw a
huge fireball light up dark New
Mexico skies tonight."
The story went
on to
tell about how a "blinding
green" fireball the size
of a
full moon had silently streaked
southeast across Colorado and northern
New Mexico
at eight-forty
that night. Thousands of people
had seen
the fireball.
It had passed right over a
crowded football stadium at Santa
Fe, New Mexico, and
people in Denver said it
"turned night into day." The crew
of a
TWA airliner
flying into Albuquerque from Amarillo,
Texas, saw it. Every police
and newspaper
switchboard in the two-state area
was jammed
with calls.
One of
the calls
was from
a man'mquiring if anything unusual had- happened
recently. When he was informed
about the mysterious fireball he heaved an
audible sigh of relief, "Thanks," he said, "I was
afraid I'd gotten some bad
bourbon." And he hung
up.
Dr. Lincoln La
Paz, world-famous authority on meteorites
and head of the
University of New Mexico's Institute
of Metebritics,
apparently took the occurrence calmly. The wire story said he had told
a reporter
that he would plot its
course, try to determine
where it landed, and go
out and
try to find it. "But," he said, "I don't
expect to find anything."
When Jim Phalen had read the rest
of the
report he asked, "What was it?"
"It sounds to
me like
the green
fireballs are back," I answered.
"What the
devil are green fireballs?"
What the devil
are green fireballs?
I'd like
to know.
So would a lot of other
people.
The green fireballs
streaked into UFO history late
in November
1948, when people around Albuquerque,
New Mexico,
began to report seeing mysterious
"green flares" at night. The first reports mentioned only
a "green
streak in the sky," low on the horizon. From
the description
the Air
Force Intelligence people at Rutland
AFB in
Albuquerque and the Project Sign people
at ATIC
wrote the objects off as
flares.
After all, thousands
of GI's
had probably
been discharged with a duffel bag
full of "liberated"
Very pistols and flares.
But as
days passed the reports got
better. They seemed to indicate that the "flares" were getting larger and
more people were reporting seeing them.
It was
doubtful if this "growth"
was psychological
because there had been no
publicity—so the Air Force decided
to reconsider
the "flare"
answer. They were in
the process
of doing
this on the night of December
5, 1948,
a memorable
night in the green fireball
chapter of UFO history.
At 9:27
p.m. on December 5, an Air
Force C-47 transport was flying at
18,000 feet 10 miles east
of Albuquerque.
The pilot was a Captain Goede. Suddenly the crew,
Captain Goede,
his co-pilot,
and his
engineer were startled by a green ball of
fire flashed across the sky
ahead of them. It looked something like a
huge meteor except that it
was a bright green color and it didn't
arch downward, as meteors usually do. The green-colored ball of fire had
started low, from near the eastern
slopes of the Sandia Mountains,
arched upward a little, then seemed to
level out. And it was
too big for a meteor, at least
it was
larger than any meteor that anyone in the C-47
had ever
seen before. After a hasty
discussion the crew decided
that they'd better tell somebody
about it, especially since they
had seen
an identical
object twenty-two minutes before
near Las Vegas, New Mexico.
Captain Goede picked up
his microphone
and called
the control tower at
Rutland AFB and reported what
he and
his crew had seen.
The tower
relayed the message to the
local intelligence people.
A few minutes
later the captain of Pioneer
Airlines Flight 63 called Kirtland Tower.
At 9:35
p.m. he had also seen/a green ball of
fire just east of Las
Vegas, New Mexico. He was on
his way
to Albuquerque
and would
make a full report when
he landed.
When he taxied
his DC-3
up to
the passenger
ramp at Kirtland a few minutes later, several
intelligence officers were waiting for him.
He reported
that at 9:35 p.m. he
was on a westerly heading, approaching
Las Vegas
from the east, when he and
his co-pilot
saw what
they first thought was a "shooting
star." It was ahead and
a little
above them. But, the captain said,
it took
them only a split second
to realize that whatever they saw
was too
low and
had too
flat a trajectory to be a
meteor. As they watched, the
object seemed to approach their
airplane head on, changing color from orange red to
green. As it became bigger
and bigger, the captain said, he
thought sure it was going
to collide with them so he
racked the DC-3 up in
a tight
turn. As the green ball of
fire got abreast of them
it began
to fall
toward the ground, getting
dimmer and dimmer until it
disappeared. Just before he
swerved the DC-3, the fireball
was as big, or bigger, than
a full
moon.
The intelligence
officers asked a few more
questions and went back to their
office. More reports, which had
been phoned in from all over
northern New Mexico, were waiting
for them. By morning
a full-fledged
investigation was under way.
No matter
what these green fireballs were,
the military
was getting a little edgy. They
might be common meteorites, psychologically enlarged
flares, or true UFO's, but
whatever they were they were playing
around in one of the most sensitive security areas
in the
United States. Within 100 miles of
Albuquerque were two installations that were the backbone of the atomic bomb
program. Los Alamos
and Sandia Base. Scattered throughout the countryside were other installations vital to the
defense of the U.S.: radar
stations, fighter-interceptor bases, and
the other
mysterious areas that had
been blocked off by high
chain-link fences.
Since the green,
fireballs bore some resemblance to meteors or meteorites,
the Kirtland
intelligence officers called in Dr. Lincoln La Paz.
Dr. La Paz
said that he would be
glad to help, so the
officers explained the strange
series of events to him.
True, he said, the description of the fireballs did
sound as if they might be meteorites—except for a
few points.
One way
to be sure was to try
to plot
the flight
path of the green fireballs
the same
way he
had so
successfully plotted the flight path of meteorites in the past. From this flight path
he could determine where they would
have hit the earth—if they were meteorites. They would
search this area, and if
they found parts of
a meteorite
they would have the answer
to the green fireball riddle.
The fireball
activity on the night of
December 5 was made to order
for plotting
flight paths. The good reports
of that
night included carefully noted
locations, the directions in which the
green objects were seen, their
heights above the horizon, and the
times when they were observed.
So early the
next morning Dr. La
Paz and
a crew
of intelligence
officers were scouring northern New Mexico.
They started out by talking
to the
people who had made reports
but soon
found out that dozens of other
people had also seen the
fireballs. By closely checking the time
of the
observations, they determined that eight
separate fireballs had been seen.
One was
evidently more spectacular and was seen by
the most
people. Everyone in northern New
Mexico had seen it going
from west to east,
so Dr.
La Paz
and his
crew worked eastward across New
Mexico to the west border
of Texas,
talking to dozens of
people. After many sleepless hours
they finally plotted where it should
have struck the earth. They
searched the area but
found nothing. They went back
over the area time and time
again—nothing. As Dr.
La Paz
later told me, this was the
first time that he seriously
doubted the green fireballs were meteorites.
Within a few
more days the fireballs were
appearing almost nighdy. The
intelligence officers from Kirtland decided
that maybe they could
get a
good look at one of
them, so on the night of
December 8 two officers took
off in
an airplane
just before dark and began
to cruise
around north of Albuquerque. They had
a carefully
worked out plan where each man
would observe certain details if
they saw one of the green
fireballs. At 6:33 p.m. they
saw one.
This* is their report:
At 6:33
p.m. while flying at an indicated
altitude of 11,500 feet, a strange
phenomenon was observed. Exact position
of the aircraft at time of
the observation
was 20
miles east of the Las Vegas,
N.M., radio range station. The
aircraft was on a compass course
of 90
degrees. Capt. was pilot
and I was acting as copilot.
I first
observed the object and a split
second later the pilot saw
it. It
was 2,000
feet higher than the plane, and
was approaching
the plane
at a
rapid rate of speed from 30
degrees to the left of
our course.
The object was similar in appearance
to a
burning green flare, the. kind that is
commonly used in the Air
Force. However, the light was much
more intense and the object
appeared considerably larger than
a normal
flare. The trajectory of the object,
when first sighted, was almost
flat and parallel to the earth.
The phenomenon
lasted about 2 seconds. At
the end of this time the
object Seemed to begin to burn
out and the trajectory then dropped
off rapidly.
The phenomenon
was of
such intensity as to be
visible from the very moment
it ignited.
Back at
Wright-Patterson AFB, ATIC
was getting
a blow-by-blow
account of the fireball activity
but they
were taking no direct part in
the investigation.
Their main interest was to review
all incoming
UFO reports
and see
if the
green fireball reports were
actually unique to the Albuquerque
area. They were. Although
a good
many UFO reports were coming in from other parts
of the
U.S., none fit the description
of the
green fireballs.
All during December
1948 and January 1949 the
green fireballs continued to
invade the New Mexico skies.
Everyone, including the intelligence officers at Rutland AFB,
Air Defense Command people, Dr. La
Paz, and some of the
most distinguished scientists at Los Alamos had
seen at least one.
In mid-February
1949 a conference- was called
at Los
Alamos to determine what
should be done to further
pursue the investigation. The Air Force,
Project Sign, the intelligence people at Kirtland, and
other interested parties had done everything
they could think of and
still no answer. Such notable scientists as Dr. Joseph
Kaplan, a world-renowned authority
on the
physics of the upper atmosphere,
Dr. Edward
Teller, of H-bomb fame, and
of course
Dr. La
Paz, attended, along with
a lot
of military
brass and scientists from Los Alamos.
This was one
conference where there was no
need to discuss whether or not
this special type of UFO,
the green
fireball, existed. Almost everyone
at the
meeting had seen one. The purpose
of the
conference was to decide whether
the fireballs were natural
or man-made
and how
to find
out more about them.
As happens in
any conference,
opinions were divided. Some people thought
the green
fireballs were natural fireballs. The proponents of the
natural meteor, or meteorite, theory presented facts that they
had dug
out of
astronomical journals. Greenish-colored meteors, although not common,
had been observed on
many occasions. The flat trajectory,
which seemed to be
so important
in proving
that the green fireballs were extraterrestrial,
was also
nothing new. When viewed from certain
angles, a meteor can appear
to have
a flat trajectory. The reason that
so many
had been
seen during December of 1948 and
January of 1949 was that
the weather
had been unusually clear
all over
the Southwest
during this period.
Dr. La Paz
led the
group who believed that the
green fireballs were not meteors
or meteorites.
His argument
was derived
from the facts that he
had gained
after many days of research and working with Air
Force intelligence teams. He stuck to
the points
that (1) the trajectory was too flat, (2) the
color was too green, and
(3) he
couldn't locate any fragments even though
he had
found the spots where they
should have hit the
earth if they were meteorites.
People who
were at that meeting have
told me that Dr. La Paz's
theory was very interesting and that each point
was carefully considered. But evidently it
wasn't conclusive enough because
when the conference broke up,
after two days, it was decided
that the green fireballs were
a natural
phenomenon of some kind.
It was
recommended that this phase of the
UFO investigation
be given
to the
Air Force's
Cambridge Research Laboratory, since it is the
function of this group to study
natural phenomena, and that Cambridge
set up a project to attempt
to photograph
the green
fireballs and measure their speed,
altitude, and size.
In the
late summer of 1949, Cambridge
established Project Twinkle to solve
the mystery.
The project
called for establishing three cinetheodolite stations near
White Sands, New Mexico. A cinetheodolite is similar
to a
35-mm. movie camera except when you
take a photograph of an
object you also get a photograph
of three
dials that show the time
the photo was taken,
the azimuth
angle, and the elevation angle of the camera. If
two or
more cameras photograph the same object,
it is
possible to obtain a very
accurate measurement of -the
photographed object's altitude, speed, and size.
Project Twinkle
was a
bust. Absolutely nothing was photographed.
Of the
three cameras that were planned
for the
project, only one was
available. This one camera was
continually being moved from place
to place.
If several
reports came from a certain area,
the camera
crew would load up their equipment
and move
to that
area, always arriving too late. Any
duck hunter can tell you
that this is the wrong
tactic; if you want
to shoot
any ducks
pick a good place and
stay put, let the
ducks come to you.
The people
trying to operate Project Twinkle
were having financial and morale
trouble. To do a good
job they
needed more and better
equipment and more people, but
Air Force budget cuts
precluded this. Moral support was
free but they didn't
get this
either.
When the Korean
War started,
Project Twinkle silently died, along with
official interest in green fireballs.
When I organized
Project Blue Book in the
summer of 1951 I'd never heard
of a
green fireball. We had a
few files marked "Los Alamos Conference,"
"Fireballs," "Project Twinkle," etc., but
I didn't
pay any
attention to them.
Then one day
I was
at a
meeting in Los Angeles with
several other officers from
ATIC, and was introduced to Dr. Joseph Kaplan. When
he found
we were
from ATIC, his first question was,
"What ever happened to the green
fireballs?" None of
us had
ever heard of them, so
he quickly
gave us the story.
He and
I ended
up discussing
green fireballs. He mentioned Dr.
La Paz
and his
opinion that the green fireballs might
be man-made,
and although
he respected
La Paz's
professional ability, he just wasn't
convinced. But he did
strongly urge me to get
in touch
with Dr. La Paz and hear
his side
of the
story.
When I returned
to ATIC
I spent
several days digging into our collection
of green
fireball reports. All of these
reports covered a period
from early December 1948 to
late 1949. As far as Blue
Book's files were concerned, there hadn't been a green
fireball report for a ■ year
and a
half.
I read
over the report on Project
Twinkle and the few notes we
had on
the Los
Alamos Conference, and decided that the next time I
went to Albuquerque I'd contact
Dr. La Paz. I did go
to Albuquerque
several times but my visits
were always short and
I was
always in a hurry so
I didn't
get to see him.
It was six
or eight
months later before the subject
of green
fireballs came up again.
I was
eating lunch with a group
of people at the
AEC's Los Alamos Laboratory when one of the group mentioned the mysterious kelly-green balls of fire.
The strictly unofficial bull-session-type discussion
that followed took up the
entire lunch hour and several
hours of the afternoon. It was
an interesting
discussion because these people, all scientists
and technicians
from the lab, had a
few educated guesses as to what
they might be. AH of
them had seen a green fireball,
some of them had seen
several.
One of the
men, a private pilot, had
encountered a fireball one night while
he was
flying his Navion
north of Santa Fe and he
had a
vivid way of explaining what he'd seen. "Take
a soft ball and paint it
with some kind of fluorescent
paint that will glow a bright
green in the dark," I remember his saying, "then have someone take
the ball
out about
100 feet
in front of you
and about
10 feet
above you. Have him throw the
ball right at your face,
as hard
as he
can throw
it. That's what a
green fireball looks like."
The speculation about what the green
fireballs were ran through the usual
spectrum of answers, a new
type of natural phenomenon, a secret
U.S. development, and psychologically enlarged meteors. When the
possibility of the green fireballs'
being associated with interplanetary vehicles came up, the whole
group got serious. They had
been doing a lot of thinking
about this, they said, and
they had a theory.
The green fireballs,
they theorized, could be some
type of unmanned test vehicle that
was being
projected into our atmosphere from a
"spaceship" hovering several
hundred miles above the earth. Two
years ago I would have
been amazed to hear a group
of reputable
scientists make such a startling Statement.
Now, however, I took it
as a
matter of course. I'd heard the
same type of statement many
times before from equally qualified groups.
Turn the tables,
they said, suppose that we
are going
to try to go to a
far planet.
There would be three phases
to the trip: out through the
earth's atmosphere, through space,
and the
re-entry into the atmosphere of the planet we're planning to land on.
The first
two phases
would admittedly present formidable problems, but the last
phase, the re-entry phase, would be
the most
critical. Coming in from outer space, the craft would,
for all
practical purposes, be similar to a
meteorite except that it would
be powered
and not free-falling. You would have
myriad problems associated with
aerodynamic heating, high aerodynamic loadings, and very probably a
host of other problems that
no one
can now conceive of. Certain of
these problems could be partially,
solved by laboratory experimentation, but nothing can
replace flight testing, and the
results obtained by flight tests
in our atmosphere would not be
valid in another type of
atmosphere. The most logical
way to
overcome this difficulty would be to
build our interplanetary vehicle, go
to the
planet that we were
interested in landing on, and
hover several hundred miles up. From
this altitude we could send
instrumented test vehicles down
to the
planet. If we didn't want the inhabitants of the
planet, if it were inhabited,
to know what we were doing
we could
put destruction
devices in the test vehicle, or
arrange the test so that
the test
vehicles would just plain burn
up at
a certain
point due to aerodynamic heating.
They continued,
each man injecting his ideas.
Maybe the
green fireballs are test vehicles—somebody
else's. The regular UFO
reports might be explained by
the fact that the manned vehicles
were venturing down to within
100,000 or 200,000 feet of
the earth,
or to
the altitude
at which atmosphere re-entry begins to get
critical.
I had to
go down
to the
airstrip to get a CARCO
Airlines plane back to
Albuquerque so I didn't have
time to ask a lot of
questions that came into my
mind. I did get tp
make one comment. From
the conversations,
I assumed
that these people didn't think the
green fireballs were any kind
of a natural phenomena.
Not exacdy, they said, but
so far
the evidence that said
they were a natural phenomenon
was vastly outweighed by the evidence
that said they weren't.
During the kidney-jolting
trip down the valley from
Los Alamos to Albuquerque in one
of the
CARCO Airlines' Bonanzas, I decided
that I'd stay over an
extra day and talk to Dr.
La Paz.
He knew every
detail there was to know
about the green fireballs. He confirmed
my findings,
that the genuine green fireballs were no longer being
seen. He said that he'd
received hundreds of reports, especially
after he'd written several articles about
the mysterious
fireballs, but that all of
the reported objects were
just greenish-colored, common,
everyday meteors.
Dr. La Paz
said that some people, including
Dr. Joseph
Kaplan and Dr. Edward
Teller, thought that the green
fireballs were natural meteors. He
didn't think so, however, for
several reasons. First the
color was so much different.
To illustrate his point, Dr. La
Paz opened
his desk
drawer and took out a well-wom chart of the
color spectrum. He checked off two shades of green;
one a
pale, almost yellowish green and the
other a much more distinct
vivid green. He pointed to the bright green and
told me that this was
the color
of the green fireballs. He'd taken
this chart with him wheij he went out to talk to
people who had seen the
green fireballs and everyone had
picked this one color. The
pale green, he explained, was the
color reported in the cases
of documented green meteors.
Then there
were other points of dissimilarity
between a meteor and the green
fireballs. The trajectory of the
fireballs was too flat. Dr.
La Paz
explained that a meteor doesn't
necessarily have to arch
down across the sky, its trajectory
can appear to be
flat, but not as flat
as that
of the
green
fireballs. Then there was
the size.
Almost always such des-
criptive words
as "terrifying,"
"as big as the moon,"
and
"blinding" had been used
to describe
the fireballs.
Meteors
just aren't this big
and bright. ^
No—Dr. La
Paz didn't
think that they were meteors.
Dr. La
Paz didn't
believe that they were meteorites
either.
A meteorite is
accompanied by sound and shock
waves that break windows and stampede
cattle. Yet in every case
of a
green fireball sighting the
observers reported that they did
not hear any sound.
But the
biggest mystery of all was
the fact
that no particles of a green
fireball had ever been found.
If they
were meteorites, Dr. La Paz
was positive
that he would have found
one. He'd missed very
few times
in the
cases of known meteorites. He pulled a map
out of
his file
to show me
what he meant. It was a
map that
he had
used to plot the spot where a meteorite had
hit the
earth. I believe it was
in Kansas.
The map had been prepared from
information he had obtained from dozens of people who
had seen
the meteorite
come flaming toward the earth. At
each spot where an observer
was standing he'd drawn
in the
observer's line of sight to the meteorite. From the
dozens of observers he had
obtained dozens of lines of
sight. The lines all converged
to give Dr.
La Paz
a plot
of the
meteorite's downward trajectory. Then
he had
been able to plot the
spot where it had struck
the earth. He and
his crew
went to the marked area,
probed the ground with long steel
poles, and found the meteorite.
This was
just one case that he
showed me. He had records
of many more similar
successful expeditions in his file.
Then he showed
me some
other maps. The plotted lines
looked identical to the
ones on the map I'd
just seen. Dr. La Paz had
used the same techniques on these plots and
had marked an area where he
wanted to search. He had
searched the area many times but
he had
never found anything.
These were
plots of the path of
a green
fireball. ,
When Dr.
La Paz
had finished,
I had one
last question, "What do
you think
they are?"
He weighed the
question for a few seconds—then
he said
that all he cared
to say
was that
he didn't
think that they were a natural
phenomenon. He thought that maybe
someday one would hit the
earth and the mystery would
be solved. He hoped that they
were a natural phenomenon.
After my talk
with Dr. La Paz I
can well
understand his apparent calmness on the
night of September 18,1954, when the newspaper
reporter called him to find
out if
he planned
to investigate this latest
green fireball report. He was
speaking from experience, not indifference,
when he said, "But I don't expect to find
anything."
If the green
fireballs are back, I hope
that Dr. La Paz gets
an answer this time.
The story of
the UFO
now goes
back to late January 1949,
the time when the
Air Force
was in
the midst
of the
green fireball mystery. In
another part of the country
another odd • series of events
was taking
place. The center of activity
was a highly secret area that
can't be named, and the
recipient of the UFO's, which were
formations of little lights, was
the U.S. Army.
The series
of incidents
started when military patrols who
were protecting the area
began to report seeing formations
of lights flying through
the night
sky. At first the lights
were reported every three or four
nights, but inside of two
weeks the frequency had stepped up.
Before long they were a
nightly occurrence. Some patrols
reported that they had seen three
or four
formations in one night. The
sightings weren't restricted to the men on
patrol. One night, just at
dusk, during retreat, the
entire garrison watched a formation
pass directly over the post
parade ground.
As usual with
UFO reports,
the descriptions
of the
lights varied but the majority of
the observers
reported a V formation of three lights. As
the formation
moved through the sky, the lights
changed in color from a
bluish white to orange and back to bluish white.
This color cycle took about
two seconds. The lights usually traveled
from west to east and
made no sound. They
didn't streak across the sky
like a meteor, but they
were "going faster than a jet." The lights
were "a little bigger
than the biggest star." Once in a while
the GI's would get
binoculars on them but they
couldn't see any more details. The
lights just looked bigger.
From the time
of the
first sighting reports of the
little lights were being sent to
the Air
Force through Army Intelligence channels. The reports were
getting to ATIC, but the
green fireball activity was
taking top billing and no
comments went back to the
Army about their little lights.
According to an Army G-2
major to whom I talked
in the
Pentagon, this silence was
taken to mean that no
action, other than sending in reports,
was necessary
on the
part of the Army.
But after about
two weeks
of nightly
sightings and no apparent action by
the Air
Force, the commander of the
installation decided to take the
initiative and set a trap. His staff worked out a plan
in record
time. Special UFO patrols would
be sent out into
the security
area and they would be
furnished with sighting equipment. This could be the
equipment that they normally used
for fire
control. Each patrol would be sent
to a specific location and would
set up
a command post.
Operating out of the command
post, at points where the sky
could be observed, would be
sighting teams. Each team
had sighting
equipment to measure the elevation and azimuth angle of
the UFO.
Four men were to be on
each team, an instrument man, a timer, a recorder, and a radio operator. All
the UFO
patrols would be assigned special radio frequencies.
The operating
procedure would be that when
one sighting
team spotted a UFO the radio operator would call
out his
team's location, the location
of the
UFO in
the sky,
and the
direction it was going.
All of
the other
teams from his patrol would thus know when to
look for the UFO and
begin to sight on it. While
the radio
man was
reporting, the instrument man on
the team
would line up the UFO
and begin
to call out the
angles of elevation and azimuth.
The timer
would call out the
time; the recorder would write
all of
this down. The command post, upon
hearing the report of the
UFO, would call the next patrol and tell them.
They too would try to pick it up.
Here
was an excellent opportunity to get some concrete data on at least one type of
UFO. It was something that should have been done from the start. Speeds,
altitudes, and sizes that are estimated just by looking at a UFO are miserably
inaccurate, lJut if you could accurately establish
that some type of object was traveling 30,000 miles an hour— or even 3,000
miles an hour—through our atmosphere, the UFO story would be the biggest story
since the Creation.
The
plan seemed foolproof and had the full support of every man who was to
participate. For the first time in history every GI wanted to get on the
patrols. The plan was quickly written up as a field order, approved, and mimeographed.
Since the Air Force had the prime responsibility for the UFO investigation, it
was decided that the plan should be quickly co-ordinated
with the Air Force, so a copy was rushed to them. Time was critical because
every group of nightly reports might be the last. Eveiything
was ready to roll the minute the Air Force said "Go."
The
Air Force didn't O.K. the plan. I don't know where the plan was lolled, or who
killed it, but it was killed. Its death caused two reactions.
Many
people thought that the plan was killed so that too many people wouldn't find
out the truth about UFO's. Others thought somebody was just plain stupid.
Neither was true. The. answer
was simply that the official attitude toward UFO's had drastically changed in
the past few months. They didn't exist, they couldn't exist. It was the belief
at ATIC that the one last mystery, the green fireballs, had been solved a few
days before at Los Alamos. The fireballs were meteors and Project Twinkle would
prove it. Any further investigation by the Army would be a waste of time and
effort.
This drastic change in official attitude is
as difficult to explain as it was difficult for many people who knew what was
going on inside Project Sign to believe. I use the words "official
attitude" because at this time UFO's had become as controversial a subject
as they are today. All through intelligence circles people had chosen sides
and the two UFO factions that exist today were bom.
On
one side was the faction that still believed in flying saucers. These people,
come hell or high water, were hanging on to their original ideas. Some thought
that the UFO's were interplanetary spaceships. Others weren't quite as bold and
just believed that a good deal more should be known about the UFO's before they
were so completely written off. These people weren't a bunch of nuts or crackpots
either. They ranged down through the ranks from generals and top-grade
civilians. On the outside their views were backed up by civilian scientists.
On
the other side were those who didn't believe in flying saucers. At one time
many of them had been believers. When the UFO reports were pouring in back in
1947 and 1948, they were just as sure that the UFO's were real as the people
they were now scoffing at. But they had changed their minds. Some of them had
changed their minds because they had seriously studied the UFO reports and just
couldn't see any evidence that the UFO's were real. But many of them could see
the "I don't believe" band wagon pulling out in front and just jumped
on.
This change in the operating policy of the
UFO project was so pronounced that I, like so many other people, wondered if
there was a hidden reason for the change. Was it actually an attempt to go
underground—to make the project more secretive? Was it an
effort to cover up the fact that UFO's were proven to be interplanetary and that
this should be withheld from the public at all cost to prevent a mass panic?
The UFO files are full of references to the near mass panic of October 30,
1938, when Orson Welles presented his now famous "The War of the
Worlds" broadcast.
This period of "mind changing"
bothered me. Here were people deciding that there was nothing to this UFO
business right at a time when the reports seemed to be getting better. From
what I could see, if there was any mind changing to be done it should have been
the other way, skeptics should have been changing to believers.
Maybe I was just playing the front man to a
big cover-up.
I didn't like
it because
if somebody
up above
me knew
that UFO's were really spacecraft, I could make a
big fool
out of myself if the truth
came out. I checked into
this thoroughly. I spent a
lot of
time talking to people who
had worked
on Project Grudge.
The anti-saucer
faction was bom
because of an old psychological
trait, people don't
like to be losers. To
be a
loser makes one feel inferior and
incompetent. On September 23, 1947, when
the chief
at ATIC
sent a letter to the
Commanding General of the Army
Air Forces
stating that UFO's were real, intelligence committed themselves. They had to prove
it. They tried for
a year
and a
half with no success. Officers
on top began to get anxious
and the
press began to get anxious.
They wanted an answer. Intelligence
had tried
one answer,
the then
Top Secret
Estimate of the Situation that
"proved" that UFO's were
real, but it was kicked
back. The people on the UFO
project began to think maybe
the brass didn't consider them too
sharp so they tried a
new hypothesis: UFO's don't
exist. In no time they
found that this was easier to
prove and it got recognition.
Before if an especially interesting UFO report came in
and the
Pentagon wanted an answer, all
they'd get was an "It
could be real but we can't
prove it." Now such a
request got a quick, snappy "It was a balloon,"
and feathers
were stuck in caps from ATIC
up to
the Pentagon.
Everybody felt fine.
In early 1949
the term
"new look" was well known.
The new look in women's fashions
was the
lower hemlines, in automobiles
it was
longer lines. In UFO circles
the new
look was cuss 'em.
The new look
in UFO's
was officially
acknowledged on February 11, 1949, when
an order
was written
that changed the name of the
UFO project
from Project Sign to Project
Grudge. The order was
supposedly written because the classified name, Project Sign, had
been compromised. This was always my
official answer to any questions
about the name change. I'd go
further and say that the
names of the projects, first Sign,
then Grudge, had no significance.
This wasn't true, they did have significance,
a lot
of it.
chapter five
The Dark Ages
The order of February 11, 1949, that changed
the name
of Project Sign to Project Grudge
had not
directed any change in the operating
policy of the project. It
had, in fact, pointed out that the project was
to continue
to investigate
and evaluate
reports of sightings of unidentified
flying objects. In doing this, standard
intelligence procedures would be used.
This normally means the
unbiased evaluation of intelligence
data. But it doesn't
take a great deal of
study of the old UFO
files to see that
standard intelligence procedures
were no longer being used by
Project Grduge. Everything was being
evaluated on the premise
that UFO's couldn't exist. No
matter what you see
or hear,
don't believe it.
New people took
over Project Grudge. ATIC's top
intelligence specialists who had been
so eager
to work
on Project Sign were no longer
working on Project Grudge. Some of them had drastically
and hurriedly
changed their minds about UFO's when
they thought that the Pentagon
was no longer sympathetic to the
UFO cause.
They were now directing their talents
toward more socially acceptable projects. Other charter
members of Project Sign had
been "purged." These were
the people
who had
refused to change their original opinions
about UFO's.
With the new
name and the new personnel
came the new objective, get rid
of the
UFO's. It was never specified
this
way in writing but it didn't
take much effort to see
that this was the goal of
Project Grudge. This unwritten objective
was reflected
in every
memo, report, and directive.
To reach
their objective Project Grudge launched
into a campaign that opened a new age
in the
history of the UFO. If a
comparative age in world history
can be
chosen, the Dark Ages would be
most appropriate. Webster's Dictionary defines the Dark Ages as
a period
of "intellectual
stagnation."
To one who
is intimately
familiar with UFO history it
is clear that Project Grudge had
a two-phase
program of UFO annihilation. The first
phase consisted of explaining every UFO report. The second
phase was to tell the
public how the Air Force had
solved all the sightings. This, Project Grudge reasoned, would
put an
end to
UFO reports.
Phase one
had been
started by the people of
Project Sign. They realized that a great many reports
were caused by people seeing balloons
or such
astronomical bodies as planets, meteors, or stars. They also
realized that before they could
get to the heart of the
UFO problem
they had to sift out
this type of report.
To do
this they had called on
outside help. Air Weather Service had
been asked to screen the
reports and check those that sounded
like balloons against their records
of balloon flights. Dr. J. Allen
Hynek, distinguished
astrophysicist and head
of Ohio
State University's Astronomy Department, had been given a
contract to sort out those
reports that could be blamed
on stars,
planets, meteors, etc. By early March
the Air
Weather Service and Dr. Hynek had some positive identifications. According
to the
old records, with these solutions and
those that Sign and Grudge
had already found, about
50 per
cent of the reported UFO's
could now be positively
identified as hoaxes, balloons, planets,
sundogs, etc. It was
now time
to start
phase two, the publicity campaign.
For many
months reporters and writers had
been trying to reach behind the
security wall and get the
UFO story
from the horse's mouth,
but no
luck. Some of them were
still trying but they were having
no success
because they were making the mistake
of letting
it slip
that they didn't believe that airline pilots, military pilots,
scientists, and just all around solid
citizens were having "hallucinations," perpetrating "hoaxes," or being deceived
by the
"misidentification of common objects."
The people
of Project
Grudge weren't looking for this type
of writer,
they wanted a writer who
would listen to them
and "write
their story. As a public
relations officer later told me,
"We had a devil of
a time.
All of the writers who were
after saucer stories had made
their own investigations of sightings and
we couldn't
convince them they were wrong."
Before long,
however, the right man came
along. He was Sidney Shallet, a
writer for The
Saturday Evening Post. He seemed to have
the prerequisites
that were desired, so his
visit to ATIC was
cleared through the Pentagon. Harry
Haberer, a
crack Air Force public relations
man, was assigned the job of
seeing that Shallet
got his
^tory. I have
heard many times, from both military
personnel and civilians,
that the Air Force
told Shallet exactly what to say
in his
article—play down the UFO's—don't
write anything that even hints that there might- be
something foreign in our skies.
I don't believe
that this is the case.
I think that
he just
wrote the UFO story
as it
was told
to him,
told to him by Project Grudge.
Shallet's article,
which appeared in two parts
in the
April 30 and May 7, 1949, issues of
The Saturday Evening Post, is important
in the
history of the UFO and
in understanding
the UFO problem because
it had
considerable effect on public opinion. Many
people had, with varying degrees
of interest, been wondering about the
UFO's for over a year
and a half. Very few had
any definite
opinions one way or the other.
The feeling
seemed to be that the
Air Force
is working on the
problem and when they get
the answer
well know. There had
been a few brief, ambiguous
press releases from the
Air Force
but these
meant nothing. Consequently when Shallet's article appeared in the
Post it was
widely read. It contained
facts, and the facts had
come from Air Force Intelligence. This was the Air
Force officially reporting on UFO's
for the
first time*
The article was
typical of the many flying
saucer stories that were to follow
in the
later years of UFO history,
all written from material obtained from
the Air
F rce.
Shallet's article casually
admitted that a few UFO
sightings couldn't be explained, but the
reader didn't have much chance
to think about this fact because
99 per
cent of the story was
devoted to the anti-saucer
side of the problem. It
was the
typical negative approach. I
know that the negative approach
is typical of the
way that
material is handed out by
the Air Force because I was continually being told
to "tell
them about the sighting reports we've
solved—don't mention the unknowns."
I was
never ordered to tell this,
but it
was a
strong suggestion and in
the military
when higher headquarters suggests, you
do.
Shallet's article
started out by psychologically conditioning the reader
by using
such phrases as "the great
flving saucer scare," "rich, full-blown screwiness," "fearsome
freaks," and so forth. By the
time the reader gets to
the meat
of the
article he feels like
a rich,
full-blown jerk for ever even
thinking about UFO's.
He pointed
out how
the "furor"
about UFO reports got so great
that the Air Force was
"forced" to investigate
the reports reluctantly. He didn't mention
that two months after the first
UFO report
ATIC had asked for Project
Sign since they believed that UFO's
did exist.
Nor did
it mention
the once Top Secret Estimate of
the Situation
that also concluded that UFO's
were real. In no way
did the
article reflect the excitement and anxiety of the
age of
Project Sign when secret conferences preceded and followed every
trip to investigate a UFO report.
This was the Air Force
being "forced" into reluctantly
investigating the UFO reports.
Laced through
the story
were the details of several
UFO sightings; some new
and some
old, as far as the
public was concerned. The original UFO
report by Kenneth Arnold couldn't, be explained. Arnold, however,
had sold
his story
to Fate
magazine and
in the
same issue of Fate were stories with such titles
as "Behind
the Etheric Veil" and "Invisible Beings Walk the
Earth," suggesting that Arnold's story
might fall into the
same category. The sightings where
the Air Force had
the answer
had detailed
explanations.
The ones that
were unknowns were mentioned, but only in passing.
Many famous
names were quoted. The late
General.Hoyt S. Vandenberg,
then Chief of Staff of
the Air
Force, had seen a flying saucer
but it
was just
a reflection on
the windshield
of his
B-17. General Lauris
Norstad's UFO was
a reflection of
a star
on a cloud, and General Curtis E. Lemay
found out that one
out of
six UFO's
was a
balloon; Colonel McCoy, then chief of
ATIC, had seen lots of
UFO's. All were reflections from distant
airplanes. In other words, nobody
who is anybody in the Air
Force believes in flying saucers.
Figures in
the top
echelons of the military had
spoken.
A few
hoaxes and crackpot reports rounded
out Mr.
Shallet's article.
The reaction
to the
article wasn't what the Air
Force and ATIC expected. They had
thought that the public would
read the article and
toss it, and all thoughts
of UFO's,
into the trash can. But they
didn't. Within a few days
the frequency
of UFO
reports hit an all-time high.
People, both military and civilian, evidently
didn't much care what Generals
Vandenberg, Norstad, LeMay, or
Colonel McCoy thought; they didn't believe
what they were seeing were
hallucinations, reflections, or balloons.
What they were seeing were UFO's,
whatever UFO's might be.
I heard
many times from ex-Project Grudge people that Shallet had "crossed"
them, he'd vaguely
mentioned that there might be a case for the
UFO. This made him pro-saucer.
A few
days after the last installment
of the
Post article the Air
Force gave out a long
and detailed
press release completely debunking
UFO's, but this had no
effect. It only seemed to add
to the
confusion.
The one thing
that Shallet's article accomplished was to
plant a seed of
doubt in many people's minds.
Was the
Air Force telling the
truth about UFO's? The public
and a large percentage of the
military didn't know what' was
going on behind ATIC's barbed-wire fence but they did
know that a lot of
reliable people had seen UFO's.
Airline pilots are considered responsible people—airline pilots had seen
UFO's.
Experienced military pilots
and ground
officers are responsible people—they'd seen UFO's. Scientists, doctors, lawyers, merchants,
and plain
old Joe
Doakes had seen
UFO's, and their friends knew that
they were responsible people. Somehow
these facts and the tone
of the
Post article didn't
quite jibe, and when things don't
jibe, people get suspicious.
In those people
who had
a good
idea of what was going
on behind ATIC's barbed
wire, the newspaper reporters and writers with the "usually
reliable sources," the Post article planted a bigger seed of doubt. Why the
sudden change in policy they wondered?
If UFO's were
so serious
a few
months ago, why the sudden
debunking? Maybe Shal-Iet's story was a put-up
job for
the Air
Force. Maybe the security had been
tightened. Their sources of information
were reporting that many
people in the military did
not quite buy the Shallet article. The
seed of doubt began to
grow, and some of
these writers began to start
"independent investigations"
to get
the "true"
story. Research takes time, so during
the summer
and fall
of 1949
there wasn't much apparent UFO activity.
As the writers
began to poke around for
their own facts, Project Grudge lapsed
more and more into a
period of almost complete inactivity.
Good UFO reports continued to
come in at the
rate of about ten per
month but they weren't being verified or investigated. Most of them were
being discarded. There are few,
if any,
UFO reports
for the
middle and latter part of 1949
in the
ATIC files. Only the logbook,
showing incoming reports, gives any
idea of the activity of this period. The meager
effort that was being made
was going into a report that
evaluated old UFO reports, those
received prior to the
spring of 1949. Project Grudge
thought that they
were writing a final report
on the
UFO's.
From the small
bits of correspondence and memos
that were in the ATIC files,
it was
apparent that Project Grudge thought that the UFO was
on its
way out.
Any writers
inquiring about UFO activity were
referred to the debunking press release given out just
after the Post
article had
been published. There was
no more
to say.
Project Grudge thought they were winning
the UFO
battle; the writers thought that they were covering up
a terrific
news story—the story that the Air
Force knew what flying saucers
were and weren't teHing.
By late fall
1949 the material for several
UFO stories
had been collected by writers who
had been
traveling all over the United States
talking to people who had
seen UFO's. By early winter the
material had been worked up
into UFO stories. In December the
presses began to roll. True magazine "scooped" the world
with their story that UFO's
were from outer space.
The True article, entitled, "The Flying
Saucers are Real," was written by Donald Keyhoe. The article opened
with a hard punch. In the
first paragraph Keyhoe
concluded that after eight months of
extensive research he had found
evidence that the earth
was being
closely scrutinized by intelligent
beings. Their vehicles were the
so-called flying saucers. Then he proceeded
to prove
his point.
His argument
was built
around the three classics: the
Mantell, the
Chiles-Whitted, and the Gorman incidents.
He took
each sighting, detailed the
"facts," ripped the
official Air Force conclusions to shreds,
and presented
his own
analysis. He threw in a varied
assortment of technical fact that
gave the article a distinct, authoritative
flavor. This, combined with the fact
that True had the name for printing the
truth, hit the reading public like
an 8-inch
howitzer. Hours after it appeared in subscribers' mailboxes and
on the
newsstands, radio and TV commentators
and newspapers
were giving it a big play.
UFO's were back in business,
to stay.
True was in business
too. It is rumored among
magazine publishers that Don Keyoe's article in
True was one
of the
most widely read and widely discussed
magazine articles in history.
The Air Force
had inadvertendy helped Keyhoe—in fact,
they made his story
a success.
He and
several other writers had contacted the
Air Force
asking for information for their
magazine articles. But, knowing
that the articles were pro-saucer,
the writers
were unceremoniously sloughed
off. Keyhoe carried his fight right
to the
top, to General Sory Smith, Director of the Office of
Public Information, but still no
dice—the Air Force wasn't
divulging any more than they
had-already told. Keyhoe construed this
to mean
tight security, the tightest type
of security.
Keyhoe had one
more approach, however. He
was an
ex-Annapolis graduate, and among his classmates
were such people as Admiral
Delmar Fahmey,
then a top figure in
the Navy
guided missile program and Admiral
Calvin Bolster, the Director of
the Office
of Naval Research. He
went to see them but
they couldn't help him. He knew that this meant
the real
UFO story
was big and that it could
be only
one thing—interplanetary
spaceships or earthly weapons—and his contacts denied they
were earthly weapons. He
played this security angle in
his True article and in a later book,
and it
gave the story the needed punch.
But the Air
Force wasn't trying to cover
up. It
was just
that they didn't want
Keyhoe or any
other saucer fans in their hair.
They couldn't be bothered. They
didn't believe in flying saucers
and. couldn't feature anybody else
believing. Believing, to the
people in ATIC in 1949,
meant even raising the possibility that there might be
something to the reports.
The Air Force
had a
plan to counter the Keyhoe article, or any other story
that might appear. The plan
originated at ATIC. It called for
a general
officer to hold a short
press conference, flash his
stars, and speak the magic
words "hoaxes, hallucinations, and the misidentification of known objects."
True, Keyhoe and
the rest
would go broke trying to
peddle their magazines. The True
article did
come out, the general spoke, the
public laughed, and Keyhoe and True got rich. Only the
other magazines that had planned
to run
UFO stories, and that were scooped
by True, lost out. Their stories were killed—they would have been an
anti-climax to Key-hoe's potboiler.
The Air Force's
short press conference was followed
by a
press release. On December
27, 1949,
it was
announced that I Project Grudge had
been closed out and the
final report on UFO's would be
released to the press in
a few
days. When it was released it
caused widespread interest because, supposedly,
this was all that the
Air Force
knew about UFO's.
Once again, instead
of throwing
large amounts of cold water
on the UFO's, it only caused
more confusion.
The report
was officially
tided "Unidentified Flying
Objects-Project Grudge," Technical Report No. 102-AC-49/15-100.
But it
was widely
referred to as the Grudge
Report.
The Grudge Report
was a
typical military report. There was the
body of the report, which
contained the short discussion, conclusions, and recommendations. Then there were several appendices that were supposed
to substantiate
the conclusions and recommendations
made in the report.
One of the
appendices was the final report
of Dr.
J. Allen Hynek, Project Grudge's contract
astronomer. Dr. Hynek and his staff had
studied 237 of the best
UFO reports.
They had spent several months
analyzing each report. By searching through
astronomical journals and checking the location of various celestial
bodies, they found that some
UFO's could be explained.
Of the
237 reports
he and
his staff examined, 32 per cent
could be explained astronomically.
The Air
Force Air Weather Service and
the Air
Force Cambridge Research Laboratory
had sifted
the reports
for UFO's that might have been
balloons. These two organizations had data on the
flights of both the regular
weather balloons and the
huge, high-flying skyhooks. They wrote
off 12 per cent of the
237 UFO
reports under study as balloons.
This left 56
per cent
still unknown. By weeding out
the hoaxes, the reports that were
too nebulous
to evaluate,
and reports that could well be
misidentified airplanes, Project Grudge
disposed of another 33 per
cent of the reports. This
left 23 per cent
that fell in the "unknown"
category.
There were more
appendices. The Rand Corporation, one of the most unpublicized
yet highly
competent contractors to the Air Force,
looked over the reports and
made the statement, "We
have found nothing which would
seriously controvert simple rational
explanations of the various phenomena
in terms
of balloons,
conventional aircraft, planets, meteors, bits
of paper,
optical illusions, practical jokers, psy-chopathological reporters, and the like." But Rand's comment didn't help a great deal
because they didn't come up
with any solutions to any of
the 23
per cent
unknown.
The Psychology
Branch of the Ah* Force's
Aeromedical Laboratory took a pass at
the psychological
angles. They said, "There are sufficient
psychological explanations for the reports of unidentified objects to
provide plausible explanations
for reports
not otherwise
explainable." They pointed
out that some people
have "spots in front of
their eyes" due to minute solid
particles that float about in
the fluids
of the eye and cast shadows
on the
retina. Then they pointed out that some people are
just plain nuts. Many people
who read the ^Grudge Report took
these two points to mean
that all UFO Observers
either had spots in front
of their
eyes or were nuts.
They broke the reports down
statistically. The people who
wrote the report found that
over 70 per cent of the
people making sightings reported a
light-colored object. (This I
doubt, but that's what his
report said.)' They said a big
point of these reports of
light-colored objects was that any high-flying
object will appear to be
dark against the sky. For this
reason the UFO's couldn't be
real.
I suggest
that the next time you
are outdoors
and see
a bomber go over at high
altitude you look at it
closely. Unless it's painted a dark
color it won't look dark.
The U.S.
Weather Bureau wrote an extremely
comprehensive and interesting
report on all types of
lightning. It was included in the
Grudge Report but contained a
note: "None of the
recorded incidents appear to have
been lightning."
There was one
last appendix. It was entitled
"Summary of the Evaluation
of Remaining
Reports." What the
title meant was, We
have 23 per cent of
the reports
that we can't explain but we
have to explain them because
we don't
believe in flying saucers.
This appendix contributed greatly to the usage of the
analogy to the Dark Ages,
the age
of "intellectual stagnation."
This appendix
was important—it
was the
meat of the whole report. Every UFO sighting had
been carefully checked, and those with
answers had been sifted out.
Then the ones listed in "Summary
of the
Evaluation of Remaining Reports" should be the best UFO
reports—the ones with no answers.
This was
the appendix
that the newsmen grabbed at
when the Grudge Report was released.
It contained
the big
story. But if youll
check back through old newspaper
files you will hardly find a
mention of the Grudge Report.
I was told
that reporters just didn't believe
it when
I tried to find out why
the Grudge
Report hadn't been mentioned in the newspapers. I got the story
from a newspaper correspondent
in Washington
whom I came to know
pretty well and who kept me
filled in on the latest
UFO scuttlebutt
being passed around the
Washington press circles. He was
one of those humans who had
a brain
like a filing cabinet; he could remember eveiything about everything.
UFO's were a hobby of his.
He remembered
when the Grudge Report came out;
in fact,
he'd managed to get a
copy of his own. He said the report
had been
quite impressive, but only in its
ambiguousness, illogical reasoning,
and very
apparent effort to write
off all
UFO reports
at any
cost. He, personally, thought
that it was a poor
attempt to put out a "fake"
report, full of misleading information, to cover up
the real story. Others,
he told
me, just
plainly and simply didn't know what
to think—they
were confused.
And they
had every
right to be confused.
As an example
of the
way that
many of the better reports
of the
1947-49 period were "evaluated" let's take
the report of a
pilot who tangled with a
UFO near
Washington, D.C., on the night
of November
18, 1948.
At about
9:45 EST I noticed a
light moving generally north in south
over Andrews AFB. It appeared
to be
one continuous,
glowing white light. I thought
it was
an aircraft
with only one landing
light so I moved in
closer to check, as I wanted
to get
into the landing pattern. I
was well
above landing traffic altitude at this
time. As I neared the
fight I noticed that it was
not another
airplane. Just then it began
to take
violent evasive action so I
tried to close on it, I
made first contact at 2,700
feet over the field. I
switched my navigation lights on and
off but
got no
answer so I went in closer—but
the light
quickly flew up and over
my airplane.
I then tried to close again
hut the
light turned. I tried to turn inside of its
turn and, at the same
time, get the light between the moon and me,
but even
with my flaps lowered I couldn't turn inside the light. I never did manage to get into a
position where the light was
silhouetted against the moon.
I chased the" light up
and down
and around
for about
10 minutes, then as a last
resort I made a pass and turned on
my landing lights. Just
before the object made a
final tight turn and headed for
the coast
I saw that
it was
a dark
gray oval-shaped object, smaller
than my T-6. I couldn't tell if the light was on
the object
or if
the whole
object had been glowing.
Two officers and
a crew
chief, a master sergeant, completely
corroborated the pilot's report. They
had been
standing on the flight line
and had
witnessed the entire incident.
The Air Weather
Service, who had been called
in as
experts on weather balloons, read
this report. They said, "Definitely
not a
balloon." Dr. Hynek said, "No astronomical explanation." It wasn't another
airplane and it wasn't a
hallucination.
But Project Grudge
had an
answer, it was a weather
balloon. There was no
explanation as to why they
had so
glibly reversed the decision
of the
Air Weather
Service.
There was
an answer
for every
report.
From the
600 pages
of appendices,
discussions of the appendices, and careful
studies of UFO reports, it
was concluded
that:
1.
Evaluation of
reports of unidentified flying objects
constitute no
direct threat to the national
security of the United States.
2.
Reports of unidentified
flying objects are the result
of:
a. A mild form
of mass
hysteria or "war nerves."
b. Individuals who fabricate
such reports to perpetrate
a hoax or seek publicity.
c. Psychopathological persons.
d. Misidentification of
various conventional objects.
It was
recommended that Project Grudge be
"reduced in scope" and that only
"those reports clearly indicating realistic technical applications"
be sent
to Grudge. There was a
note below these recommendations. It said,
"It is readily apparent that further study along present
lines would only confirm the findings presented herein."
Somebody read
the note
and concurred
because, with the completion and approval
of the
Grudge Report, Project Grudge folded. People
could rant and rave, see
flying saucers, pink elephants,
sea serpents,
or Harvey,
but it
was no concern
of ATIC's.
chapter sex
The Presses Roll—The
Air Force Shrugs
The Ghudge
Report was supposedly
not for
general distribution. A few copies
were sent to the Air
Force Press Desk in the Pentagon
and reporters
and writers
could come in and read it.
But a
good many copies did get
into circulation. The Air Force Press
Room wasn't the best place
to sit
and study a 600-page report, and
a quick
glance at the report showed that it required some
study—if no more than to
find out what the authors were
trying to prove—so several dozen
copies got into circulation.
I know
that these "liberated"
copies of the Grudge
Report had been thoroughly studied because nearly every writer
who came
to ATIC
during the time that I was
in charge
of Project
Blue Book carried a copy.
Since the
press had some questions about
the motives
behind releasing the Grudge Report,
it received
very little publicity while the writers
put out
feelers. Consequendy in early 1950 you didn't
read much about flying saucers.
Evidently certain people
in the
Air Force
thought this hill in publicity meant
that the UFO's had finally
died because Project Grudge was
junked. All the project files,
hundreds of pounds of reports,
memos, photos, sketches, and other assorted
bits of paper were unceremoniously
yanked out of their filing cabinets,
tied up with string, and
chucked into an old storage case.
I would
guess that many reports ended up as "souvenirs" because a
year later, when I exhumed
these files, there were a
lot of
reports missing.
About this time
the official
Air Force
UFO project
had one, last post-death muscular spasm.
The last
bundle of reports had just landed
on top
of the
pile in the storage case when. ATIC received a
letter from the Director of
Intelligence of the Air
Force. In official language it
said, "What gives?" There had been no
order to end Project Grudge. The answer went back
that Project Grudge had not been
disbanded; the project functions had
been transferred and it was
no longer
a "special"
project. From now on UFO reports
would be processed through normal
intelligence channels along with other
intelligence reports.
To show good
faith ATIC requested permission to issue a new Air
Force-wide bulletin which
was duly
mimeographed and disseminated. In essence
it said
that Air Force Headquarters had directed ATIC to
continue to collect and evaluate
reports of unidentified flying objects.
It went
on to
explain that most UFO reports
were trash. It pointed out
the findings of the Grudge Report
in such
strong language that by the time
the recipient
of the
bulletin had finished reading it,
he would
be ashamed
to send
in a
report. To cinch the deal the
bulletins must have been disseminated
only to troops in Outer Mongolia
because I never found anyone
in the field who had ever
received a copy.
As the
Air Force
UFO-investigating activity dropped
to nil, the press activity skyrocketed
to a
new peak.
A dozen
people took off to
dig up
their own UFO stories and
to draw
their own conclusions.
After a quiet
January, True again clobbered the reading
public. This time it
was a
story in the March 1950
issue and it was entitled, "How
Scientists Tracked Flying Saucers." It was written by none
other than the man who
was at
that time in charge of a
team of Navy scientists at the super hush-hush guided missile test and
development area, White Sands Proving Ground,
New Mexico.
He was
Commander R. B. McLaughlin, an Annapolis
graduate and a Regular Navy officer. His story
had been
cleared by the military and
was in absolute, 180-degree, direct contradiction
to every
press release that had
been made by the military
in the
past two years. Not
only did the commander believe
that he had proved that UFO's
were real but
that he knew what they were. "I am convinced," he wrote in
the True article, "that it,"
referring to a UFO he
had seen
at White
Sands, "was a flying
saucer, and further, that these
disks are spaceships from another
planet, operated by animate, intelligent
beings."
On several occasions
during 1948 and 1949, McLaughlin
or his crew at the White
Sands Proving Ground had made
good UFO sightings. The best one was
made on April 24, 1949, when
the commander's
crew of engineers, scientists, and technicians were getting ready
to launch
one of
the huge
100-foot-diameter skyhook balloons. It
was 10:30
a.m. on an absolutely clear Sunday morning.
Prior to the launching, the crew had sent up
a small
weather balloon to check the
winds at lower levels. One man
was watching
the balloon
through a theodolite, an instrument similar to a surveyor's
transit built around a 25-power telescope,
one man
was holding
a stop watch, and a third
had a
clipboard to record the measured data. The crew had
tracked the balloon to about
10,000 feet when one
of them
suddenly shouted and pointed off to the left. The
whole crew looked at the
part of the sky where the
man was
excitedly pointing, and there was
a UFO. "It didn't appear to
be large,"
one of
the scientists
later said, "but it
was plainly
visible. It was easy to
see that it was elliptical in shape and had
a "whitish-silver
color."
After taking a split
second to realize what they
were look-
ing at,
one of
the men
swung the theodolite
around to pick
up the object, and the timer
reset his stop watch. For
sixty seconds they tracked
the UFO
as it
moved toward the
east. In about fifty-five
seconds it had dropped from
an
angle of elevation of
45 degrees
to 25
degrees, then it zoomed
upward and in a
few seconds
it was
out of
sight. The crew
heard no sound and
the New
Mexico desert was so calm
that day that they
could have heard "a whisper
a mile
away." • N
When they reduced
the data
they had collected, McLaughlin and crew fround out that
the UFO
had been
traveling 4 degrees per
second. At one time during
the observed
portion of its fight, the
UFO had
passed in front of a range
of mountains
that were visible to the
observers. Using this as
a check
point, they estimated the size
of the
UFO to be 40 feet wide
and 100
feet long, and they computed
that the UFO had been
at an
altitude of 296,000 feet, or 56
miles, when they had first
seen it, and that it
was traveling 7 miles per second.
This wasn't the
only UFO sighting made by
White Sands scientists. On April 5,
1948, another team watched a
UFO for several minutes as it
streaked across the afternoon sky
in a series of violent maneuvers.
The disk-shaped
object was about a fifth the
size of a full moon.
On another
occasion the crew of a
C-47 that was tracking a skyhook balloon saw two
similar UFO's come loping in from
just above the horizon, circle
the balloon,
which was flying at just under
90,000 feet, and rapidly leave.
When the balloon was recovered it
was ripped.
I knew the
two pilots
of the
C-47; both of them now
believe in flying saucers. And
they aren't alone; so do
the people of the Aeronautical Division of General Mills
who launch and track the big
skyhook balloons. These scientists and engineers all have seen
UFO's and they aren't their
own balloons. I was
almost tossed out of General
Mills offices into a cold January
Minneapolis snowstorm for suggesting such a thing—but that
comes later in our history
of the UFO.
I don't
know what these people saw.
There has been a lot of
interest generated by these sightings
because of the extremely high qualifications
and caliber
of the
observers. There is some
legitimate doubt as to the
accuracy of the speed and altitude
figures that McLaughlin's crew arrived
at from the data
they measured with their theodolite. This doesn't mean much,
however. Even if they were
off by
a factor of 100 per cent,
the speeds
and altitudes
would be fantastic, and besides
they looked at the UFO
through a 25-power telescope and
swore that it was a
flat, oval-shaped object. BaHoons, birds, and
airplanes aren't flat and oval-shaped.
Astrophysicist Dr.
Donald Menzel, in a book
entitled Flying Saucers, says they
saw a
refracted image of their own
balloon caused by an atmospheric
phenomenon. Maybe he is right, but
the General
Mills people don't believe it.
And their disagreement is backed up
by years
of practical
experience with the atmosphere, its tricks and its
illusions.
When the
March issue of True magazine carrying Commander McLaughlin's story about how
the White
Sands scientists had tracked
UFO's reached the public, it
stirred up a hornets' nest. Donald
Keyhoe's article in
the January
True had converted
many people but there were
still a few heathens. The fact
that government scientists had seen
UFO's, and were admitting it, took
care of a large percentage
of these heathens. More and more
people were believing
in flying
saucers.
The Navy had
no comment
to make
about the sightings, but they did
comment on McLaughlin. It seems
that several months before, at the
suggestion of a group of
scientists at White Sands, McLaughlin had carefully written up
the details
of the
sightings and forwarded them to
Washington. The report contained
no personal
opinions, just facts. The comments on McLaughlin's report had
been wired back to White Sands
from Washington and they were,
"What are you drinking out there?"
A very
intelligent answer—and it came from an
admiral in the Navy's guided
missile program.
By the time
his story
was published,
McLaughlin was no longer at White
Sands; he was at sea
on the
destroyer
Bristol. Maybe he
answered the admiral's wire.
The Air Force
had no
comment to make on McLaughlin's
story. People at ATIC
just shrugged and smiled as
they walked by the remains of
Project Grudge, and continued to
"process UFO reports through
regular intelligence channels."
In early 1950
the UFO's
moved down to Mexico. The
newspapers were full of
reports. Tourists were bringing back
more saucer stories than
hand-tooled, genuine leather purses. Time reported that pickpockets were doing a
fabulous business working the sky-gazing
crowds that gathered when a platwolo was seen. Mexico's Department of National
Defense reported that there
had been
some good reports but that
the stories of finding
crashed saucers weren't true.
On March 8
one of
the best
UFO sightings
of 1950
took place right over ATIC,
About midmorning
on this
date a TWA airliner was
coming in to land at
the Dayton
Municipal Airport. As the pilot
circled to get into
the traffic
pattern, he and his copilot
saw a bright light hovering off
to the
southeast. The pilot called the tower operators at the
airport to tell them about
the light, but before he could
say anything,
the tower
operators told him they
were looking at it too.
They had called the operations office of the Ohio
Air National
Guard, which was located at the
airport, and while the tower
operators were talking, an Air Guard
pilot was running toward an
F-51, dragging his parachute,
helmet, and oxygen mask.
I knew the
pilot, and he later told
me, "I
wanted to find out once and
for all
what these screwy flying saucer
reports were all about."
While the
F-51 was warming up, the
tower operators called ATIC and told
them about the UFO and
where to look to see it.
The people
at ATIC
rushed out and there it
was— an extremely bright light, much
brighter and larger than a
star. Whatever it was,
it was
high because every once in
a while it would be blanked
out by
the thick,
high, scattered clouds that were in
the area.
While the group
of people
were standing in front of
ATIC watching the light, somebody
ran in and called the radar
lab at
Wright Field to see if
they had any radar "on the
air." The people in the
lab said
that they didn't have, but they
could get operational in a hurry. They said they
would search southeast of the
field with their radar and suggested
that ATIC send some people
over. By the time the ATIC
people arrived at the radar
lab the
radar was on the
air and
had a
target in the same position
as the light that everyone was
looking at. The radar was
also picking up the Air Guard
F-51 and an F-51 that
had been scrambled from Wright-Patterson. The pilots of the
Air Guard '51 and
the Wright-Patterson
'51 could
both see the UFO, and they
were going after it. The
master sergeant who was operating the
radar called the F-51's on
the radio,
got them together and
started to vector them toward
the target. As the two airplanes
climbed they kept up a
continual conversation with the radar
operator to make sure they
were all after the
same thing. For several minutes
they could clearly see the UFO,
but when
they reached about 15,000 feet, the clouds moved in
and they
lost it. The pilots made
a quick decision;
since radar showed that they
were getting closer to the target,
they decided to spread out
to keep
from colliding with one
another and to go up
through the clouds. They went on
instruments and in a few
seconds they were in the cloud.
It was
much worse than they'd expected;
the cloud was thick, .and the
airplanes were icing up fast.
An F-51 is far from being
a good
instrument ship, but they stayed in their climb until
radar called and said that
they were close to the target;
in fact,
almost on it. The pilots
had another hurried radio conference and decided that since
the weather was so bad they'd
better come down. If a
UFO, or something, was in the
clouds, they'd hit it before
they could see it. So they
made a wise decision; they
dropped the noses of their airplanes
and dove
back down into the clear.
They circled awhile but
the clouds
didn't break. In a few
minutes the master sergeant
on the
radar reported that the target was fading fast. The
F-51's went in and landed.
When the target
faded on the radar, some
of the
people went outside to visually look
for the
UFO, but it was obscured
by clouds,
and the
clouds stayed for an hour.
When it finally did clear for
a few
minutes, the UFO was gone.
A conference
was held
at ATIC
that afternoon. It in-
eluded Roy James, ATTC's electronics specialist and expert on radar
UFO's. Roy had been over
at the
radar lab and had seen the
UFO on
the scope
but neither
the the F-51 pilots nor the master
sergeant who operated the radar
were at the conference. The records
show that at this meeting
a unanimous
decision was reached as to
the identity
of the
UFO's. The bright light was Venus
since Venus was in the
southeast during midmorning on March
8, 1950,
and the
radar return was caused by the
ice-laden cloud that the F-51
pilots had encountered. Ice-laden clouds can cause
a radar
return. The group of
intelligence specialists at the meeting
decided that this was
further proved by the fact
that as the F-51's approached the center of the
cloud their radar return appeared to
approach the UFO target on
the radar-scope.
They were near the UFO
and near
ice, so the UFO must have
been ice. The case was closed.
I had read
the report
of this
sighting but I hadn't paid
too much attention to
it because
it had
been "solved." But
one day almost two years later
I got
a telephone
call at my office at Project
Blue Book. It was a
master sergeant, the master sergeant who had been operating
the radar
at the
lab. He'd just heard that the
Air Force
was again
seriously investigating UFO's and
he wanted
to see
what had been said about
the Dayton Incident. He came over,
read the report, and violently
disagreed with what had been
decided upon as the answer. He said that he'd
been working with radar before
World War II; he'd
helped with the operational tests on the first microwave
warning radars developed early in
the war
by a group headed by Dr.
Luis Alvarez. He said that
what he saw on that radarscope
was no
ice cloud;
it was
some type of aircraft. He'd seen
every conceivable type of weather
target on radar, he
told me; thunderstorms, ice-laden clouds,
targets caused by temperature
inversions, and the works. They
all had similar characteristics—the
target was "fuzzy" and varied in intensity. But in
this case the target was
a good,
solid return and he
was convinced
that it was caused by
a good, solid
object.
And besides,
he said,
when the target began to
fade on his scope he had
raised the tilt of the
antenna and the target came back, indicating that whatever
it was,
it was
climbing. Ice-laden clouds don't
climb, he commented rather bitterly.
Nor did the
pilot of one of the
F-51's agree with the ATIG
analysis. The pilot who
had been
leading the two-ship flight of F-51's
on that
day told
me that
what he saw was no
planet. While he and
his wing
man were
climbing, and before the clouds
obscured it, they both got
a good
look at the UFO, and it
was getting
bigger and more distinct all
the time. As they climbed, the
light began to take on
a shape;
it was definitely round. And if
it had
been Venus it should have been in the same
part of the sky the
next day, but the pilot said
that he'd looked and it
wasn't there. The ATIC report doesn't
mention this point.
I remember asking
him a
second time what the UFO
looked like; he said,
"huge and metallic"—shades
of the
Mantell Incident.
The Dayton Incident
didn't get much of a
play from the press because officially
it wasn't
an unknown
and there's
nothing intriguing about an
ice cloud
and Venus.
There were UFO reports in the
newspapers, however.
One story that
was widely
printed was about a sighting
at the naval air station at
Dallas, Texas. Just before noon
on March 16, Chief Petty Officer
Charles Lewis saw a disk-shaped
UFO come
streaking across the sky and
buzz a highflying B-36. Lewis
first saw the UFO coming
in from
the north, lower than the B-36;
then he saw it pull
up to
the big
bomber as it got
closer. It hovered under the
B-36 for an instant, then it went
speeding off and disappeared. When the press inquired about
the incident,
Captain M. A. Nation, commander of the air station,
vouched for his chief and
added that the base tower operators
had seen
and reported
a UFO
to him about ten days before.
This story didn't
run long
because the next day a
bigger one broke when the sky
over the little town of
Farmington, New Mexico, about
170 miles
northwest of Albuquerque, was literally invaded
by UFO's.
Every major newspaper carried the
story. The UFO's had apparently
been congregating over the four comers
area for two days because
several
104
the be port on
people had reported seeing UFO's on
March 15 and 16. But the
seventeenth was the big day,
every saucer this side of Polaris
must have made a successful
rendezvous over Farmington, because
on that
day most
of the
town's 3,600 citizens saw the mass
fly-by. The first reports were
made at 10:15 a.m.; then
for an
hour the air was full
of flying
saucers. Estimates of the number
varied from a conservative 500 to "thousands."
Most all the observers said
the UFO's
were saucer-shaped, traveled at
almost unbelievable speeds, and
didn't seem to have any
set flight
path. They would dart in and
out and
seemed to avoid collisions only by inches. There was no doubt they they weren't hallucinations because
the mayor,
the local
newspaper staff, ex-pilots, the highway patrol, and every type
of person
who makes
up a community of 3,600 saw
them.
I've talked
to several
people who were in Farmington
and saw this now famous UFO
display of St. Patrick's Day,
1950. I've. heard dozens of explanations—cotton blowing in the wind, bugs'
wings reflecting sunlight, a hoax
to put
Fanning-ton on the map, and
real honest-to-goodness flying
saucers. One explanation was never publicized,
however, and if there is an
explanation, it is the best.
Under certain conditions of extreme
cold, probably 50 to 60
degrees below zero, the plastic bag
of a
skyhook balloon will get very
brittle, and will take on the.
characteristics
of a
huge light bulb. If a sudden gust of
wind or some other disturbance
hits the balloon, it will shatter
into a thousand pieces. As
these pieces of plastic float down
and are
carried along by the wind,
they could look like
thousands of flying saucers.
On St. Patrick's
Day a
skyhook balloon launched from Holloman AFB, adjacent to the
White Sands Proving Ground, did burst near Farmington, and it was cold
enough at 60,000 feet to make
the balloon
brittle. True, the people at
Farmington never found any pieces
of plastic,
but the
small pieces of plastic are literally
as light
as feathers
and could
have floated far beyond
the city.
The next
day, on March 18, the
Air Force,
prodded by the press, shrugged and
said, "There's nothing to it,"
but they had no explanation.
True magazine came through for a third time
when their
April issue, which was
published during the latter part
of March 1950, Carried a roundup of UFO
photos. They offered seven photos as
proof that UFO's existed. It
didn't take a photo-interpretation expert
to tell
that all seven could well be of doubtfull lineage, nevertheless
the collection
of photos added
fuel to the already smoldering
fire. The U.S. public was hearing
a lot
about flying saucers and all
of it was on the pro side. For
somebody who didn't believe in the things, the public
thought that the Air Force
was being
mighty quiet.
The subject
took on added interest on
the night
of March
26, when a famous
news commentator said the UFO's
were from Russia.
The' next night
Henry J. Taylor, in a broadcast from Dallas, Texas, said
that the UFO's were Uncle
Sam's own. He couldn't tell all
he knew,
but a
flying saucer had been found on the beach near
Galveston, Texas. It had USAF
markings.
Two nights later
a Los Angeles
television station cut into a regular program with a
special news flash; later in
the evening the announcer said they
would show the first photos
of the real thing, our military's
flying saucer. The photos turned out to be of
the Navy
XF-5-U, a World War H
experimental aircraft that never
flew.
The public
was now
thoroughly confused.
By now the
words "flying saucer"
Were being batted
around by every newspaper reporter, radio
and TV
newscaster, comedian, and man
on the
street. Some of the comments
weren't complimentary, but as
Theorem I of the publicity
racket goes, "It doesn't
make any difference what's said
as long as
the name's spelled right."
Early in
April the publication that is hightly revered
by so many, U.S.
News and World Report,-threw in their lot. The UFO's belonged to
the Navy.
Up popped the
old non-flying
XF-5-U again.
Events drifted back
to normal
when Edward R. Murrow made UFO's the subject of
one of
his TV
documentaries. He took bis viewers around the U.S.,
talked to Kenneth Arnold, of original UFO
fame, by phone and got
the story
of Captain
Mantell's death from
a reporter
"who was there." Sandwiched in between accounts of
actual UFO sightings were the pro
and con
opinions of top Washington brass, scientists, and the man
on the
street.
Even the
staid New York Times, which had until now stayed out of
UFO controversy,
broke down and ran an
editorial entitled, "Those Fying Saucers—Are They or Aren't
Theyr
All of
this activity did little to
shock the military out of
their dogma. They admitted
that the UFO investigation really hadn't been
discontinued. "Any substantial reports of any unusual aerial phenomena
would be processed through normal intelligence channels,"
they told the press.
Ever since July
4, 1947,
ten days
after the first flying saucer
report, airline pilots had been
reporting that they had seen UFO's.
But the
reports weren't frequent—maybe one every few
months. In the spring of
1950 this changed, however, and
the airline
pilots began to make more
and more
reports—good reports. The reports
went to ATIC but they
didn't receive much attention.
In a
few instances
there was a semblance of an
investigation but it was halfhearted.
The reports reached the
newspapers too, and here they
received a great deal more
attention. The reports were investigated,
and the
stories checked and rechecked. When airline crews began
to turn
in one
UFO report
after another, it was difficult to
believe the old "hoax, hallucination, and
misidentification of known objects"
routine. In April, May, and June
of 1950
there were over thirty-five good reports from airline crews.
One of these
was a
report from a Chicago and
Southern crew who were flying a
DC-3 from Memphis to Little
Rock, Arkansas, on the
night of March 31. It
was an
exceptionally clear night, no
clouds or haze, a wonderful
night to fly. At exactly nine twenty-nine by the
cockpit clock the pilot, a
Jack Adams, noticed a
white light off to his
left. The copilot, G. W. Anderson,
was looking
at a
chart but out of the
corner of his eye he saw
the pilot
lean forward and look out
the
window, so he looked out too.
He saw
the light
just as the pilot said, "What's
that?"
The copilot's
answer was classic: "No, not
one of
those things."
Both pilots had
only recendy voiced their opinions regarding
the flying
saucers and they weren't complimentary.
As they
watched the UFO, it passed
across the nose of their DC-3
and they
got a
fairly good look at it.
Neither the pilot nor the copilot
was positive
of the
object's shape because it was "shadowy"
but they
assumed it was disk-shaped because of the circular
arrangement of eight or ten
"portholes," each one glowing
from a strong bluish-white light that seemed to come
from the inside of whatever
it was that they saw. The
UFO also
had a
blinking white light on top, a
fact that led many people
to speculate
that this UFO was another airliner.
But this
idea was quashed when it was
announced • that there were,
no other
airliners in the area. The crew of
the DC-3,
when questioned on this possibility, were definite in their
answers. If it had been
another airplane, they could
have read the number, seen
the passengers, and dam
near reached out and slugged
the pilot for getting so close
to them.
About a month later,
over northern Indiana, TWA treated
all the passengers of one of their
DC-3 flights to a view
of a
UFO that looked like
a "big
glob of molten metal."
The official answer
for this
incident is that the huge
orange-red UFO was nothing more
than the light from the
many northern Indiana blast furnaces reflecting
a haze
layer. Could be, but the pilots
say no.
There were similar
sightings in North Korea two
years later—and FEAF Bomber
Command had caused a shortage
of blast furnaces in North Korea.
UFO sightings by
airline pilots always interested me as much as any
type of sighting. Pilots in
general should be competent observers simply
because they spend a large
part of their lives looking around
the sky.
And pilots
do look;
one of the first things an
aviation cadet is taught is
to "Keep
your head on a
swivel"; in other words, keep
looking around the sky. Of all
the pilots,
the airline
pilots are the cream of this
group of good observers. Possibly some second lieutenant
just out of flying school
could be confused by some
unusual formation of ground
lights, a meteor, or a
star, but airline pilots have flown
thousands of hours or they
wouldn't be sitting in the left
seat of an airliner, and
they should be familiar with a
host of unusual sights.
One afternoon in
February 1953 I had an
opportunity to further my study of
UFO sightings
by airline
pilots. I had been out at
Air Defense
Command Headquarters in Colorado Springs and was flying back
East on a United Airlines
DC-6. There weren't many passengers on the airplane that
afternoon but, as usual,
the captain
came strolling back through the
cabin to chat. When
he got
to me
he sat
down in the next seat. We talked a few
minutes; then I asked him
what he knew about flying saucers.
He sort
of laughed
and said
that a dozen people a week
asked that question, but when
I told him who I was
and why
I was
interested, his attitude changed. He said
that he'd never seen a
UFO but
he knew
a lot of pilots on United
who had.
One man,
he told
me, had seen one several years
ago. He'd reported it but
he had been sloughed off like
the rest.
But he
was so
convinced that he'd Seen something unusual
that he'd gone out and bought
a Leica camera with a 105-mm.
telephoto lens, learned how to use
it, and
now he
carried it religiously during his flights.
There was
a lull
in the
conversation, then the captain said, "Do you really want to
get an
opinion about flying saucers?" I said I did.
"O.K.," I remember his
saying, "how much of a
layover do you have in Chicago?"
I had about two hours.
,
"All right,
as soon
as we
get to
Chicago 111 meet you at Caffarello's, across the street
from the terminal building. Ill see who else
is in
and 111
bring them along."
I thanked
him and
he went
back up front.
I waited around
the bar
at Caffarello's for an hour. I'd
just about decided that
he wasn't
going to make it and
that I'd better get back to
catch my flight to Dayton
when he and three other pilots
came in. We got a
big booth
in the
coffee shop because he'd called three
more off-duty pilots who lived in
Chicago and they were coming
over too. I don't remember any of the men's
names because I didn't make
any attempt to. This
was just
an informal
bull session and not an official
interrogation, but I
really got the scoop on
what airline pilots think
about UFO's.
First of
all they
didn't pull any punches about
what they thought about the Air
Force and its investigation of UFO reports. One of
the men
got right
down to the point: "If
I saw. a flying saucer flying
wing-tip formation with me and could
see little
men waving—even
if my
whole load of passengers saw it—I
wouldn't report it to the
Air Force."
Another man cut
in, "Remember
the thing
Jack Adams said he saw down
by Memphis?"
I said
I did.
"He reported
that to the Air Force
and some
red-hot character met him
in Memphis
on his
next trip. He talked to
Adams a few minutes
and then
told him that he'd seen
a meteor. Adams felt like a
fool. Hell, I know Jack
Adams well and he's the most
conservative guy I know. If
he said
he saw something with glowing portholes,
he saw
something with glowing portholes—and
it wasn't
a meteor."
Even though I
didn't remember the pilots' names
111 never forget their comments. They
didn't like the way the
Air Force had handled UFO reports
and I
was the
Air Force's
"Mr. Flying Saucer." As quickly as one
of the
pilots would set me up and
bat me
down, the next one grabbed
me off
the floor and took his turn.
But I
couldn't complain too much; I'd asked
for it.
I think
that this group of seven
pilots pretty much represented
the feelings
of a
lot of
the airline
pilots. They weren't wide-eyed space fans,
but they
and their
fellow pilots had seen something and
whatever they'd seen weren't hallucinations, mass hysteria,
balloons, or meteors.
Three of the
men at
the Caffarello conference had seen UFO's or, to use their
terminology, they had seen something
they couldn't identify as
a known
object. Two of these men
had seen odd lights
closely following their airplanes_at night Both had checked
and double-checked
with CAA, but no other aircraft
was in
the area.
Both admitted, however, that they hadn't
seen enough to class what
they'd seen as good UFO sighting.
But the
third man had a lulu.
If I recall
correctly, this pilot was flying
for TWA.
One day in March 1952 he,
his copilot,
and a
third person who was either a
pilot deadheading home or another
crew member, I don't recall
which, were flying a C-54
cargo airplane from Chicago to Kansas
City. At about 2:30 p.m. the
pilot was checking in with the
CAA radio
at Kirksville,
Missouri, flying 500 on
top of
a solid
overcast. While he was talking
he glanced out at
his No.
2 engine, which had been
losing oil. Directly in line with
it, and
a few
degrees above, he saw a silvery,
disk-shaped object. It was too
far out
to get
a really good look
at it,
yet it
was close
enough to be able definitely to make out the
shape.
The UFO held
its relative
position with the C-54 for
five or six minutes; then the
pilot decided to do a
little on-the-spot investigating
himself. He
started a gradual turn toward
the UFO and for
about thirty seconds he was
getting closer, but then the UFO
began to make a left
turn. It had apparently slowed down because they
were still closing on it.
About this time
the copilot
decided that the UFO was
a balloon; it just looked as
if the
UFO was
turning. The pilot agreed halfway—and since the company wasn't
paying them to intercept balloons, they
got back
on their
course to Kansas City. They flew
on for
a few
minutes with "the dam thing"
still off to their
left. If it was a
balloon, they should be leaving it behind, the pilot
recalled thinking to himself; if
they made a 45-degree
right turn, the "balloon" shouldn't stay off the left
wing; it should drop way
behind. So they made a 45-degree
right turn, and although the
"balloon" dropped back a
little bit, it didn't drop
back far enough to be a
balloon. It seemed to put
on speed
to try
to make
a turn outside of the C-54's
turn. The pilot continued on
around until he'd made a tight
360-degree turn, and the UFO
had followed, staying outside. They could
not judge
its speed,
not knowing how far
away it was, but to
follow even a C-54 around in a 360-degree turn and to .stay
outside all of the time takes
a mighty
speedy object.
This shot
the balloon
theory right in the head.
After the
360-degree turn the
UFO seemed
to be
gradually losing altitude because
it was
getting below the level of
the wings.
The pilot decided to
get a
better look. He asked for
full power on all four engines,
climbed several thousand feet, and again
turned into the UFO. He
put the
C-54 in a long glide, headed directly toward it.
As they
closed in, the UFO seemed to lose altitude a
little faster and "sank" into the top of the
overcast. Just as the C-54
flashed across the spot where the UFO had disappeared,
the crew
saw it
rise up out of the overcast
off their
right wing and began to
climb so fast that in several
seconds it was out of
sight.
Both the
pilot and copilot wanted to
stay, around and look for it
but No.
2 engine
had started
to act
up soon
after they had put on full
power for the climb, and
they decided that they'd better get
into Kansas City.
I missed my
Dayton flight but I heard
a good
UFO story.
What had the two
pilots and their passenger seen?
We kicked it around plenty that
afternoon. It was no balloon.
It wasn't another airplane
because when the pilot called
Kirksville Radio he'd asked
if there
were any airplanes in the area.
It might
possibly have been a reflection
of some
kind except that when
it "sank"
into the overcast the pilot
said it looked like
something sinking into an overcast—it just didn't disappear as
a reflection
would. Then there was the
sudden reappearance off the
right wing. These are the
types of things you just can't
explain.
What did the
pilots think it was? Three
were sold that the UFO's were
interplanetary spacecraft, one man was convinced they they
were some U.S. "secret weapon," and three
of the
men just
shook their heads. So did
I. We
all agreed on one thing—this pilot had seen something
and it
was something highly unusual.
The meeting broke
up about
9:00 p.m. Td
gotten the personal and very
candid opinion of seven airline
captains, and the opinions of a
half a hundred more airline
pilots had been quoted. I'd learned
that the UFO's are discussed
often. I'd learned that many airline
pilots take UFO sightings very
seriously. I learned that some
believe they are interplanetary,
some think they're a U.S. weapon,
and many
just don't know. But very few
are laughing
off the
good sightings.
By May 1950
the flying
saucer business had hit a
new all-time peak.
The Air
Force didn't take any side,
they just shrugged. There was no
attempt to investigate and explain
the various
sightings. Maybe this was
because someone was afraid the
answer would be "Unknown."
Or maybe
it was
because a few key officers thought
that the eagles or stars
on their
shoulders made them leaders
of all
men. If they didn't believe
in flying
saucers and said so,
it would
be like
calming the stormy Sea of Galilee.
"It's all a bunch of
damned nonsense," an Air Force colonel
who was
controlling the UFO investigation said. "There's no such thing
as a
flying saucer." He went on to
say that
all people
who saw
flying saucers were jokers, crackpots, or publicity hounds. Then
he gave
the airline
pilots who'd been reporting
UFO's a reprieve. "They were just fatigued,"
he said.
"What they thought were spaceships were windshield reflections.
This was the
unbiased processing of UFO reports
through normal intelligence channels.
But the U.S.
public evidently had more faith
in the
"crackpot" scientists who were spending millions
of the
public's dollars at the
White Sands Proving Grounds, in
the "publicity-mad"
military pilots, and the "tired,
old" airline pilots, because in
a nationwide
poll it was found that
only 6 per cent of the
country's 150,697,361 people agreed with
the colonel
and said, "There aren't such things."
Ninety-four per
cent had different ideas.
chapter seven
The Pentagon Rumbles
On June 25, 1950,
the North
Korean armies swept down across the 38th parallel and
the Korean
War was
on—the UFO was no longer a
news item. But the lady,
or gentleman,
who first
said, "Out of sight is
out of
mind," had never reckoned with the
UFO.
On September 8,
1950, the UFO's were back
in the
news. On that day it was
revealed, via a book entitle
Behind the Flying Saucers, that government
scientists had recovered and analyzed three different models of
flying saucers. And they were fantastic—just
like the book. They were
made of an unknown super-duper metal and they were
manned by little blue uniformed men
who ate
concentrated food and drank heavy water.
The author
of the
book, Frank Scully, had gotten the
story directly from a millionaire
oilman, Silas Newton. Newton had in
turn heard the story from
an employee
of his,
a mysterious
"Dr. Gee," one of the
government scientists who had
helped analyze the crashed saucers.
The story made
news, Newton and "Dr. Gee'
made fame, and Scully made money.
A little over
two years
later Newton and the man
who was reportedly the mysterious "Dr. Gee' again made
the news. The Denver district attorney's
office had looked into
the pair's oil business
and found
that the pockets they were
trying to tap didn't
contain oil. According to the
December 6, 1952, issue of the
Saturday Review, the D.A,
had charged
the two men with
a $50,000
con game.
One of
their $80,000 electronic devices
for their
oil explorations
turned out to be a $4.00
piece of war surplus junk.
Another book came
out in
the fall
of 1950
when Donald Keyhoe expanded his original UFO
story that had first appeared
in the
January 1950 issue of True magainze. Next to
Scully's book Keyhoe's
book was tame, but it
convinced more people. Keyhoe had based his conjecture
on fact,
and his facts were correct, even
if the
conjecture wasn't.
Neither the
seesaw advances and retreats
of the
United Nations troops in
Korea nor the two flying
saucer books seemed to have any
effect on the number of
UFO reports
logged into ATIC, however.
By official
count, seventy-seven came in the first
half of 1950 and seventy-five
during the latter half. The actual
count could have been more
because in 1950, UFO reports were
about as popular as sand
in spinach, and I would guess
that at least a few
wound up in the "circular file."
In early January
1951 I was recalled to
active duty and assigned to Air
Technical Intelligence Center as an
intelligence officer. I had been
at ATIC
only eight and a half
hours when I first
heard the words "flying saucer" officially used.
I had
never paid a great deal
of attention
to flying
saucer reports but I
had read
a few—especially
those that had been made by
pilots. I'd managed to collect
some 2,000 hours of flying time
and had
seen many odd things in
the air, but I'd always been
able to figure out what
they were in a few seconds.
I was
convinced that if a pilot, or any crew member
of an
airplane, said that he'd seen
something that he couldn't
identify he meant it—it wasn't
a hallucination.
But I
wasn't convinced that flying saucers
were spaceships.
My interest
in UFO's
picked up in a hurry
when I learned that ATIC was
the government
agency that was responsible for the UFO project. And
I was
really impressed when I found out
that the person who sat
three desks down and one over
from mine was in charge
of the
whole UFO show. So when I
came to work on my
second morning at ATIC and
heard the words "flying
saucer report" being talked about
and saw a group
of people
standing around the chief of
the UFO project's desk I almost
sprung an eardrum listening to
what they had to
say. It seemed to be
a big deal—except
that most of them
were laughing. It must be
a report
of hoax or hallucination, I remember
thinking to myself, but I listened
as one
of the
group told the
others about the report.
The night
before a Mid-Continent Airlines DC-3
was taxiing
out to
take off from the airport
at Sioux
City, Iowa, when the airport control
tower operators noticed a bright
bluish-white light in the
west. The tower operators, thinking that it was another
airplane, called the pilot of
the DC-3
and told him to
be careful
since there was another airplane
approaching the field. As
the DC-3
lined up to take off,
both the pilots of the airliner
and the
tower operators saw the light moving
in, but
since it was still some
distance away the DC-3 was given
permission to take off. As
it rolled
down the runway getting up speed,
both the pilot and the
copilot were busy, so they didn't
see the
light approaching. But the tower operators
did, and as soon as
the DC-3
was airborne,
they called and told
the pilot
to be
careful. The copilot said that he
saw the
light and was watching it.
Just then the tower got a
call from another airplane that
was requesting
landing instructions and the
operators looked away from the
light.
In the DC-3
the pilot
and copilot
had also
looked away from the light for
a few
seconds. When they looked back,
the bluish-white light had
apparently closed in because it
was much brighter and
it was
dead ahead. In a split
second it closed in and flashed
by their
right wing—so close that both pilots
thought that they would collide
with it. When it passed the
DC-3, the pilots saw more
than a light—they saw a huge object that
looked like the "fuselage of a B-29."
When the copilot
had recovered
he looked
out his
side window to see if he
could see the UFO and
there it was, flying formation with
them. He • yelled at
the pilot,
who leaned over and looked just
in time
to see
the UFO
disappear.
The second looked
confirmed the Mid-Continent crew's first impression—the object looked like
a B-29
without wings. They saw nothing more,
only a big "shadowy shape" and the bluish-white light—no windows, no exhaust.
The tower had
missed the incident because they
were landing the other airplane and
the pilot
and the
coplilot didn't have time to call them
and tell
them about what was going
on. All the tower operators could say
was that
seconds after the UFO had disappeared
the light
that they had seen was
gone.
When the
airliner landed in Omaha, the
crew filed a report that
was forwarded
to the
Air Force.
But this
wasn't the only report that was
filed; a full colonel from
military intelligence had been
a passenger
on the
DC-3. He'd seen the UFO too,
and he
was mighty
impressed.
I thought that
this was an interesting report and I wondered
what the official reaction would
be. The
official reaction was a great big,
deep belly laugh.
This puzzled
me because
I'd read
that the Air Force was
seriously investigating all UFO
reports.
I continued to
eavesdrop on the discussions about the report all
day since
the UFO
expert was about to "investigate"'
the incident. He sent
out a
wire to Flight Service and
found that there was a B-36
somewhere in the area of
Sioux City at the time of
the sighting,
and from
what I could gather he
was trying to blame
the sighting
on the
B-36. When Washington called to
get the
results of the analysis of
the sighting,
they must have gotten
the B-36
treatment because the case was closed.
I'd only been
at ATIC
two days
and I
certainly didn't class myself as an
intelligence expert, but it didn't
take an expert to see that
a B-36,
even one piloted by an
experienced idiot, could not do what
the UFO
had done—buzz
a DC-3
that was in an airport traffic
pattern.
I didn't know
it at
the time
but a
similar event had occurred the
year before. On the night
of May
29, 1950,
the crew of an American Airlines
DC-6 had just taken off
from
Washington National Airport, and they were about
seven miles west of Mount Vernon
when the copilot suddenly looked out and yelled, "Watch
it—watch it." The pilot and
the engineer looked out
to see
a bluish-white
light closing in on them from
dead ahead. The pilot racked
the DC-6
up in
a tight right
turn while the UFO passed
by on
the left
"from eleven to seven
o'clock" and a little higher
than the airliner. During this time
the UFO
passed between the full moon
and DC-6 and the
crew could see the dark
silhouette of a "wingless B-29." Its length was about
half the diameter of the full
moon, and it had a
blue flame shooting out the
tail end.
Seconds after the
UFO had
passed by the DC-6, the
copilot looked out and there
it was
again, apparently flying formation off their right wing.
Then in a flash of
blue flame it was gone—streaking out ahead of the
airliner and making a left turn toward the coast.
The pilot of
the DC-6,
who made
the report,
had better
than 15,000 hours' flying
time.
I didn't hear
anything about UFO's, or flying
saucers, as they were then known,
for several
weeks but I kept them
in mind and one day I
asked one of the old
hands at ATIC about them—specifically I wanted
to know
about the Sioux City Incident. Why had it been
sloughed off so lightly? His
answer was typical of the
official policy at that time.
"One of these days all of
these crazy pilots will kill
themselves, the crazy people on the
ground will be locked up,
and there
won't be any more
flying saucer reports."
But after
I knew
the people
at ATIC
a little better,
I found
that being anti-saucer wasn't a unanimous feeling.
Some of the intelligence officers took
the UFO
reports seriously. One man, who had
been on Project Sign since
it was
organized back in 1947,
was convinced
that the UFO's were interplanetary
spaceships. He had questioned the people in the
control tower at Godman AFB when Captain Mantell was killed chasing the UFO,
and he
had spent
hours talking to the crew of
the DC-3
that was buzzed near Montgomery,
Alabama, by a "cigar-shaped
UFO that
spouted blue flame."
In essence, he
knew UFO history from A to Z because
he had "been there."
I think
that it was this controversial
thinking that first aroused my interest
in the
subject of UFO's and led
me to
try to sound out a few
more people.
The one thing
that stood out to me,
being unindoctrinated in the
ways of UFO lore, was
the schizophrenic
approach so many people at ATIC
took. On
the surface
they sided with the belly-laughers on any saucer issue,
but if
you were
alone with them and
started to ridicule the subject,
they defended it or at
least took an active interest.
I learned
this one day after I'd been
at ATIC
about a month.
A belated
UFO report
had come
in from
Africa. One of my friends was
reading it, so I asked
him if
I could
take a look at it when he had
finished. In a few minutes
he handed
it to me.
When I finished with
the report
I tossed
it back
on my
friend's desk, with some
comment about the whole world's
being nuts. I got
a reaction
I didn't
expect; he wasn't so sure the
whole world was nuts—maybe the nuts were at
ATIC. "What's the deal?"
I asked
him. "Have they really thoroughly checked out every report
and found
that there's nothing to any of
them?"
He told me
that he didn't think so, he'd been at ATIC
a long time.
He hadn't
ever worked on the UFO
project, but he had seen many
of their
reports and knew what they
were doing. He just plain didn't
buy a
lot of
their explanations. "And I'm
not the
only one who thinks this,"
he added.
"Then why all
of the
big show
of power
against the UFO reports?" I remember
asking him.
"The powers-that-be are anti-flying saucer," he answered about half bitterly,
"and to stay in favor
it behooves
one to
follow suit."
As of
February 1951 this was the
UFO project.
The words "flying
saucer" didn't come up again
for a month or two. I'd forgotten all
about the two words and
was deeply engrossed in making an
analysis of the performance of the Mig-15. The Mig had just begun to
show up in Korea, and finding out more about
it was
a hot
project.
Then the
words "flying saucer"
drifted across the room once
more. But this time
instead of belly laughter there
was a
note of hysteria.
It seems
that a writer from Life magazine was doing
some research on UFO's and rumor
had it
that Life was thinking about doing a
feature article. The writer had
gone to the Office of Public
Information in the Pentagon and
had inquired
about the current status of
Project Grudge. To accommodate the writer, the OPI
had sent
a wire
out to
ATIC: What is the
status of Project Grudge?
Back went
a snappy
reply: Everything is under control;
each new report is
being thoroughly analyzed by our
experts; our vast files of
reports are in tiptop shape;
and in
general things are hunky-dunky. All
UFO reports
are hoaxes,
hallucinations, and the misidentification
of known
objects.
Another wire from
Washington: Fine, Mr. Bob Ginna of Life
is leaving
for Dayton.
He wants
to check
some reports.
Bedlam in the
raw.
Other magazines
had printed
UFO stories,
and other
reporters had visited ATIC,
but they
had always
stayed in the offices of the
top brass.
For some
reason the name Life, the prospects of a
feature story, and the feeling
that this Bob Ginna
was going
to ask
questions caused sweat to flow
at ATIC.
Ginna arrived
and the
ATIC UFO "expert" talked to
him. Ginna
later told me about the
meeting. He had a long
list of questions about
reports that had been made
over the past four years and
every time he asked a
question, the "expert" would
go tearing
out of
the room
to try
to find
the file that had the answer.
I remember
that day people spent a lot
of time
ripping open bundles of files
and pawing
through them like a
bunch of gophers. Many times,
"I'm sorry, that's classified,"
got ATIC
out of
a tight
spot.
Ginna, I can asure you, was not at
all impressed
by the
"efficiently operating UFO project."
People weren't buying the hoax, hallucination,
and misidentification
stories quite as readily as the
Air Force
believed.
When it
started or who started it
I don't
know, but about two months after
the visit
from Life's representative the
official interest in UFO's
began to pick up. Lieutenant
Jerry Cununings,
who had
recendy been recalled
to active
duty, took over the project.
Lieutenant Cumrnings is the
type of person who when
given a job to
do does
it. In
a few
weeks the operation of the UFO
project had improved considerably. But the project was
still operating under political, economic, and manpower difficulties.
Cumrnings' desk
was right
across from mine, so I began
to get
a UFO indoctrination via bull sessions.
Whenever Jerry found a good
report in the pile—and all he had to start
with was a pile of
papers and files—he'd toss it over
for me
to read.
Some of the
reports were unimpressive, I remember.
But a few were just the opposite. Two
that I remember Jerry's showing me made me wonder
how the
UFO's could be sloughed off so
lightly. The two reports involved
movies taken by Air Force technicians
at White
Sands Proving Ground in New Mexico.
The guided missile
test range at White Sands
is fully
instrumented to track high, fast-moving
objects—the guided missiles. Located
over an area of many
square miles there are camera stations
equipped with cinetheodolite
cameras and linked together by a
telephone system.
On April 27,
1950, a guided missile had
been fired, and as it roared
up into
the stratosphere
and fell
back to earth, the camera crews
had recorded
its flight.
All the
crews had started to unload their
cameras when one of them
spotted an object streaking across the
sky. By April 1950 every
person at White Sands
was UFO-conscious,
so one
member of the camera crew grabbed
a telephone
headset, alerted the other crews, and
told them to get pictures.
Unfortunately only one camera
had film
in it,
the rest
had already
been unloaded, and before
they could reload, the UFO
was gone.
The photos from the
one station
showed only a smudgy dark
object. About all the
film proved was that something
was in the air and whatever
it was,
it was
moving.
Alerted by
this first chance to get
a UFO
to "run
a measured
course," the camera crews agreed
to keep
a sharper
lookout They
also got the official O.K.
to "shoot"
a UFO
if one appeared.
Almost exactly a
month later another UFO did
appear, or as least
at the
time the camera crews thought
that it was a UFO. This
time the crews were ready—when
the call
went out over the telephone net
that a UFO had been
spotted, all of the crew scanned
the sky.
Two of
the crews
saw it
and shot several feet of film
as the
shiny, bright object streaked across the sky.
As soon as
the missile
tests were completed, the camera
crews rushed their film
to the
processing lab and then took
it to the Data Reduction Croup.
But once
again the UFO had eluded man because there were
apparently two or more UFO's in the sky and
each camera station had photographed
a separate one. The
data were no good for
triangulation.
The records at
ATIC didn't contain the analysis
of these
films but they did
mention the Data Reduction Croup
at White Sands. So when I
later took over the UFO
investigation I made
several calls in an effort
to run
down the actual film and the
analysis. The files at White
Sands, like all files, evidently weren't
very good, because the original
reports were gone. I
did contact
a major
who was
very co-operative and offered
to try
to find
the people
who had
worked on the analysis
of the
film. His reports, after talking
to two
men who
had done
the analysis,
was what
I'd expected—nothing
concrete except that the UFO's
were unknowns. He did say
that by putting a correction
factor in the data gathered by
the two
cameras they were about to
arrive at a rough
estimate of speed, altitude, and
size. The UFO was "higher than 40,000 feet traveling
over 2,000 miles per hour, and
it was
over 300 feet in diameter."
He cautioned me, however, that these
figures were only estimates, based on the possibly
erroneous correction factor; therefore
they weren't proof of anything—except
that something was in the
air.
The people
at White
Sands continued to be on
the alert
for UFO's while the camera stations
were in operation because they realized that if the
flight path of a UFO
could be ao curately plotted and
timed it could be positively
identified. But no more
UFO's showed up.
One day
Lieutenant Cummings came over to
my desk
and dropped a stack of reports
in front
of me.
"All radar reports," he
said, "and I'm getting more
and more
of them
every day."
Radar reports, I
knew, had always been a
controversial point in UFO
history, and if more and
more radar reports were coming in,
there was no doubt that
an already
controversial issue was
going to be compounded.
To understand
why there
is always
some disagreement whenever a
flying saucer is picked up
on radar,
it is
necessary to know a little bit
about how radar operates.
Basically radar
is nothing
but a
piece of electronic equipment that "shouts"
out a
radio wave and "listens" for the echo. By "knowing"
how fast
the radio, or radar wave travels and from which direction
the echo
is coming,
the radar tells the direction and
distance of the object that
is causing the echo. Any "solid"
object like an airplane, bird,
ship, or even a
moisture-laden cloud can
cause a radar echo. When the echo comes back
to the
radar set, the radar operator
doesn't have to listen
for it
and time
it because
this is all done for him
by the
radar set and he sees
the "answer"
on his
radar-scope—a kind of a round
TV screen.
What the radar operator sees
is a
bright dot, called a "blip"
or a
"return." The location of the return on
the scope
tells him the location of
the object that was
causing the echo. As the
object moves through the sky, the
radar operator sees a series
of bright
dots on his scope
that make a track. On
some radar sets the altitude of the target, the
object causing the echo, can
also be measured.
Under normal
conditions the path that the
radar waves take as they travel
through the air is known.
Normal conditions are when the
temperature and relative humidity of
the air decrease with an increase
in altitude.
But sometimes
a condition will occur when, at
some level, instead of the
temperature and/or relative humidity
decreasing with altitude, it will
begin to increase. This layer
of warm,
moist air is known as an
inversion layer, and it can
do all
lands of crazy things to a
radar wave. It can cause
part of the radar wave to
travel in a big arc
and actually
pick up the ground many miles
away. Or it can cause
the wave
to bend
down just enough to
pick up trucks,
cars, houses, or anything that
has a
surface perpendicular to the ground
level.
One would
immediately think that since the
ground or a house isn't moving,
and a
car or
truck is moving only 40,
50, or 60 miles an hour,
a radar
operator should be able to
pick these objects out
from a fast-moving target. But
it isn't
as simple as that.
The inversion
layer shimmers and moves, and one second the radar
may be
picking up the ground or
a truck in one
spot and the next second
it may
be picking
up something in a
different spot. This causes a
series of returns on the scope
and can
given the illusion
of extremely
fast or slow speeds.
These are
but a
few of
the effects
of an
inversion layer on radar. Some of
the effects
are well
known, but others aren't. The 3rd
Weather Group at Air Defense
Command Headquarters in Colorado
Springs has done a lot
of work
on the effects of weather on
radar, and they have developed
mathematical formulas for telling
how favorable
weather conditions are for "anomalous
propagation,'' the two-bit
words for false radar targets caused
by weather.
The first problem
in analyzing
reports of UFO's' being picked up on radar is
to determine
if the
weather conditions are right to give
anomalous propagation. This can be
determined by putting weather data
into a formula. If they
are, then it is necessary to
determine whether the radar targets
were real or caused
by the
weather. This is the difficult
job. In most cases the only
answer is the appearance of the target on the
radarscope. Many times a weather
target will be a fuzzy and
indistinct spot on the scope
while a real target,
an airplane
for example,
will be bright and sharp.
This question of whether
a target
looked real is the cause
of the majority of the arguments
about radar-detected UFO's because
it is
up to
the judgment
of the
radar operator as to what the
target looked like. And whenever
human judgment is involved in
a decision,
there is plenty of room
for an argument.
All during
the early
summer of 1951 Lieutenant Cummings "fought the
syndicate" trying to
make the UFO respectable. All the time I was
continuing to get my indoctrination.
Then one day with the speed
of a
shotgun wedding, the long-overdue respectability arrived.
The date
was September
12, 1951, and the exact time
was 3:04
p.m.
On this
date and time a teletype
machine at Wright-Patterson AFB began
to chatter
out a
message. Thirty-six inches of paper rolled
out of
the machine
before the operator ripped off the copy, stamped it
Operational Immediate, and gave it to
a special
messenger to deliver to ATIC.
Lieutenant Cummings got the message.
The report
was from
the Army
Signal Corps radar center at Fort
Monmouth, New Jersey, and it
was red-hot.
The incident had
started two days before, on
September 10, at 11:10 a.m., when a
student operator was giving a
demonstration to a group
of visiting
brass at the radar school.
He demonstrated the set
under manual operation for a
while, picking up local
air traffic,
then he announced
that he would demonstrate automatic tracking,
in which
the set
is put on a target and
follows it without help from
the operator.
The set could track
objects flying at jet speeds.
The operator
spotted an object about 12,000
yards southeast of the station,
flying low toward the north.
He tried
to switch the set
to automatic
tracking. He failed, tried again,
failed again. He turned
to his
audience of VIPs, embarrassed.
"It's going too
fast for the set," he said. "That means it's going faster than
a jetl"
A lot
of very
important eyebrows lifted. What flies
faster than a jet?
The object was
in range
for three
minutes and the operator kept trying, without success, to
get into
automatic track. The target finally went
off the
scope, leaving the red-faced operator
talking to himself.
The radar technicians
at Fort
Monmouth had checked the weather—there wasn't the slightest indication
of an
inversion layer.
Twenty-five minutes
later the pilot of a
T-33 jet trainer, carrying an Air
Force-major as passenger and flying
20,000 feet over Point Pleasant, New
Jersey, spotted a dull silver,
disklike object
far below
him. He described it as
30 to
50 feet in diameter and as
descending toward Sandy Hook from
an altitude of a
mile or so. He banked
the T-33
over and started down after it.
As he
shot down, he reported, the
object stopped its descent,
hovered, then sped south, made
a 120-degree rum, and vanished out
to sea.
The Fort
Monmouth Incident then switched back
to the
radar group. At 3:15
p.m. they
got an
excited, almost frantic call from headquarters
to pick
up a
target high and to the
north—which was where the
first "faster-than-a-jet" object
had vanished—and to pick
it up
in a
hurry. They got a fix on
it and
reported that it was traveling
slowly at 93,000 feet. They also
could see it visually as
a silver
speck.
What flies
18 miles
above the earth?
The next morning
two radar
sets picked up another target
that couldn't be tracked
automatically. It would
climb, level off, climb again, go into
a dive.
When it climbed it went
almost straight up.
The two-day
sensation ended that afternoon when
the radar tracked another unidentified slow-moving object and tracked it for several minutes.
A copy
of the
message had also gone to
Washington. Before Jerry could digest
the thirty-six
inches of facts, ATIC's new chief, Colonel Frank Dunn,
got a
phone call. It came from the
office of the Director of
Intelligence of the Air Force, Major General (now Lieutenant
General) C. P. Cabell. General
Cabell wanted somebody from ATIC
to get
to New Jersey—fast—and find out what
was going
on. As
soon as the reports
had been
throughly investigated, the general said that
he wanted
a complete
personal report. Nothing expedites like
a telephone
call from a general officer,
so in a matter of hours
Lieutenant Cummings and Lieutenant Colonel N. R. Rosengarten were on an airliner,
New Jersey-bound.
The two officers
worked around the clock interrogating
the radar operators, their instructors, and the
technicians at Fort Monmouth.
The pilot
who had
chased the UFO in the T-33
trainer and his passenger were
flown to New York,
and they talked to Cummings and
Rosengarten. All other radar stations in
the area
were checked, but their radars
hadn't picked up anything
unusual.
At about 4:00
a.m. the
second morning after they had
arrived, the investigation was completed, Cummings later
told. He and Lieutenant
Colonel Rosengarten couldn't get an airliner
out of
New York
in time
to get
them to the Pentagon by
10:00 a.m., the time
that had been set up
for their
report, so they chartered
an airplane
and flew
to the
capital to brief the general.
General Cabell presided
over the meeting, and it
was attended by his entire staff
plus Lieutenant Cummings,
Lieutenant Colonel Rosengarten, and a special representative
from Republic Aircraft Corporation. The man from Republic supposedly represented a group
of top
U.S. industrialists and scientists who thought that there
should be a lot more sensible
answers coming from the Air
Force regarding the UFO's.
The man
was at
the meeting
at the
personal request of a
general officer.
Every word of
the two-hour
meeting was recorded on a
wire recorder. The recording
was so
hot that
it was
later destroyed, but not
before I had heard it
several times. I can't tell everything that was said
but, to be conservative, it didn't exactly follow the
tone of the official Air
Force releases-many of the people
present at the meeting weren't
as convinced
that the "hoax, hallucination, and misidentification"
answer was quite as
positive as the Grudge Report
and subsequent
press releases made out.
Toward the
end of
the two-hour
conference a general asked Lieutenant Cummings to review the
activity of the UFO investigation for the past year
and a
half. Maybe it was just a
lack of sleep, or maybe
it was
just Cummings, but the general got
the straight
answer—for all practical purposes the
project was dead. Then Cummings
proceeded to elaborate on the details,
the attitude
at ATIC,
the opposition
to his reorganizing the project, and
the methods
of processing
reports. Lieutenant Cummings didn't
miss a point. He later
told me that all
of the
generals and about three fourths
of the full colonels present at
the meeting
turned the shade of purple normally
associated with rage while a
sort of sickly grin graced the
faces of the remaining few.
Then one of the generals on
the purple-faced
team glared at the sickly-grin team and cut loose.
The first thing
the general
wanted to know was, "Who
in hell has been giving me
these reports that every decent
flying saucer sighting is
being investigated?"
Then others
picked up the questioning.
"What happened
to those
two reports
~ that
General ----------------------
sent in from Saudi Arabia? He
saw those
two flying
saucers himself."
"And who released
this big report, anyway?" another person added, picking
up a
copy of the Grudge Report
and slamming it back down on
the table.
Lieutenant Cummings and
Lieutenant Colonel Rosengarten came
back to ATIC with orders
to set
up a new project and report back to General Cabell
when it was ready to
go. But
Cummings didn't get a
chance to do much work
on the
new revitalized Project Grudge—it
was to
keep the old name —because in a few days
he was
a civilian.
He'd been released from active duty
because he was needed back
at Cal
Tech, where he'd been working on
an important
government project before his recall to
active duty.
The day after
Cummings got his separation orders, Lieutenant Colonel Rosengarten
called me into his office.
The colonel was chief of the
Aircraft and Missiles branch and
one of his many responsibilities was Project Grudge. He
said that he knew that I
was busy
as group
leader of my regular group but, if he gave
me enough
people, could I take Project
Grudge? All he wanted
me to
do was
to get
it straightened
out and operating; then I could go
back to trying to outguess
the Russians.
He threw
in a
few comments
about the good job I'd done
straightening out other fouled-up projects.
Good old "Rosy." With my ego sufficiently
inflated, I said yes.
On many
later occasions, when I'd land
at home
in Dayton
just long enough for a clean clothes resupply,
or when
the telephone would ring
at 2:00 a.m. to
report a new 'hot" sighting and wake up the
baby, Mrs. Ruppelt
and I
have soundly cussed my ego.
I had had
the project
only a few days when
a minor
flurry of good UFO reports started.
It wasn't
supposed to happen because the day
after I'd taken over Project
Grudge I'd met the ex-UFO "expert"
in the
hall and he'd nearly doubled
up with laughter as
he said
something about getting stuck with Project Grudge. He predicted
that I wouldn't get a
report until the newspapers
began to play up flying
saucers again. "It's all mass hysteria," he said.
The first hvsterical report of the flurry
came from the Air Defense Command. On September 23,
1951, at seven fifty-five in the morning two
F-86's on an early patrol
were approaching Long Beach, California,
coming in on the west
leg of the Long Beach Radio
range. All of a sudden
the flight
leader called his ground
controller—high at twelve
o'clock he and his wing man
saw an
object. It was in a
gradual turn to its left, and
it wasn't
another airplane. The ground controller
checked his radars but they
had nothing,
so the
ground controller called the
leader of the F-86's back
and told
him to go after the object
and try
to identify
it. The
two airplanes
started to climb.
By this time
the UFO
had crossed
over them but it was
still in a turn and was
coming back. Several times they
tried to intercept, but they could
never climb up to it.
Once in a while, when they'd
appear to be getting close,
the UFO
would lazily move out
of range
by climbing
slightly. All the time it kept
orbiting to the left in
a big,
wide circle. After about ten minutes
the flight
leader told the ground controller,
who had
been getting a running account
of the
unsuccessful intercept, that their fuel
was low
and that
they'd have to break off soon.
They'd gotten a fairly good
look at the UFO, the flight
leader told the ground controller,
and it
appeared to be a
silver airplane with highly swept-back
wings. The controller acknowledged the message and
said that he was scrambling all his alert airplanes
from George AFB. Could the two
F-86's stay in the area
a few
more minutes? They stayed and in
a few
minutes four more F-86's arrived. They saw the UFO
immediately and took over.
The two F-86's
with nearly dry tanks went
back to George AFB.
For thirty
more minutes the newly arrived
F-86's worked in pairs trying to
get up
to the
UFO's altitude, which they estimated to be 55,000 feet,
but they
couldn't make it. All the
time the UFO kept slowly
circling and speeding up only when
the F-86's
seemed to get too close.
Then they began to run out
of fuel
and asked
for permission
to break
off the intercept.
By this time
one remaining
F-86 had been alerted and
was airborne toward Long Beach. He
passed the four
homeward-bound F-86's as he was going
in, but
by the
time he arrived over Long Beach
the UFO
was gone.
All the
pilots except one reported a
"silver airplane with highly swept-back wings." One pilot said
the UFO
looked round and silver to him.
The report
ended with a comment by
the local
intelligence officer. He'd called
Edwards AFB, the big Air
Force test base north of Los
Angeles, but they had nothing
in the
air. The officer concluded that the
UFO was
no airplane.
In 1951 nothing we had would
fly higher
than the F-86.
This was a
good report and I decided
to dig
in. First
I had some more questions I
wanted to ask the pilots.
I was
just in the process
of formulating
this set of questions when
three better reports came
in. They
automatically got a higher priority than the Long Beach
Incident.
chapter eight
The Lubbock Lights, Unabridged
When four college professors,
a geologist,
a chemist,
a physicist, and a petroleum engineer,
report seeing the same UFO's on fourteen different occasions,
the event
can be
classified as, at least,
unusual. Add the fa6ts that
hundreds of other people saw these
UFO's and that they were
photographed, and the
story gets even better. Add
a few
more facts—that these UFO's
were picked up on radar
and that
a few people got a close
look at one of them,
and the
story begins to convince even the
most ardent skeptics.
This was the
situation the day the reports
of the
Lubbock Lights arrived at
ATIC. Actually the
Lubbock Lights, as Project Blue Book
calls them, involved many widespread
reports. Some of these
incidents are known -to the
public, but the ones that added
the emphasis
and intrigue
to the
case and caused hundreds
of hours
of time
to be
spent analyzing the reports
have not been told before.
We collected
all of
these reports under the one
title because there appeared to be
a tie-in
between them.
The first word
of the
sightings reached ATIC late in
September 1951, when the mail
girl dropped letters into my
"in" basket. One of
the letters
was from
Albuquerque, New Mexico, one was from a
small town in Washington State, where I knew an
Air Denfense Command radar station was
located, and the other
from Reese AFB at Lubbock,
Texas.
I opened
the Albuquerque
letter first. It was a
report from 34th Air Defense at
Rutland AFB. The report said
that on the evening of August
25, 1951,
an employee
of the
Atomic Energy Commission's supersecret
Sandia Corporation and his wife had
seen a UFO. About dusk
they were sitting in
the back yard of their home
on the
outskirts of Albuquerque. They were gazing
at the
night sky, commenting on how
beautiful it was, when
both of them were startled
at the
sight of a huge
airplane flying swiftly and silendy over their home. The airplane
had been
in sight
only a few seconds but
they had gotten a
good look at it because
it was
so low.
They estimated 800 to
1000 feet. It was the
shape of a "flying wing" and one and a
half times the size of
a B-36.
The wing was sharply
swept back, almost like a
V. Both
the husband and wife
had seen
B-36's over their home many times.
They couldn't see the color
of the
UFO but
they did notice that
there were dark bands running
across the wing from front to
back. On the aft edge
of the
wings there were six to eight
pairs of soft, glowing, bluish
lights. The aircraft had passed over
their house from north to
south.
The reports
went on to say that
an investigation
had been
made immediately. Since the
object might have been a
conventional airplane, air traffic was
checked. A commercial airlines Constellation
was 50
miles west of Albuquerque and an Air Force B-25
was south
of the
city, but there had been
nothing over Albuquerque that evening. The man's
background was checked. He had
a "Q"
security clearance. This summed up his
character, oddballs don't
get "Q"
clearances. No one else
had reported
the UFO,
but this
could be explained by the
fact the AEC employee and
his wife
lived in such a location that
anything passing over their home
from north to south wouldn't pass
over or near very many
other houses. A sketch of the
UFO was
enclosed in the report.
I picked
up the
letter from Lubbock next. It
was a
thick report, and from the photographs
that were attached, it looked
interesting. I thumbed through
it and
stopped at the photos. The first thing that struck
me was
the similarity
between these photos and the report
I'd just
read. They showed a series of
lights in a V shape,
very similar to those described
as being on the
aft edge
of the
"flying wing" that was reported
from Albuquerque. This was something
unique, so I read the report
in detail.
On the
night of August 25, 1951,
about 9:20 p.m., just
twenty minutes after the
Albuquerque sighting, four college professors from Texas Technological College at Lubbock had observed a formation of
soft, glowing, bluish-green lights
pass over their home. Several
hours later they saw a
similar group of lights
and in
the next
two weeks
they saw at least ten more.
On August
31 an
amateur photographer had taken five photos
of the
lights. Also on the thirty-first
two ladies had seen
a large
"aluminum-colored," "pear-shaped" object hovering
near a road north of
Lubbock. The reports went into the
details of these sightings and
enclosed a set of the photos
that had been taken.
This report, in
itself, was a good UFO
report, but the similarity to the
Albuquerque sighting, both in the
description of the object and
the time
that it was seen was
truly amazing.
I almost overlooked
the report
from the radar station because
it was
fairly short. It said that
early on the morning of August 26, only a
few hours
after the Lubbock sighting, two different radars had shown
a target
traveling 900 miles per hour at
13,000 feet on a northwesterly
heading. The target had been
observed for six minutes and
an F-86
jet interceptor
had been
scrambled but by the time
the F-86
had climbed into the air the
target was gone. The last
paragraph in the report was
rather curt and to the
point. It was apparently in anticipation
of the
comments the report would draw. It
said that the target was
not caused
by weather. The officer in charge
of the
radar station and several members of
his crew
had been
operating radar for Seven years and
they could recognize a weather
target. This target was real.
I quickly took
out a
map of
the United
States and drew in a course
fine between Lubbock and the
radar station. A UFO flying
between these two points would
be on
a northwesterly
heading and the times it
was seen
at the
two places
gave it a speed
of roughly
900 miles
per hour.
This was by
far the
best combination of UFO reports
I'd ever read and I'd read
every one in the Air
Force's files.
The first thing
I did
after reading the reports was
to rush
a set of the Lubbock photos
to the
intelligence officer of the
34th Air Division in Albuquerque. I asked him
to show
the photos to the AEC employee
and his
wife without telling them what they
were. I requested an answer
by wire.
Later the next day I received
my answer:
"Observers immediately said that this is what
they saw on the night
of 25
August. Details by airmail."
The details
were a sketch the man
and his wife had made of
a wing
around the photo of the
Lubbock Lights. The number of
lights in the photo and
the number
of lights
the two
observers had seen on the
wing didn't tally, but they explained
this by saying that they
could have been wrong in their
estimate.
The next day
I flew
to Lubbock
to see
if I
could find an answer to all
of these
mysterious happenings.
I arrived in
Lubbock about 5:00 p.m. and contacted
the intelligence officer at
Reese AFB. He knew that
I was
on my
way and had already
set up
a meeting
with the four professors. Right after dinner we
met them.
If a group
had been
hand-picked to observe a UFO,
we couldn't have picked
a more
technically qualified group of people. They
were:
Dr. W.
I. Robinson,
Professor of Geology.
Dr. A.
G. Oberg,
Professor of Chemical Engineering.
Professor W.
L. Ducker,
Head of the Petroleum Engineering
Department.
Dr. George,
Professor of Physics.
This is
their story:
On the
evening of August 25 the
four men were sitting in
Dr. Robinson's back yard.
They were discussing micro-meteorites and drinking tea. They
jokingly stressed this point. At nine-twenty
a formation
of lights
streaked across the sky directly over
their heads. It all happened
so fast
that none of them had a
chance to get a good
look. One of the men mentioned
that he had always admonished
his students
for not being more
observant; now he was in
that spot. He and his colleagues
realized they could remember only
a few details of what they
had seen.
The lights
were a weird bluish-green color and
they were in a semicircular
formation. They estimated that
there were from fifteen to
thirty separate lights and that
they were moving from north
to south.
Their one wish
at this
time was that the lights
would reappear. They did; about
an hour
later the lights went over
again. This time the
professors were a little better
prepared. With the initial
shock worn off, they had
time to get a better
look. The details they
had remembered
from- the first flight checked. There was one difference;
in this
flight the lights were not in
any orderly
formation, they were just in
a group.
The professors reasoned that if the
UFO's appeared twice they might come
back." Come back they did.
The next
night and apparently many times later,
as the
professors made twelve more observations during the next few
weeks. For these later sightings they
added two more people to
their observing team.
Being methodical, as college professors are, they made every attempt to get a
good set of data. They
measured the angle through which the
objects traveled and timed them.
The several flights they
checked traveled through 90 degrees
of sky
in three
seconds, or 30 degrees per
second. The lights usually suddenly appeared
45 degrees
above the northern horizon and
abruptly went out 45 degrees
above the southern horizon. They always
traveled in this north-to-south direction. Outside of
the first
flight, in which the objects
were in a roughly
semicircular formation, in none of
the rest of the flights did
they note any regular pattern.
Two or three flights were often
seen in one night.
They had tried
to measure
the altitude,
with no success. First they tried
to compare
the lights
to the
height of clouds but the clouds
were never near the lights,
or vice
versa. Next they tried a more
elaborate scheme. They measured off
a base line perpendicular to the
objects' usual flight path. Friends of the professors made up two teams.
Each of the two teams was
equipped with elevation-measuring
devices, and one team was stationed
at each
end of
base line. The two teams were
linked together by two-way radios.
If they
sighted the objects they
would track and time them,
thus getting the speed and altitude.
Unfortunately neither
team ever saw the fights.
But the
lights never seemed to
want to run the course.
The wives
of some of the
watchers claimed to have seen
them from then-homes in the
city. This later proved to
be a
clue.
The professors
were not the sole observers
of the
mysterious lights. For two
weeks hundreds of other people
for miles
around Lubbock reported that
they saw the same lights.
The professors checked many
of these
reports against the times of the
flights they had seen and
recorded, and many checked out close. They attempted to
question these observers as to the
length of time they had
seen the lights and angles
at which they had seen them,
but the
professors learned what I already knew,
people are poor observers.
Naturally there
had been
much discussion among the professors
and their
friends as to the nature
of the
lights. A few simple mathematical calculations showed that' if
the lights
were very high they
would be traveling very fast.
The possibility
that they were some natural
phenomena was, of course, discussed and seriously considered. The professors did a
lot of thinking and research and
decided that if they were
natural phenomena they were
something altogether new. Dr. George, who
has since
died, studied the phenomena of
the night sky during
his years
as a
professor at the University of Alaska, and he had
never seen or heard of
anything like this before.
This was the
professor's story. It was early
in the
morning when we returned to Reese
AFB. I sat up a
few more
hours unsucessfully trying to
figure out what they had
seen.
The next day
I again
met the
intelligence officer and we went to
talk to Carl Hart, Jr.,
the amateur
photographer who had taken
the pictures
of the
lights. Hart was a freshman
at Texas
Tech. His story was that
on the
night of August 31 he was lying in his bed
in an
upstairs room of the Hart
home. He, like everyone
else in Lubbock, had heard
about the lights but he had
never seen them. It was
a warm
night and his bed was pushed
over next to an open
window. He was looking out at
the clear
night sky, and had been
in bed about
a half
hour, when he saw a
formation of the lights appear in
the north,
cross an open patch of
sky, and disappear over his house.
Knowing that the fights might
reappear as they had
done in the past, he
grabbed his loaded Kodak 35, set
the lens
and shutter
at f
3.5 and
one tenth of a second, and
went out into the middle
of the
back yard. Before long
his vigil
was rewarded
when the lights made a second
pass. He got two pictures.
A third
formation went over a
few minutes
later and he got three
more pictures. The next
morning bright and early Hart
said he took the roll of
unexposed film to a friend
who ran a photo-finishing shop. He
explained that he did all
of his
film processing in this
friend's lab. He told the
friend about the pictures and they
quickly developed them.
I stopped Hart
at this
point and asked why he
didn't get more excited about what
could be the biggest news
photos of the century.
He said
that the lights had appeared
to be so dim that he
was sure
he didn't
have anything on the negatives; had he thought that
he did
have some good pictures he would
have awakened his friend to
develop the negatives right away.
When he
developed the negatives and saw
that they showed an image, his
friend suggested that he call
the newspaper.
At first
the paper
wasn't interested but then they
decided to run the photos.
I later
found out that they had
done some checking of
their own.
We went
with Hart into his back
yard to re-enact what had taken
place. He described the lights
as being
the same
dull, glowing bluish-green color as those seen
by the
professors. The formation was different,
however. The lights Hart saw were
always flying in a perfect
V. He
traced the path from where they
appeared over some trees in
the north,
through an open patch
of sky
over the backyard, to a
point where they disappeared over the
house. From the flight path he pointed out, the
lights had crossed about 120
degrees of open sky in
four seconds. This 30-degree-per-second angular velocity corresponded
to the
professors' measured angular velocity.
We made arrangements
to borrow
Hart's negatives, thanked him for his
information, and left.
Armed with
a list
of names
of other
observers of the mysterious lights, the
intelligence officer and I started
out to try to get a
cross-section account of the other
UFO sightings
in the
Lubbock area. All the stories
about the UFO's were the same;
various types of formations of dull bluish-green lights, generally moving north
to south.
A few
people had variations, One lady saw
a flying
Venetian blind and another a flying double
boiler. One point of interest
was that very few claimed to
have seen the lights before
reading the professor's story in
the paper,
but this
could ge,t back to
the old
question, "Do people look up
if they have no
reason to do so?"
We talked
to observers
in nearby towns.
Their stories were the same. Two
of them,
tower operators at an airport,
reported that they had seen
the lights
on several
occasions.
It was in
one of
these outlying towns, Lamesa, that we talked to an
old gentleman,
about eighty years old, who
gave us a good
lead. He had seen the
lights and he had identified them. Ever since he
had read
the story
in the
papers he had been looking.
One evening
he and
his wife
were in their yard looking for
the lights.
All of
a sudden
two or
three appeared. They were
in view
for several
seconds, then they were gone. In
a few
minutes the fights did a
repeat performance. The man
admitted he had been scared.
He broke off his story of
the lights
and launched
into his background as a
native Texan, with range wars,
Indians, and stagecoaches under his belt.
What he was trying to
point out was that despite the
range wars, Indians, and stagecoaches,
he had been scared. His wife
had been
scared too. We had some difficulty
getting back to the lights
but we
finally made it. The third time
they came around, he said,
one of
the lights emitted a sound. It
said, "Plover." The
old gentleman
had immediately identified it as a plover, a water bird about the size of a
quail. Later that night, and
on several
other occasions, they had
seen the same thing. After
a few
more hair-raising but interesting
stories of the old west
Texas, we left.
Our next stop
was the
federal game warden's office in Lubbock. We got the low-down on
plovers. We explained our interest and
the warden
was very
helpful. He had been around west Texas all of
his life
so he
was familiar
with wildlife. The oily white
breast of a plover could
easily reflect light, but plovers usually
didn't travel in more than
pairs, or three
at the
most. He had never seen
or heard
of them
traveling in a flock
of fifteen
to thirty
but, of course, this wasn't impossible. Ducks,
yes, but probably not plovers. He did
say that
for some
unknown reason there were more than the
usual number of plovers in
the area
that fall.
I was
anxious to get the negatives
that Hart had lent us
back to the photo
lab at
Wright Field, but I had
one more
call to make. I
wanted to talk to the
two ladies
who had
seen a strange object hovering near
their car, but I also
wanted to write my report before
I left
Lubbock. Two Air Force special investigators from Reese AFB
offered to talk to the
ladies, so I stayed
at the
air base
and finished
my report.
The night
when the investigators came back,
I got
the story. They had spent the
whole day talking to the
ladies and doing a little discreet
checking into their backgrounds.
The two ladies,
a mother
and her
daughter, had left their home in Matador, Texas, 70
miles northeast of Lubbock, about twelve-thirty p.m. on
August 31. They were driving
along in their car
when they suddenly noticed "a
pear-shaped" object about 150
yards ahead of them. It
was just
off the
side of the road,
about 120 feet in the
air. It was drifting slowly to the east, "less
than the speed required to take
off in a Cub airplane." They drove on down
the road
about 50 more yards, stopped, and
got out
of the
car. The object, which they
estimated to be the size
of a
B-29 fuselage, was still drifting along
slowly. There was no sign
of any
exhaust blast and they
heard no noise, but they
did see
a "porthole" in the
side of the object. In
a few
seconds the object began to pick
up speed
and rapidly
climb out of sight. As it
climbed it seemed to have
a tight spiraling
motion.
The investigation
showed that the two ladies
were "solid citizens," with
absolutely no talents, or reasons,
for fabricating
such a story. The daughter
was fairly
familiar with aircraft. Her husband was
an Air
Force officer then in Korea,
and she had been
living near air bases for
several years. The ladies had said
that the object was "drifting"
to the
east, which possibly indicated
that it was moving with
the wind, but on further investigation
it was
found that it was moving into the wind.
The two investigators
had worked
all day
and hadn't
come up with the slightest indication
of an
answer.
This added the
final section to my now
voluminous report on the Lubbock affair.
The next morning
as I
rode to the airport to
catch an airliner back to Dayton
I tried
to put
the whole
puzzle together. It was hard
to believe
that all I'd heard was
real. Did a huge flying wing
pass over Albuquerque and travel
250 miles to Lubbock in about
fifteen minutes? This would be
about 900 miles per
hour. Did the radar station
in Washington
pick up the same
thing? I'd checked the distances
on the
big wall map in
flight operations just before leaving
Reese AFB. It was 1,300 miles
from Lubbock to the radar
site. From talking to people, we
decided that the lights were
apparently still around Lubbock
at 11:20
p.m and the
radar picked them up just after
midnight. They would have had
to be traveling about 780 miles
per hour.
This was fairly close to the
900-mile-per-hour speed clocked
by the
two radars. The photos of the
Lubbock Lights checked with the
description of what the
AEC employee
and his
wife had seen in Albuquerque. Nobody in Lubbock, however,
had reported
seeing a "flying wing" with lights. All of
this was swimming around in my
mind when I stepped out
of the
staff car at the
Lubbock airport.
My plane had
already landed so I checked
in at
the ticket
counter, picked up a
morning paper, and ran out
and got
into the airplane. I
sat down
next to a man wearing
a Stetson
hat and cowboy boots.
I soon
found out he was a
retired rancher from Lubbock.
On the front
page of the paper was
an account
of a
large meteor that had
flashed across New Mexico, west
Texas, and
Oklahoma the night before. According
to the
newspaper account, it was
very spectacular and had startled
a good many in Lubbock. I
was interested
in the
story because I had seen
this meteor. It was a
spectacular sight and I could easily
understand how such things could
be called UFO's. My seat partner
must have noticed that I
was reading the story
of the
meteor because he commented that a friend of his,
the man
who had
brought him to the airport, had seen it. We
talked about the meteor. This
led to a discussion of other
odd happenings
and left
a perfect
opening for him to
bring up the Lubbock Lights.
He asked
me if I'd heard about them.
I said
that I had heard a
few vague stories. I hoped that
this would stave off any
detailed accounts of stories I
had been
saturated with during the past five
days, but it didn't. I
heard all the details all
over again.
As he talked
on, I
settled back in my seat
waiting for a certain thing to
happen. Pretty soon it came.
The rancher
hesitated and the tone
of his
voice changed to a half-proud,
half-apologetic tone. I'd heard
this transition many times in
the past few months;
he was
going to tell about the
UFO that he had seen. He
was going
to tell
how he
had seen
the bluish-green lights. I
was wrong;
what he said knocked me out of my boredom.
The same night
that the college professors had seen their formation of lights his wife
had seen
something. Nobody in Lubbock knew about
the story,
not even
their friends. He didn't want anyone
to think
he and
his wife
were "crazy." He was
telling me only because I
was a
stranger. Just after dark his wife
had gone
outdoors to take some sheets
off the
clothesline. He was inside
the house
reading the paper. Suddenly his
wife had rushed into the
house, as he told the
story, "as white as
the sheets
she was
carrying." As close
as he could remember, he said,
this was about ten minutes
before the professors made their
first sighting. He stopped at this point to tell
me about
his wife,
she wasn't
prone to be "flighty"
and she
"never made up tales." This character qualification
was also
standard for UFO storytellers. The reason his wife was
so upset
was that
she had
seen a large object glide swiftly
and silently
over the house. She said
it looked like "an airplane without
a body."
On the
back edge of the wing were
pairs of glowing bluish lights.
The Albuquerque
sighting! He said he didn't
have any idea what his wife
had seen
but he
thought that it was an
interesting story.
It was an interesting story. It hit me
right between the eyes. I knew
the rancher
and his
wife couldn't have possibly heard the Albuquerque couple's story,
only they and a few
Air Force people knew
about it. The chances of
two identical
stories being made up were
infinitesimal, especially since neither of them fitted
the standard
Lubbock Light description. I wondered
how many
other people in Lubbock, Albuquerque,
or anywhere
in the
Southwest had seen a similar
UFO during this period
and hesitated
to mention
it.
I tried to
get a
few more
facts from the rancher but
he'd told me all he knew.
At Dallas
I boarded
an airliner
to Dayton
and he
went on to Baton Rouge,
never knowing what he'd added to
the story
of the
Lubbock Lights.
On the
way to
Dayton I figured out a
plan of attack on the thousands
of words
of notes
I'd taken.
The best
thing to do, I decided, was
to treat
each sighting in the Lubbock
Light series as a
separate incident. All of them
seemed to be dependent upon each
other for importance. If the
objects that were reported in several
of the
incidents could be identified, the rest
would merely become average UFO
reports. The photographs taken by
Carl Hart, Jr., became number one on the agenda.
As soon
as I
reached Dayton I took Hart's
negatives to the Photo Reconnaissance Laboratory at Wright Field.
This laboratory, staffed by the
Air Force's
top photography
experts, did all of our analysis
of photographs.
They went right to work on
the negatives
and soon
had a
report.
There had originally
been five negatives, but when
we asked to borrow them Hart
could only produce four. The
negatives were badly scratched
and dirty
because so many people had handled
them, so it was difficult
to tell
the actual photographic images from the
dust spots and scratches. The first thing that the
lab did
was to
look at each spot on
the negatives to see
if it
was an
actual photograhic image. They found that the
photos showed an inverted V
formation of lights. In each photo
the individual
image of a light was badly
blurred due to motion of
the camera,
but by
careful scrutiny of each
blurred image they were able
to determine that the original lights
that Hart had photographed
were circular, near pinpoint
sources of light. Like a
bright star, or a distant light
bulb. Next they made enlargements
from the negatives and
carefully plotted'the position of each light in the formation.
In each photograph
the individual
lights in the formation shifted position according to a
definite pattern.
One additional factor that was brought
out in
the report
was that although the
photos were taken on a
clear night no images of the
stars could be found in
the background.
This proved one thing,
the lights,
which were overexposed in the photograph,
were a great deal brighter
than the stars, or the lights
affected the film more than
the light
from the stars.
This was all
that the photos showed. It
was impossible
to determine the size of each
image of the group, speed,
or altitude.
The next
thing was to try to
duplicate what Hart said he
had done. I enlisted
the aid
of several
friends and we tried to photograph
a moving
light. When we were talking
to Hart in Lubbock, he had
taken us to his back
yard, where he had shot the
pictures. He had traced the
flight path of lights across the
sky. We had him estimate
the speed
by following an imaginary flight of
lights across the sky. It
came out to about four seconds.
We had
a camera
identical to the one that Hart
had used
and set
up a
light to move at the
same speed as the
UFO's had flown. He tried
to take
photographs. In four seconds we
could get only two poor
shots. These were badly blurred, much
worse than Hart's, due to
the one-tenth-of-a-second shutter speed.
We repeated
our experiment several times,
each time with the same
results. This made a lot of
people doubt the authenticity of Hart's photos.
With the
completed photo lab report in
my hands,
I was
still without an answer.
The report
was interesting
but didn't
prove anything. All I
could do was to get
opinions from as qualified sources as
I could find.
A physiologist
as the
Aero-medical Laboratory knocked out the
timing theory immediately by saying
that if Hart had been
excited he could have easily taken
three photos in four seconds
if we
could get two in four seconds
in our
experiment. Several professional photographers, one of them a
top Life photographer, said that
if Hart
was familiar
with his camera and was
familiar with panning action shots,
his photos
would have shown much less blur
than ours. I recalled what
I heard
about Hart's having photographed sporting events
for the
Lubbock newspaper. This would have
called for a good panning
technique.
The photographs
didn't tally with the description
of the
lights that the professors
had seen;
in fact,
they were firmly convinced that they
were of "home manufacture." The professors had reported
soft, glowing lights yet the
photos showed what should have been
extremely bright lights. Hart reported a perfect formation while
the professors,
except for the first flight, reported
an unorderly group. There was no way
to explain
this disagreement in the arrangement
of the lights. Of course, it
wasn't impossible that on the
night that Hart saw the fights
they were flying in a
V formation.
The first time the
professors saw them they were
flying in a semicircle.
The intensity of
the lights
was difficult
to explain.
Again I went to the people in the
Photo Reconnaissance Laboratory. I
asked them if there was
any possible
situation that could cause this. They
said yes. An intensely bright
light source which had a color
far over
in the
red end
of the
spectrum, bordering on infrared,
could do it. The eye
is not
sensitive to such a light, it
could appear dim to the
eye yet
be "bright" to the
film. I asked them what
kind of a light source
would cause this. There
were several things, if you
want to speculate, they said, extremely
high temperatures for one. But thfa was as far as
they would go. We have
nothing in this world that flies
that appears dim to the
eye yet
will show bright on film, they
said.
This ended the
investigation of the photographs, and the investigation ended at
a blank
wall. My official conclusion, which was later given to
the press,
was that
"The photos were never proven to
be a
hoax but neither were they proven
to be genuine." There is no
definite answer.
The emphasis
of the
investigation was now switched to
the
professors' sighting.
The meager
amount of data that they
had gathered seemed to
be accurate
but it
was inconclusive
as far as getting a definite
answer was concerned. They had
measured two things, how
much of the sky the
objects had crossed in a certain
time and the angle from
one side
of the formation to the other.
These figures didn't mean a
great deal, however, since
the altitude
at which
the formation
of lights
was flying
was unknown.
If you
assumed that the objects were flying
at an
altitude of 10,000 feet you
could easily compute that they were
traveling about 3,600 miles per hour,
of five
to six
times the speed of sound.
The formation
would have been about 1,750
feet wide. If each light was a separate object
it could
have been in the neighborhood
of 100
feet in diameter. These figures
were only a guess since nobody
knew if the lights were
at, above,
or below 10,000 feet. If they
had been
higher they would have been going
faster and have been larger.
If lower than
10,000 feet, slower and
smaller.
The only
solid lead that had developed
while the Reese AFB intelligence officer and I were
investigating the professors' sightings was
that the UFO's were birds
reflecting the city lights; specifically plover. The old cowboy
from Lamesa had described something identical
to what
the professors
described and they were
plover. Secondly, whenever the professors left the vicinity of
their homes to look for
the lights they didn't see them,
yet their
wives, who stayed at home, did
see them.
If the
"lights" were birds
they would be flying low and
couldn't be seen from more
than a few hundred feet. While in
Lubbock I'd noticed several main
boulevards lighted with the
bluish mercury vapor lights. I called the intelligence officer at Reese AFB
and he
airmailed me a city map
of Lubbock
with the mercury-vapor-lighted
streets marked. The place where
the professors
had made their observations was close
to one
of these
streets. The big hitch in this
theory was that people living
miles from a mercury-vapor-lighted
boulevard had also reported the
lights. How many of
these sightings were due to
the power
of suggestion and how
many were authentic I didn' know. If I could
have found out, it would
have been possible to plot the
sightings in Lubbock, and if
they were all located close to the lighted boulevards,
birds would be an answer.
This, however, it was
impossible to do.
The fact that
the lights
didn't make any perceivable sound seemed as if it
might be a clue. Birds
or light
phenomena wouldn't make any
sound, but how about some
object of appreciable size traveling at
or above
the speed
of sound?
Jet airplanes don't fly
as fast
as the
speed of sound but they
make a horrible roar. Artillery shells, which
are going
much faster than aircraft, whine as
they go through the air.
I knew that a great deal
of the
noise from a jet is
due to
the heated air rushing out of
the tail
pipe but I didn't know
exactly how much of
the noise
this caused. If a jet
airplane with a silent engine could
be built,
how much
noise would it make? How far
could it be heard? To
get the
answer I contacted National Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics Laboratory at Langley AFB, a
government agency which specializes in aeronautical research. They didn't
know. Neither they nor anybody else
had ever
done any research on this
question. Their opinion was that
such an aircraft could not
be heard 5,000 or 10,000 feet
away. Aerodynamicists at Wright Field's Aircraft Laboratory agreed.
I called the
Army's Ballistic Research Laboratories at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Maryland,
to find
out why
artillery shells whine. These
people develop and test all
kinds of shells so
they would have an answer
if anybody
did. They said that the majority
of the
whine of an artillery shell
is probably caused by
the flat
back end of the shell.
If a
perfectly streamlined shell could
be used
it would
not have
any perceivable whine.
What I found out,
or didn't
find out, about the sound
of an object moving at several
times the speed of sound
was typical of nearly every question
that came up regarding UFO's. We were working in
a field
where there were no definite answers to questions. In some instances we
were getting into fields far advanced
above the then present levels
of research. In other
instances we were getting into
fields where no research had been
done at all. It made
the problem
of UFO
analysis one of getting opinions.
All we
could
do was
hope the opinions we were
getting were the best.
My attempts to
reach a definite conclusion as to what the
professors had seen met
another blank wall. I had
no more
success than I'd had
trying to reach a conclusion
on the
authenticity of the photographs.
A thorough analysis
of the
reports of the flying wings
seen by the retired
rancher's wife in Lubbock and
the AEC
employee and his wife
in Albuquerque
was made.
The story from the two ladies
who saw
the aluminum-colored
pear-shaped object hovering near
the road
near Matador, Texas, was studied, checked,
and rechecked.
Another blank wall on all three of
these sightings.
By the time
I got
around to working on the
report from the radar station in
Washington State, the data of
the weather conditions that existed on
the night
of the
sighting had arrived. I turned the
incident folder over to the
electronics specialists at ATIC. They
made the analysis and determined
that the targets were caused
by weather,
although it was a borderline case. They further surmised
that since the targets had been
picked up on two radars,
if I
checked I'd find out that the
two targets
looked different on the two radarscopes.
This is a characteristic of a weather target picked up on radars
operating on different frequencies. I did check. I called
the radar
station and talked to the
captain who was in charge
of the
crew the night the target
had been picked up.
The target
looked the same on both
scopes. This was one of the
reasons it had been reported,
the captain
told me. If the target hadn't
been the same on both
scopes, he wouldn't have made the
report since he would have
thought he had a weather target.
He asked
me what
ATIC thought about the sighting. I
said that Captain James thought
it was
weather. Just before the
long-distance wires between Dayton and
Washington melted, I caught some
comment about people sitting in swivel
chairs miles from the closest
radar-scope. ... I took it
that he didn't agree the
target was caused by weather. But
that's the way it officially
stands today.
Although the
case of the Lubbock Lights
is officially
dead, its memory lingers on. There
have never been any more
reliable reports of "flying wings" but lights somewhat
similar to those seen by the
professors have been reported. In
about 70 per cent of these
cases they were proved to
be birds
reflecting city lights.
The known
elements of the case, the
professors' sightings and the photos, have
been dragged back and forth
across every type of paper upon
which written material appears, from the cheapest, coarsest pulp
to the
slick Life pages. Saucer addicts have
studied and offered the case
as all-conclusive
proof, with photos, that UFO's
are interplanetary.
Dr. Donald Menzel of Harvard studied the
case and ripped the sightings to shreds in Look, Time, and his book,
Flying Saucers, with the
theory that the professors were merely looking at refracted
city lights. But none of
these people even had access to
the full
report. This is the first
time it has ever been printed.
The only other
people outside Project Blue Book
who have studied the complete case
of the
Lubbock Lights were a group who,
due to
their associations with the government,
had complete access to
our files.
And these
people were not pulp writers or
wide-eyed fanatics, they were scientists-rocket experts, nuclear physicists, and intelligence experts. They had banded together to
study our UFO reports because
they were convinced that some
of the
UFO's that were being reported were
interplanetary spaceships and the Lubbock series
was one
of these
reports. The fact that the
formations of lights were in
different shapes didn't bother them;
in fact, it convinced
them all the more that
their ideas of how a spaceship
might operate was correct.
This group of
scientists believed that the spaceships,
or at least the part of
the spaceship
that came relatively close to the
earth, would have to have
a highly
swept-back wing configuration. And
they believed that for propulsion
and control
the craft
had a
series of small jet orifices
all around
its edge. Various combinations of these
small jets would be turned on
to get
various flight attitudes. The lights
that the various observers saw differed
in arrangement
because the craft was flying in
different flight attitudes.
(Three years
later !the Canadian Government announced that this was exactly
the way
that they had planned to
control the flying saucer that
they were trying to build.
They had to give up their
plans for the development of the saucerlike craft, but
now the
project has been taken over
by the
U. S. Air Force.)
This is the
complete story of the Lubbock
Lights as it is carried in the Air Force
files, one of the most
interesting and most controversial
collection of UFO
sightings ever to be reported to
Project Blue Book. Officially all of the sightings,
except the UFO that was
picked up on radar, are
unknowns.
Personally I thought
that the professor's lights might
have been some kind of birds
reflecting the light from mercury-vapor
street lights, but I was
wrong. They weren't birds, they
weren't refracted light, but
they weren't spaceships. The lights that the professors saw—the backbone of the
Lubbock Light series—have been positively
identified as a
very commonplace and easily
explainable natural phenomena.
It is very
unfortunate that I can't divulge
exactly the way the answer was
found because it is an
interesting story of how a scientist
set up
complete instrumentation to track down
the lights and how
he spent
several months testing theory after theory until he finally
hit upon
the answer.
Telling the story would lead to
his identity
and, in exchange for his
story, I promised the
man complete
anonymity. But he fully convinced me that he had
the answer,
and after
having heard hundreds of explanations of UFO's, I don't
convince easily.
With the
most important phase of the
Lubbock Lights "solved"—the sightings
by the
professors—the other phases
become only good UFO
reports.
chapter nine
The New Project Grudge
While I was in Lubbock,
Lieutenant Henry Metscher, who
was helping me on
Project Grudge, had been sorting
out the
many bits and pieces
of information
that Lieutenant Jerry Cummings
and Lieutenant
Colonel Rosengarten had brought back from Fort
Monmouth, New Jersey, and he
had the
answers.
The UFO
that the student radar operator
had assumed
to be traveling at a terrific
speed because he couldn't lock
on to it turned out to
be a
400-mile-an-hour conventional airplane. He'd just
gotten fouled up on his
procedures for putting the radar set
on automatic
tracking. The sighting by the two
officers in the T-33 jet
fell apart when Metscher showed how
they'd seen a balloon.
The second radar
sighting of the series also
turned out to be a balloon.
The frantic
phone call from headquarters requesting a reading
on the
object's altitude was to settle
a bet. Some
officers in headquarters had seen
the balloon
launched and were betting
on how
high it was.
The second
day's radar sightings were caused
by another
balloon and weather—both enhanced by the firm
conviction that there were
some mighty queer goings on
over Jersey.
The success with
the Fort
Monmouth Incident had gone to our
heads and we were convinced
that with a little diligent
digging we'd be knocking off
saucers like an ace skeet-shooter.
With all the confidence in the world, I
attacked the Long Beach Incident, which
I'd had
to drop
to go
to Lubbock,
Texas. But if saucers could
laugh, they were probably
zipping through
the statosphere chuckling to themselves, because there was no
neat solution to this one.
In the
original report of how the
six F-86's
chased the high-flying UFO over Long
Beach, the intelligence officer who made the report had
said that he'd checked all
aircraft flights, therefore this wasn't
the answer.
The UFO
could have been a balloon,
so I
sent a wire to the Air
Force weather detachment at the
long Beach Municipal Airport.
I wanted
the track
of any
balloon that was in the air
at 7:55
a.m. on
September 23, 1951.
While I was
waiting for the answers to
my two
wires, Lieutenant Metscher and I began to
sort out old UFO reports.
It was
a big
job because
back in 1949, when the
old Project Grudge had been disbanded,
the files
had just
been dumped into storage bins. Hank
and I
now had
four filing case drawers full of
a heterogeneous
mass of UFO reports, letters, copies of letters, and
memos.
But I didn't
get to
do much
sorting because the mail girl brought
in a
copy of a wire that
had just
arrived. It was a report of
a UFO
sighting at Terre Haute, Indiana.
I read it and told Metscher that I'd quickly whip
out an
answer and get back to
helping him sort. But it
didn't prove to be that easy.
The report
from Terre Haute said that
on October
9, a
CAA employee at Hulman Municipal Airport had observed
a silvery UFO. Three minutes later
a pilot,
flying east of Terre Haute, had seen a similar
object. The report lacked many
details but a few
phone calls filled me in
on the
complete story.
At 1:43
p.m. on
the ninth
a CAA
employee at the airport was walking across the ramp
in front
of the
administration building. He happened
to glance
up at
the sky—why,
he didn't know—and out of the
comer of his eye he
caught a flash of light on
the southeastern
horizon. He stopped and looked at the sky where
the flash
of light
had been
but he
couldn't see anything. He
was just
about to walk on when
he noticed what he described as
"a pinpoint" of light in
the same spot where he'd seen
the flash.
In a
second or two the the "pinpoint" grew larger
and it
was obvious
to the
CAA man that something was approaching
the airport
at a
terrific speed. As he
watched, the object grew larger
and larger
until it flashed directly
overhead and disappeared to the
northwest. The CAA man
said it all happened so
fast and he was so amazed
that he hadn't called anybody
to come
out of the nearby hangar and
watch the UFO. But when
he'd calmed down he remembered a few facts. The
UFO had
been in sight for
about fifteen seconds and during
this time it had passed from
horizon to horizon. It was
shaped like a "flattened tennis ball,"
was a
bright silver color, and when it
was directly
overhead it was "the size
of a
50-cent piece held at arm's length."
But this wasn't
all there
was to
the report,
A matter
of minutes after the sighting a
pilot radioed Terre Haute that
he had seen a UFO. He
was flying
from Greencastle Indiana, to
Paris, Illinois, when just east
of Paris
he'd looked back and to his
left. There, level with his
airplane and fairly close, was a large silvery object,
'Tike a flattened orange," hanging motionless in the sky.
He looked
at it
a few
seconds, then hauled his plane around
in a
tight left bank. He headed
directly toward the UFO, but
it suddenly
began to pick up speed and
shot off toward the northeast.
The time,
by the
Clock on his instrument
panel, was 1:45 p.m.—just two minutes
after the sighting at
Terre Haute.
When I finished
calling I got an aeronautical
chart out of the file and
plotted the points of the
sighting. The CAA employee had seen
the UFO
disappear over the northwestern horizon. The pilot
had been
flying from Greencastle, Indiana, to Paris, Illinois, so he'd
have been flying on a
heading of just a little less
than 270 degrees, or almost
straight west. He was just east
of Paris
when he'd first seen the
UFO, and since he said that
he'd looked back and to
his left,
the spot
where he saw the UFO would
be right
at a
spot where the CAA man had
seen his UFO disappear. Both observers had checked
their watches with radio
time just after the sightings,
so there couldn't be more than
a few
seconds' discrepancy. All I could conclude
was that
both had seen the same
UFO.
I checked
the path
of every
balloon in the Midwest. I
checked the weather—it was a clear, cloudless
day; I had the two observers'
backgrounds checked and even checked
for air traffic, although
I knew
the UFO
wasn't an airplane. I researched the University of D.ayton library for everything on daylight meteors, but this
was no
good. From the description the CAA employee gave,
what he'd seen had been
a clear-cut, distinct, flattened sphere, with
no smoke
trail, no sparks and no tail.
A daylight
meteor, so low as to
be described
as "a
50-cent piece held at arm's
length," would have had a smoke
trail, sparks, and would have
made a roar that would have jolted the Sphinx.
This one was quiet. Besides,
no daylight meteor stops
long enough to let an
airplane turn into it.
Conclusion: Unknown.
In a few
days the data from the
Long Beach Incident came in and
I started
to put
it together.
A weather
balloon had been launched from the
Long Beach Airport, and it
was in the vicinity where the
six F-86's
had made
their unsuccessful attempt to intercept
a UFO.
I plotted
out the
path of the balloon, the reported
path of the UFO, and
the flight
paths of the F-86's.
The paths
of the
balloon and the F-86's were accurate, I knew, because
the balloon
was being
tracked by radio fixes and the
F-86's had been tracked by
radar. At only one point did
the paths
of the
balloon, UFO, and F-86's coincide. When the
first two F-86's made their
initial contact with the UFO
they were looking almost directly
at the
balloon. But from then
on, even
by altering
the courses
of the F-86's, I couldn't prove
a thing.
In addition, the
weather observers from Long Beach
said that during the period that
the intercept
was taking
place they had gone outside and
looked at their balloon; it
was an exceptionally clear day and
they could see it at
unusually high altitudes. They didn't
see any
F-86's around it. And one stronger
point: the balloon had burst
about ten minutes before the F-86's
lost sight of the UFO.
Lieutenant Metscher took over and,
riding on his Fort Monmouth victory, tried to show
how the
pilots had seen the balloon. He
got the
same thing I did—nothing.
On October 27,
1951, the new Project Grudge
was officially
established. I'd written the necessary
letters and had received the necessary
endorsements. I'd estimated, itemized, and justified direct costs and
manpower. I'd conferred, inferred, and referred, and now
I had
the money
with which to operate. The next
step was to pile up
all this
paper work as an aerial barrier,
let the
saucers crash into it, and
fall just outside the door.
I was
given a very flexible operating
policy for Project Grudge because no
one knew
the best
way to
track down UFO's. I had only
one restriction
and that
was that
I wouldn't have
my people
spending time doing a lot
of wild
speculating. Our job would
be to
analyze each and every UFO report
and try
to find
what we believed to be
an honest,
unbiased answer. If we
could not identify the reported
object as being a balloon,
meteor, planet, or one of
a half
a hundred other common things that
are sometimes
called UFO's, we would mark the
folder "Unknown" and
file it in a special file.
At some
later date, when we built
up enough
of these "Unknown" reports, we'd study them.
As long as
I was
chief of the UFO project,
this was our basic rule. If
anyone became anti-flying saucer and-
was no
longer capable of making
an unbiased
evaluation of a report, out
he went.
Conversely anyone who became a
believer was through. We were
too busy
during the initial phases of the
project to speculate as to
whether the unknowns were spaceships,
space monsters, Soviet weapons, or
ethereal visions.
I had
to let
three people go for being
too pro
or too
con.
By the later
part of November 1951 I
knew most of what had taken
place in prior UFO projects
and what
I expected
to do. The people in Project
Sign and the old Project
Grudge had made many mistakes. I
studied these mistakes and profited
by them.
I could
see that
my predecessors
had had
a rough job. Mine
would be a little bit
easier because of the pioneering they had done.
Lieutenant Metscher and I
had sorted
out all
of the
pre-1951 files, refiled
them, studied them, and outlined
the future course of the new
Project Grudge.
When Lieut. Colonel
Rosengarten and Lieutenant Cum-mings had been
at the
Pentagon briefing with Major General
Cabell on the
Fort Monmouth Incidents, the general
had told
them to report back
when the new project was
formed and ready to go. We
were ready to go, but
before taking my ideas to the
Pentagon, I thought it might
be wise
to try
them out on a few other
people to get their reaction.
Colonel Frank Dunn, then chief of
ATIC, liked this idea. We
had many well-known scientists and engineers
who periodically
visited ATIC as consultants,
and Colonel
Dunn suggested that these people's opinions
and comments
would be valuable. The the next two
weeks every visitor to ATIC
who had
a reputation as a
scientist, engineer, or scholar got
a UFO
briefing.
Unfortunately the names
of these
people cannot be revealed because
I promised
them complete anonymity. But the
list reads like a
page from Great
Men of Science.
Altogether nine people
visited the project during this
trial period. Of the nine, two
thought the Air Force was
wasting its time, one could be
called indifferent, and six were
very enthusiastic over the
project. This was a shock
to me.
I had
expected reactions that ranged
from an extremely cold absolute
zero to a mild twenty
below. Instead I found out
that UFO's were being freely and
seriously discussed in scientific circles. The majority of the
visitors thought that the Air
Force had goofed on previous projects
and were
very happy to find out that
the project
was being
re-established. All of
the visitors, even the two who
thought we were wasting our
time, had good suggestions
on what
to do.
All of
them offered their services at any
future time when they might
be needed.
Several of these people
became very good friends and
valuable consultants later on.
About two
weeks before Christmas, in 1951,
Colonel Dunn and I went to
the Pentagon
to give
my report.
Major General John A. Samford
had replaced
Major General Cabell as Director of
Intelligence, but General Samford must
have been told about the UFO
situation because he was familiar
with the general aspects
of the
problem. He had appointed his Assistant for Production, Brigadier General W. M.
Garland, to ride herd on
the project
for him.
Colonel Dunn
briefly outlined to General Samford
what we planned to do. He
explained our basic policy, that
of setting aside the unknowns and
not speculating
on them,
and he told how the scientists
visiting ATIC had liked the
plans for the new
Project Grudge.
There was some
discussion about the Air Force's
and ATIC's responsibility for the UFO
reports. General Garland stated,
and it
was later
confirmed in writing, the the Air Force was solely responsible
for investigating
and evaluating
all UFO reports. Within
the Air
Force, ATIC was the responsible
agency. This in turn meant
that Project Grudge was responsible for all UFO reports
made by any branch of the
military service. I started my
briefing by telling General Samford
and his
staff about the present UFO
situation.
The UFO reports
had never
stopped coming in since they had first started in
June 1947. There was some
correlation between publicity and the
number of sightings, but it
was not an established
fact that reports came in
only when the press was playing
up UFO's.
Just within the past few
months the number of
good reports had increased sharply
and there had been
no publicity.
UFO's were seen
more frequently around areas vital
to the defense of the United
States. The Los Alamos-Albuquerque area, Oak Ridge, and
White Sands Proving Ground rated high. Port areas, Strategic
Air Command
bases, and industrial areas ranked
next. UFO's had been reported
from every state in the Union
and from
every foreign country. The U.S. did
not have
a monopoly.
The frequency of
the UFO
reports was interesting. Every July there was a sudden
increase in the number of
reports and July was always the
peak month of the year.
Just before Christmas there was
usually a minor peak.
The Grudge Report
had not
been the solution to the
UFO problem. It was true that
a large
percentage of the reports were
due to
the "misidentification
of known
objects"; people were seeing
balloons, airplanes, planets, but this
was not the final answer. There
were a few hoaxes, hallucinations,
publicity-seekers, and fatigued
pilots, but reports from these people constituted less than
1 per
cent of the total.
Left over was
a residue
of very
good and very "unexplain-able"
UFO sightings
that were classified as unknown.
The quality of
the reports
was getting
better, I told the officers; they contained more details
that could be used for
analysis and the details
were more precise and accurate.
But still they left much to
be desired.
Every one of
the nine
scientists and engineers who had
reviewed the UFO material
at ATIC
had made
one strong
point: we should give
top priority
to getting
reasonably accurate measurements of the
speed, altitude, and size of
reported UFO's. This would serve
two purposes.
First, it would make it easy
to sort
out reports
of common
things, such as balloons, airplanes, etc. Second, and more
important, if we could get even
one fairly
accurate measurement that showed
that some object was traveling
through the atmosphere as high speed,
and that
it wasn't
a meteor, the UFO
riddle would be much easier
to solve.
I had
worked out a plan to
get some
measured data, and I presented it to the group for
their comments.
I felt sure
that before long the press
would get wind of the Air
Force's renewed effort to identify
UFO's. When this happened, instead of
being mysterious about the whole
thing, we would freely
admit the existence of the
new project, explain the situation thoroughly
and exactly
as it
was, and say that
all UFO
reports made to the Air
Force would be given careful consideration.
In this
way we
would encourage more people
to report
what they were seeing and we might get some
good data.
To further
explain my point, I drew
a sketch
on a
blackboard. Suppose that a UFO is reported over a fair-sized
city. Now we may
get one
or two
reports, and these reports may
be rather
sketchy. This does us no
good—all we can conclude is that
somebody saw something that he
couldn't identify. But suppose
fifty people from all over
the city report the UFO. Then
it would
be profitable
for us
to go out and talk to
these people, find out the
time they saw the UFO, and
where they saw it (the
direction and height above the horizon).
Then we might be able
to use
these data, work out
a triangulation
problem, and get a fairly accurate
measurement of speed, altitude, and
size.
Radar, of
course, will give an accurate
measurement of speed and altitude, I
pointed out, but radar is
not infallible.
There is always the
problem of weather. To get
accurate radar data on
a UFO,
it is
always necessary to prove that
it wasn't weather that
was causing
the target.
Radar is valuable, and we wanted
radar reports, I said, but
they should be considered only as
a parallel
effort and shouldn't take the place
of visual
sightings.
In winding
up my
briefing, I again stressed the
point that, as of the end
of 1951—the
date of this briefing—there was no positive proof that
any craft
foreign to our knowledge existed. All recommendations for the reorganization of Project Grudge were based
solely upon the fact that
there were many incredible reports of
UFO's from many very reliable people. But they were
still just flying saucer reports
and couldn't be considered
scientific proof.
Everyone present
at the
meeting agreed—each had read or had
been briefed on these incredible
reports. In fact, two of the
people present had seen UFO's.
Before the meeting
adjourned, Colonel Dunn had one
last question. He knew
the answer,
but he
wanted it confirmed. "Does the United States have
a secret
weapon that is being reported as
a UFO?"
The answer
was a-
flat "No."
In a few
days I was notified that
my plan had
been given the green light. I already had the plan written up
in the
form of a staff
study so I sent it
through channels for formal approval.
It had
been obvious right from the
start of the reorganization of Project Grudge that
there would be questions that no one on my
staff was technically competent to
answer. To have a fully
staffed project, I'd need an
astronomer, a physicist, a chemist, a
mathematician, a psychologist,
and probably a dozen other specialists.
It was,
of course,
impossible to have all of
these people on my staff,
so I
decided to do the next best
thing. I would set up
a contract
with some research organization who already had
such people on their staff; then
I would
call on them whenever their
services were needed.
I soon found
a place
that was interested in such
a contract,
and the day after
Christmas, Colonel S. H. Kirkland,
of Colonel Dunn's staff, and I
left Dayton for a two-day
conference with these people to
outline what we wanted. Their
organization cannot be identified
by name
because they are doing other highly
secret work for the government.
Ill call them Project
Bear.
Project Bear is
a large,
well-known research organization in
the Midwest.
The several
hundred engineers and scientists who make up their staff
run from
experts on soils to nuclear
physicists. They would make
these people available to me to
assist Project Grudge on any
problem that might arise from a UFO report. They
did not
have a staff astronomer or psychologist, but they agreed
to get
them for us on a
subcontract basis. Besides providing
experts in every field of science,
they would make two studies
for us;
a study
of how much a person can
be expected
to see
and remember
from a UFO sighting, and a
statistical study of UFO reports.
The end
product of the study of
the powers
of observation
of a
UFO observer
would be an interrogation form.
Ever since
the Air
Force had been in the
UFO business,
attempts had been made
to construct
a form
that a person who had seen
a UFO
could fill out. Many types
had been
tried but all of
them had major disadvantages. Project Bear, working with the
psychology department of a university,
would study all of
the previous
questionnaires, along with
actual UFO reports, and
try to
come up with as near
a perfect
interrogation form as possible. The
idea was to make the form
simple and yet extract as
much and as accurate data as possible from the
observer.
The second study
that Project Bear would undertake
would be a statistical
study of all UFO reports.
Since 1947 the Air Force had
collected about 650 reports, but
if our
plan to encourage UFO
reports worked out the way
we expected this number could increase
tenfold. To handle this volume of reports, Project Bear
said that they would set
up a complete UFO file on
IBM punch
cards. Then if we wanted any
bit of
information from the files, it
would be a matter of punching
a few
buttons on an IBM card-sorting
machine, and the files
would be started electronically in a few seconds. Approximately
a hundred
items pertaining to a UFO report
would be put on each
card. These items included everything from the time the
UFO was
seen to its position in the
sky'and the observer's
personality. The items punched on the
cards would correspond to the
items on the questionnaires that Project
Bear was going to develop.
Besides giving us
a rapid
method of sorting data, this
IBM file would give
us a
modus operandi file. Our MO
file would be similiar
to the
MO files
used by police departments to file the methods of
operations of a criminal. Thus
when we received a report we
could put the characteristics of the reported UFO on
an IBM
punch card, put it into
the IBM machine, and compare it
with the characteristics of other sightings
that had known solutions. The answer might be that
out of
the one
hundred items on the card,
ninety-five were identical to previous
UFO reports
that ducks were flying over a
city at night reflecting the city's lights.
On the way
home from the meeting Colonel
Kirkland and I were both well
satisfied with the assistance we believed Project Bear could
give to Project Grudge.
In a few
days I again left ATIC,
this time for Air Defense
Command Headquarters in Colorado
Springs, Colorado. I wanted to
find out how willing ADC
was to
help us and what they could
do. When
I arrived
I got
a thorough
briefing on the operations of ADC
and the
promise that they would do
anything they could to
help solve the UFO riddle.
All of
this co-operation was something that
I hadn't
expected. I'd been warned by
the people
who had
worked on Project Sign and the
old Project
Grudge that everybody hated the word
UFO—I'd have to fight for
everything I asked for. But once again they
were wrong. The scientists who visited ATIC, General Samford,
Project Bear, and now Air Defense
Command couldn't have been more
co-operative. I was becoming
aware that there was much
wider concern about UFO reports than
I'd ever
realized before.
While I traveled around
the United
States getting the project set up,
UFO reports
continued to come in and
all of them were good. One
series of reports was especially
good, and they came
from a group of people
who had
had a great deal of experience
watching things in the sky-4he
people who launch the
big skyhook
balloons for General Mills, Inc. The
reports of what the General
Mills people had seen while they
were tracking their balloons covered
a period of over a year.
They had just sent them
in because
they had heard that
Project Grudge was being reorganized
and was taking a différait
view on
UFO reports.
They, like so many other reliable
observers, had been disgusted with
the previous Air Force
attitude toward UFO reports, ^nd they had
refused to send in any
reports. I decided that these
people might be.a good source
of information,
and I
wanted to get further details on
their reports, so I got
orders to go to Minneapolis. A scientist from Project
Bear went with me. We arrived
on January
14, 1952,
in the
middle of a cold wave and
a blizzard.
The Aeronautical Division of General Mills,
Inc., of Wheaties and Betty Crocker fame,
had launched
and tracked
every skyhook balloon that
had been
launched prior to mid-1952. They knew
what their balloons looked like
under all lighting conditions and they
also knew meteorology,
aerodynamics, astronomy, and they
knew UFO's. I talked to
these people for the
better part of a full
day, and every time I tried
to infer
that there might be some
natural explanation for the UFO's
I just
about found myself in a
fresh snowdrift.
What made
these people so sure that
UFO's existed? In the first place,
they had seen many of
them. One man told me that
one tracking
crew had seen so many
that the sight of a UFO
no longer
even especially interested them. And
the things that they
saw couldn't
be explained.
For example: On
January 16, 1951, two people
from General Mills and four
people from Artesia, New Mexico,
were watching a skyhook balloon from
the Artesia
airport. They had been watching the
balloon off and on for
about an hour when one of
the group saw two tiny specks
on the
horizon, off to the
northwest. He pointed them out
to the
others because two airplanes
were expected into the airport,
and he
thought that these might be
the airplanes.
But as they watched, the two
specks began to move in
fast, and within a few seconds
the observers
could see that "the airplanes"
were actually two round, dull
white objects flying in close formation.
The two
objects continued to come in
and headed straight toward
the balloon.
When they reached the balloon they
circled it once and flew
off to
the northwest,
where they disappeared over the
horizon. As the two UFO's circled
the balloon,
they tipped on edge and
the observers saw that they were
disk-shaped.
When the two
UFO's were near the balloon,
the observers
also had a chance
to compare
the size
of the
UFO's with the size of the
balloon. If the UFO's were
as close
to the
balloon as they appeared
to be
they would have been 60
feet in diameter.
After my
visit to General Mills, Inc.,
I couldn't
help remembering a magazine article
I'd read
about a year before. It
said that there was not
a single
reliable UFO report that couldn't be
attributed to a skyhook balloon.
I'd been back
at ATIC
only a few days when
I found
myself packing up to leave
again. This time it was
for New
York. A high-priority wire had come into
ATIC describing how a Navy pilot
had chased
a UFO
over Mitchell AFB, on Long Island.
It was
a good
report.
I remember the
trip up to New York
because my train passed through Elizabeth,
New Jersey,
early in the morning, and I could see the
fires caused by an American
Airlines Convair
that had crashed. This was
the second
of the
three tragic Elizabeth, New Jersey, crashes.
The morning before,
on January
21, a
Navy pilot had taken off from
Mitchell in a TBM. He
was a
lieutenant commander, had flown in
World War II, and was
now an
engineer at the Navy Special Devices
Center on Long Island. At
nine-fifty he had cleared
the traffic
partem and was
at about
2,500 feet, circling around
the airfield.
He was
southeast of the field when he
first noticed an object below
him and
"about three runway lengths
off the
end of
Runway 30." The object looked like
the top
of a
parachute canopy, he told me; it
was white
and he
thought he could see the
wedges or panels. He
said that he thought that
it was
moving across the ground a little
bit too
fast to be drifting with-wind,
but he
was sure
that somebody had bailed out
and that he was looking at
the top
of his
parachute. He was just ready to call the tower
when he suddenly realized that
this "parachute" was drifting
across the wind. He had
just taken off from Runway 30
and knew
which direction the wind was
blowing.
As he
watched, the object, whatever it
was (by
now he
no longer thought that it was
a parachute),
began to gradually climb, so
he started
to climb,
he said,
staying above and off to the
right of the object. When
the UFO started to make a
left turn, he followed and
tried to cut inside, but he
overshot and passed over it.
It continued
to turn and gain
speed, so he dropped the
nose of the TBM, put on
more power, and pulled in
behind the object, which was now
level with him. In a
matter of seconds the UFO
made a 180-degree turn and started
to make
a big
swing around the northern edge of
Mitchell AFB. The pilot tried
to follow, but the
UFO had
begun to accelerate rapidly, and
since a TBM leaves
much to be desired on
the speed
end, he was getting farther and
farther behind. But he did
try to follow it as long
as he
could. As he made a
wide turn around the northern edge
of the
airfield he saw that the
UFO was now turning
south. He racked the TBM
up into
a tight left turn to follow, but
in a
few seconds
the UFO
had disappeared. When he
last saw it, it had
crossed the Long Island coast line
near Freeport and it was
heading out to sea.
When he
finished his account of the
chase, I asked the commander some specific questions about
the UFO.
He said
that just after he'd
decided that the UFO was
not a
parachute it appeared to be at an altitude
of about
200 to
300 feet
over a residential section. From the
time it took it to
cover a city block, he'd estimated
that it was traveling about
300 miles an hour.
Even when he pulled in
behind the object and got
a good look, it still looked like
a parachute
canopy—dome-shaped—white—and it
had a dark undersur-face. It had been in sight two and a half minutes.
He had
called the control tower at
Mitchell during the chase, he told
me, but
only to ask if any
balloons had been launched. He thought
that he might be seeing
a balloon.
The tower had told
him that
there was a balloon in
the area.
Then the commander
took out an aeronautical chart and drew in his
flight path and the apparent
path of the UFO for me.
I think
that he drew it accurately
because he had been continually watching landmarks as he
chased the UFO and was very
careful as he drew the
sketches on the map.
I checked with
the weather
detachment at Mitchell and they said
that they had released, a balloon.
They had released it at
nine-fifty and from a point
southeast of the airfield. I got
a plot
of its
path. Just as in the
Long Beach Incident, where the six
F-86's tried to intercept the
UFO, the balloon was almost exactiy in line with the
spot where the UFO was first
seen, but then any proof
you might
attempt falls apart. If the
pilot knew where he was,
and had
plotted his flight path
even semi-accurately, he was never
over the balloon. Yet
he was
over the UFO. He came
within less than 2,000 feet of
the UFO
when he passed over it;
yet he couldn't recognize it as
a balloon
even though he thought it might
be a
balloon since the tower had
just told him that there was
one in
the area.
He said
that he followed the UFO around
the north
edge of the airfield. Yet
the balloon, after it
was launched
southeast of the field, continued on a southeast course
and never
passed north of the airfield.
But the biggest
argument against the object's being
a balloon was
the fact
that the pilot pulled in
behind it; it was directly off
the nose
of his
airplane, and although he followed it for more than
a minute,
it pulled
away from him. Once you line
up an
airplane on a balloon and
go straight toward it you will
catch it in a matter
of seconds,
even in the slowest
airplane. There have been dogfights
with UFO's where the
UFO's turned out to be
balloons, but the pilots always reported
that the UFO "made a pass" at them. In
other words, they rapidly caught
up with
the balloon
and passed it. I
questioned this pilot over and
over on this one point, and he was positive
that he had followed directly
behind the UFO for over
a minute
and all
the time
it was
pulling away from him.
This is
one of
the most
typical UFO reports we had
in our files. It is typical
because no matter
how you
argue there isn't any definite answer.
If you
want to argue that the
pilot didn't know where
he was
during the chase—that he was 3
or 4
miles from where he thought
he was—that
he never did fly around the
northern edge of the field
and get
in behind the UFO—then
the UFO
could have been a balloon.
But if you
want to believe that the
pilot knew where he was all
during the chase, and he
did have
several thousand hours of flying time,
then all you can conclude
is that
the •UFO was an unknown.
I think
the pilot
summed up the situation very
aptly when he told me, "I
don't know what it was,
but I've
never seen anything like it before
or since—maybe
it was
a spaceship."
I went
back to Dayton stumped—maybe it was a spaceship.
chapter ten
Project Blue Book and the Big BuUd-Up
Just twenty minutes after midnight
on January
22, 1952,
nineteen and a half
hours after the Navy lieutenant
commander had chased the UFO
near Mitchell AFB, another incident
involving an airplane and something
unknown was developing in Alaska. In
contrast with the unusually balmy
weather in New York,
the temperature
in Alaska
that night, according to the detailed
account of the incident we
received at ATIC, was a miserable
47 degrees
below zero. The action was unfolding at one of
our northernmost
radar outposts in Alaska. This outpost
was similar
to those
you may
have seen in pictures, a collection
of low,
sprawling buildings grouped around
the observatory—like
domes that house the antennae
of the most modem radar in
the world.
The entire
collection of buildings and domes are
one color,
solid white, from the plastering of ice and snow.
The picture
that the outpost makes could be
described as fascinating, something out
of a Walt Disney fantasy—but talk to somebody who's
been there—it's miserable.
At 0020, twenty
minutes after midnight, an airman
watching one of the
outpost's radarscopes saw a target
appear. It looked like an
airplane because it showed up
as a
bright, distinct spot. But
it was
unusual because it was northeast of the radar site,
and very
few airplanes
ever flew over this area. Off
to the
northeast of the station there
was nothing but ice, snow, and
maybe a few Eskimos until
you got to Russia. Occasionally a B-50 weather reconnaissance
plane ventured into the
area, but a quick check
of the
records showed that none
was there
on this
night.
By the time
the radar
crew had gotten three good
plots of the target, they all
knew that it was something
unusual—it was at 23,000
feet and traveling 1,500 miles
an hour.
The duty controller, an Air Force
captain, was quickly called; he made a fast check
of the
targets that had now been
put on the plotting board and
called to a jet fighter-interceptor
base for a scramble.
The fighter base,
located about 100 miles south
of the.
radar site,
acknowledged the captain's call and
in a
matter of minutes an F-94 jet
was climbling out toward the north.
While the F-94
was heading
north, the radar crew at
the outpost watched the unidentified target. The bright dots
that marked its path
had moved
straight across the radar-scope, passing within about 50
miles of the site. It
was still
traveling about 1,500 miles
an hour.
The radar
had also
picked up the F-94
and was
directing it toward its target
when suddenly the unidentified
target slowed down, stopped, and reversed its course. Now
it was
heading directly toward the radar station.
When it was within about
30 miles
of the
station, the radar operator
switched his set to a
shorter range and lost both the
F-94 and the unidentified target.
While the
radar operator was trying to
pick up the target again, the F-94 arrived in
the area.
The ground
controller told the pilot
that they had lost the
target and asked him to cruise
around the area to see
if he
and his
radar operator could pick up anything
on the
F-94's radar. The pilot said
he would but that
he was
having a little difficulty, was low on fuel, and
would have to get back
to his
base soon. The ground controller acknowledged the pilot's message,
and called back to the air
base telling them to scramble
a second
F-94.
The first
F-94 continued to search the
area while the ground radar tried
to pick
up the
target but neither could find it.
About this
time the second F-94 was
coming in, so the ground radar switched back to
long range. In a minute
they had both of the F-94's
and the
unidentified target on their scope. The ground controller called the second F-94
and began to vector him into
the target.
The first
F-94 returned- to its base.
As both
the second
F-94 and the target approached
the radar site, the operator again
switched to short range and
again he lost the
jet and
the target.
He switched
back to long range, but by
now they
were too close to the
radar site and he couldn't pick
up either
one.
The pilot continued
on toward
where the unidentified target
should have been. Suddenly the
F-94 radar operator reported
a weak
target off to the right
at 28,000
feet. They climbed into it but
faded before they could make
contact.
The pilot swung
the F-94
around for another pass, and
this time the radar
operator reported a strong return.
As they closed in, the F-94's
radar showed that the target
was now almost stationary, just barely
moving. The F-94 continued on, but the target
seemed to make a sudden
dive and they lost it. The
pilot of the jet interceptor
continued to search the area but
couldn't find anything. As the
F-94 moved away from the radar
station, it was again picked
up on the ground radar, but
the unidentified
target was gone.
A third
F-94 had been scrambled, and in the meantime
its crew took over
the search.
They flew around for about
ten minutes without detecting
any targets
on their
radar. They were making one last
pass almost direcdy
over the radar station when
the radar
operator in the back seat
of the
F-94 yelled over the interphone that he had a
target on his scope. The pilot called ground radar,
but by
this time both the F-94 and
the unidentified
target were again too close
to the
radar station and they
couldn't be picked up. The
F-94 closed in until it was
within 200 yards of the
target; then the pilot pulled up, afraid that he
might collide with whatever was
out in the night sky ahead
of him.
He made
another pass, and another, but each
time the bright spot on
the radar
operator's scope just stayed
in one
spot as if something were
defiandy sitting
out in
front of the F-94 daring
the pilot
to close in. The pilot didn't
take the dare. On each
pass he broke off at 200
yards.
The F-94 crew
made a fourth pass and
got a
weak return, but it was
soon lost as the target
seemed to speed away. Ground radar also got a
brief return, but in a
matter of seconds they too lost
the target
as it
streaked out of range on a
westerly heading.
As usual, the
first thing I did when
I read this
report was to check the weather.
But there was
no weather
report for this area that was
detailed enough to tell whether
a weather
inversion could have caused
the radar
targets.
But I took the report over to Captain
Roy James,
anyway, in hopes that he
might be able to find
a clue
that would identify the UFO.
Captain James was
the chief
of the
radar section at ATIC. He and
his people
analyzed all our reports where
radar picked up UFO's. Roy had
been familiar with radar for
many years, having set up one
of the
first stations in Florida during
World War II, and later
he took
the first
aircraft control and warning squadron
to Saipan.
Besides worrying about keeping his radar
operating, he had to worry
about the Japs' shooting holes in
his antennae.
-
Captain James decided
that this Alaskan sighting I'd
just shown him was
caused by some kind of
freak weather. He based his analysis
on the
fact that the unknown target
had disppeared
each time the ground radar
had been
switched to short range. This, he
pointed out, is an indication
that the radar was picking up
some kind of a target
that was caused by weather. The same
weather that caused the ground
radar to_. act up must
have caused false targets on
the F-94's
radar too, he continued.
After all, they had closed
to within
200 yards of what
they were supposedly picking up;
it was a clear moonlit night,
yet the
crews of the F-94's hadn't
seen a thing.
Taking a clue
from the law profession, he quoted a precedent.
About a year before over
Oak Ridge,
Tennessee, an F-82 interceptor had nearly
flown into the ground three
times as the pilot
attempted to follow a target
that his radar operator was picking
up. There
was a
strong inversion that night, and although
the target
appeared as if it were
flying in ,the air, it was actually
a ground
target.
Since Captain James
was the
chief of the radar section
and he had said "Weather," weather was
the official
conclusion on the report. But reports
of UFOY
being picked up on radar are
controversial, and some
of the
people didn't agree with James' conclusion.
A month or
two after
we'd received the report, I was
out in Colorado Springs at Air
Defense Command Headquarters. I was eating lunch in
the officers'
Club when I saw an
officer from the radar
operations section at ADC. He
asked me to stop by his
office when I had a
spare minute, and I said that
I would.
He said
that it was important.
It was
the middle
of the
afternoon before I saw him
and found out what he wanted.
He had
been in Alaska on TDY
when the UFO had
been picked up at the
outpost radar site. In fact, he
had made
a trip
to both
the radar
site and the interceptor base just
two days
after the sighting, and he
had talked about the sighting with
the people
who had
seen the
UFO on the
radar. He
wanted to know what we
thought iilwut
it.
When I told him
that the sighting had been
written off as weather, I remember
that he got a funny
look on his face and said,
"Weatherl
What are you
guys trying to pull, anyway?"
It was
obvious that he didn't agree
with our conclusion. I was interested
in learning
what this man thought because
I knew that he was one
of ADC's
ace radar
trouble shooters und that he traveled
all over
the world,
on loan
from ADC, to work out problems
with radars.
"From the
description of what the targets
looked like on the radarscopes, good, strong, bright images,
I can't
believe that they were caused by
weather," he told
me.
Then he went
on to
back up his argument by
pointing out that when the ground
radar was switched to short
range both the F-94 and the
unknown target disappeared. If just the
unknown target had disappeared, then it could have been weather. But since
both disappeared, very probably the
radar set wasn't working on
short ranges for some reason. Next he pointed out
that if there was a
temperature inversion, which is
highly unlikely in northern Alaska,
the same inversion that would affect
the ground
radar wouldn't be present at 25,000
feet or above.
I told him
about the report from Oak
Ridge that Captain James had
used as an example, but
he didn't
buy this
comparison. At Oak Ridge,
he pointed
out, that F-82 was at only
4,000 feet. He didn't know
how the
F-94V could get to within 200
yards of an object without
seeing it, unless the object
was painted
a dull
black.
"No," he said,
"I can't believe that those
radar targets were caused by weather.
I'd be
much more inclined to believe
that they were something real,
something that we just don't know about."
During the early
spring of 1952 reports of
radar sightings increased rapidly.
Most of them came from
the Air
Defense Command, but a
few came
from other agencies. One day,
soon after the Alaskan
Incident, I got a telephone
call from the chief of one
of the
sections of a civilian experimental
radar laboratory in New
York State. The people in
this lab were working on the
development of the latest types
of radar. Several times recently, while
testing radars, they had detected unidentified targets. To quote
my caller,
"Some damn odd things
are happening
that are beginning to worry
me." He went on
to tell
how the
people in his lab had
checked their radars, the weather, and
everything else they could think of, but they could
find absolutely nothing to account
for the targets; they
could only conclude that they
were reaL I promised him that
his information
would get to the right
people if he'd put
it in
a letter
and send
it to
ATIC. In about a week the
letter arrived—hand-carried by
no less
than a general. The general, who
was from
Headquarters, Air Matériel Command, had been in New York
at the
radar laboratory, and he
had heard
about the UFO reports. He
had personally checked into
them because he knew that
the people at the lab were
some of the sharpest radar
engineers in the world. When he
found out that these people
had already contacted us and had
prepared a report for us,
he offered to hand-carry
it to
Wright-Patterson.
I can't divulge
how high
these targets were flying or
how fast they were
going because it would give
an indication
of the
performance of our latest radar,
which is classified Secret. I
can say,
however, that they were flying
mighty high and mighty fast.
I turned
the letter
over to ATIC's electronics branch, and they promised to
take immediate action. They did,
and really fouled it up. The
person who received the report
in the electronics branch was one
of the
old veterans
of Projects
Sign and Grudge. He knew
all about
UFO's. He got on the phone,
called the radar lab, and
told the chief (a man who
possibly wrote all of the
textbooks this person had used in
college) all about how a weather
inversion pan cause false targets on
weather. He was gracious enough
to tell the chief
of the
radar lab to fall if
he had
anymore "trouble."
We never
heard from them again. Maybe
they found out what their targets
were. Or maybe they joined
ranks with the airline pilot who
told me that if a
flying saucer flew wing tip to
wing tip formation with him,
he'd never tell the Air Force.
In early February
I made
another trip to Air Defense
Command Headquarters in Colorado
Springs. This time it was
to present a definite
plan of how ADC could
assist ATIC in getting better data
on UFO's.
I briefed
General Benjamin W. Chidlaw, then
the Commanding
General of the Air Defense
Command, and his staff, telling
them about our plan. They agreed with it in
principle and suggested that I
Work out the details with the
Director of Intelligence for ADC,
Brigadier General W. M.
Burgess. General Burgess designated Major Veme Sadowski of his staff to
be the
ADC liaison
officer with Project Grudge.
This briefing started
a long
period of close co-operation between Project Grudge
and ADC,
and it
was a
pleasure to work with these people.
In all
of my
travels around the government, visiting and
conferring with dozens of agencies,
I never had the
pleasure of working with or
seeing a more smoothly operating and
efficient organization than the Air
Defense Command. General Childlaw and General Burgess, along, with the rest of
the staff
at ADC,
were truly great officers. None of
them were believers in flying
saucers, but they recognized the fact
that UFO reports were a
problem that must be considered. With technological progress what
it is today, you can't afford
to have
anything in the
air that
you can't identify, be
it balloons,
meteors, planets or flying saucers.
The plan that
ADC agreed
to was
very simple. They agreed to issue
a directive
to all
of their
units explaining the UFO situation and
telling specifically what to do
in case
one was detected. All
radar units equipped with radarscope
cameras would be required
to take
scope photos of targets that fell into the UFO
category—targets that were
not airplanes
or known
weather phenomena. These
photos, along with a completed technical
questionnaire that would be made
up at ATIC by Captain Roy
James, would be forwarded to
Project Grudge.
The Air Defense
Command UFO directive would also
clarify the scrambling of fighters to intercept
a UFO.
Since it is the policy of
the Air
Defense Command to establish the identity of any unidentified
target, there were no special
orders issued for scrambling
fighters to try to identify
reported UFO's. A UFO was
something unknown and automatically called for a scramble.
However, there had been some hesitancy
on the
part of controllers to send
airplanes up whenever radar picked up
a target
that obviously was not an airplane.
The directive
merely pointed out to the
controllers that it was
within the scope of existing
regulations to scramble on radar
targets that were plotted as
traveling too fast or too
slow to be conventional airplanes. The decision
to scramble
fighters was still up to
the individual
controller, however, and scrambling
on UFO's
would be a second or
third priority.
The Air Defense
Command UFO directive did not
mention shooting at a UFO.
This question came up during
our planning meeting at Colorado Springs,
but, like the authority to scramble, the authority to
shoot at anything in the
air had been established long ago.
Every ADC pilot knows the
rules for engagement, the rules that tell
him when
he can
shoot the loaded guns
that he always carries. If
anything in the air over the
United States commits any act
that is covered by the rules
for engagement,
the pilot
has the
authority to open fire.
The third
thing that ADC would do
would be to integrate the Ground Observer Corps into
the UFO
reporting net. As a second priority,
the GOC
would report UFO's—first priority
would still be reporting aircraft.
Ever since the
new Project
Grudge had been organized, we hadn't had to deal
with any large-scale publicity about
UFO's. Occasionally someone would
bring in a local item
from some newspaper about
a UFO
sighting, but the sightings never rated more than
an inch
or two
of space.
But on February 19, 1952, the
calm was broken by the
story of how a huge ball
of fire
paced two B-29's
in Korea. The
story didn't start a
rash of reports as the
story of the first UFO sighting
did in
June 1947, but it was
significant in that it started a
slow build-up of publicity that
was far
to surpass anything in the past
This Korean sighting
also added to the growing
official interest in Washington.
Almost every day I was
getting one or two telephone calls
from some branch of the
government, and I was
going to Washington at least
once every two weeks. I was
beginning to spend as much
time telling people what was going
on as
I was
doing anything about it. The
answer was'to
get somebody in
the Directorate
of Intelligence
in the
Pentagon to act as a
liaison officer. I could keep this person informed" and he could handle
the "branch
office" in Washington. Colonel Dunn bought this
idea, and Major Dewey J. Fournet got the additional duty of manager of
the Pentagon
branch. In the future all
Pentagon inquiries went to Major
Foumet, and
if he
couldn't answer them he would call
me. The
arrangement was excellent because Major Foumet took a very serious
interest in UFO's and could always
be counted
on to
do a
good job.
Sometime in February
1952 I had a visit from two Royal Canadian Air Force
officers. For some time, I
learned, Canada had been getting
her share
of UFO
reports. One of the latest ones, and the one
that prompted the visit by
the RCAF officers, occurred at North
Bay, Ontario, about 250 miles north
of Buffalo,
New York.
On two
occasions an orange-red disk had been
seen from a new jet
fighter base in the area.
The Canadians
wanted to know how we
operated. I gave them the details
of how
we were
currently operating and how we hoped
to operate
in the
future, as soon as the
procedures that were now in
the planning
stages could be put into operation.
We agreed
to try
to set
up channels
so that we could exchange information
and tie
in the
project they planned to establish
with Project Grudge.
Our plans for
continuing liaison didn't materialize, but through other RCAF intelligence
officers I found out that
their plans for an
RCAF-sponsored project failed.
A quasi-official
UFO project
was set
up soon
after this, however, and its objective
was to
use instruments
to detect
objects coming into the
earth's atmosphere. In 1954 the
project was closed down because during
the two
years of operation they hadn't officially
detected any UFO's. My sources
of information stressed the
word "officially."
During the time
that I was chief of
the UFO
project, the visitors who passed through
my office
closely resembled the international
brigade. Most of the visits
were unofficial in the sense that
the officers
came to ATIC on other
business, but in many instances
the other
business was just an excuse to
come out to Dayton to
get filled
in on
the UFO
story. Two RAF intelligence
officers who were in the
U.S. on a classified mission brought
six single-spaced
typed pages of questions they and
their friends wanted answered. On
many occasions Air Force
intelligence officers who were stationed in England, France, and
Germany, and who returned to
the U.S.
on business,
took back stacks of unclassified
flying saucer stories. One civilian
intelligence agent who frequently traveled between
the U.S.
and Europe
also acted as the unofficial courier for a German
group—transporting hot newspaper and
magazine articles about UFO's that
I'd collected. In return
I received
the latest
information on European sightings—sightings
that never were released and
that we never received
at ATIC
through official channels.
Ever since the
fateful day when Lieutenant Jerry Cum-mings
dropped his hom-rimmed glasses
down on his nose, tipped his head forward, peered
at Major
General Cabell over his glasses and,
acting not at all like
a first
lieutenant, said that the
UFO investigation
was all
fouled up, Project Grudge had been
gaining prestige. Lieutenant Colonel Rosen-garten's promise
that I'd be on the
project for only a few
months went the way
of all
military promises. By March 1952, Project Grudge was no
longer just a project within
a group; we had
become a separate organization, with the formal title of
the Aerial
Phenomena Group. Soon after this
step-up in the chain
of command
the project
code name was changed to Blue
Book. The word "Grudge" was no longer applicable. For those people who
like to try to read
a hidden meaning into
a name,
I'll say that the code
name Blue Book was derived from
the tide
given to college tests. Both the tests and the
project had an abundance of
equally confusing questions.
Project Blue
Book had been made a
separate group because of the
steadily increasing number of reports
we were
receiving. The average had
jumped from about ten a
month to twenty a month since
December 1951. In March of
1952 the reports slacked off a
little, but April was a
big month.
In April we received
ninety-nine reports.
On April 1,
Colonel S. H. Kirkland and
I went
to Los
Angeles on business. Before
we left
ATIC we had made arrangements to attend a meeting
of the
Civilian Saucer Investigators, a now
defunct organization that was very
active in 1952.
They turned
out to
be a
well-meaning but Don Quixote-type group of individuals. As soon as they
outlined their plans for attempting to • solve the
UFO riddle,
it was
obvious that they would fail.
Project Blue Book had the
entire Air Force, money, and
enthusiasm behind it and we
weren't getting any answers
yet. All this group had
was the enthusiasm.
The highlight of
the evening
wasn't the Civilian Saucer Investigators, however; it
was getting
a chance
to read
Gin-na's UFO article
in an
advance copy of Life magazine that the organization had obtained—the article written
from the material Bob Cinna had been
researching for over a year.
Colonel Kirkland took one
long look at the article,
sidled up to me, and said,
"We'd better get back to
Dayton quick; you're going to be
busy." The next morning at
dawn I was sound asleep on
a United
Airlines DC-6, Dayton-bound.
The Life
article undoubtedly threw a harder
punch at the American public than
any other
UFO article
ever written. The title alone, "Have
We Visitors
from Outer Space?" was enough. Other very reputable magazines,
such as True,
had
said it before,
but coming
from Life, it was different. Life didn't say that
the UFO's
were from outer space; it
just said maybe. But to back
up this
"maybe," it had
quotes from some famous people. Dr.
Walther Riedel, who played an important
part in the development of the German V-2
missile and is presentiy the director of rocket
engine research for North American
Aviation Corporation, said he believed that the UFO's were
from outer space. Dr. Maurice
Biot, one
of the
world's leading aerodynamicists,
backed him up.
But the most
important thing about the Life article was the question
in the
minds of so many readers:
"Why was it written?" Life doesn't go blasting off on flights
of space
fancy without a good
reason. Some of the readers
saw a
clue in the author's
comments that the hierarchy of
the Air Force was now taking
a serious
look at UFO reports. "Did the Air Force prompt
Life to write
the article?"
was the question that many people
asked themselves.
When I arrived at
Dayton, newspapermen were beating down the door. The official
answer to the Life article was released through the
Office of Public Information in the Pentagon: "The article is factual,
but Life's conclusions are their own." In answer to any
questions about the article's being Air Force-inspired, my weasel-worded
answer was that we had furnished
Life with some
raw data
on specific
sightings.
My answer was
purposely weasel-worded because I knew
that the Air Force
had unofficially
inspired the Life
article.
The "maybe they're interplanetary"
with the "maybe" bordering on "they are" was
the personal
opinion of several very high-ranking officers in the Pentagon—so
high that their personal opinion was
almost policy. I knew the
men and
I knew that one of them,
a general,
had passed
his opinions
on to Bob Cinna.
Oddly enough,
the Life article did not cause a flood
of reports. The day after the
article appeared we got nine
sightings, which was unusual, but
the next
day they
dropped off again.
The number
of reports
did take
a sharp
rise a few days later, however. The cause was
the distribution
of an
order that completed the transformation of the UFO from
a bastard
son to the family heir. The
piece of paper that made
Project Blue Book legitimate was Air Force Letter
200-5, Subject: Unidentified Flying Objects.
The letter,
which was duly signed and sealed
by the
Secretary of the Air Force,
in essence stated that UFO's were
not a
joke, that the Air Force
was making a serious
study of the problem, and
that Project Blue Book was
responsible for the study. The
letter stated that the commander of
every Air Force installation was responsible for forwarding all UFO reports to
ATIC by wire, with a copy
to the
Pentagon. Then a more detailed
report would be sent
by airmail.
Most important of all, it gave
Project Blue Book the authority
to directly
contact any Air Force unit in
the United
States without going through any chain of command. This
was almost
unheard of in the Air Force
and gave
our project
a lot
of prestige.
The new
reporting procedures established by the
Air Force letter greatly aided our
investigation because it allowed us to
start investigating the better reports
before they cooled off. But it
also had its disadvantages. It authorized the sender
to use
whatever priority he thought the
message warranted. Some things are
slow in the military, but
a priority message is
not one
of them.
When it comes into the message
center, it is delivered to
the adressee immediately, and for some
reason, all messages reporting UFO's
seemed to arrive between
midnight and 4:00 a.m. I was
considered the addressee on
all UFO
reports. To complicate matters, the messages
were usually classified and I
would have to go out to
the air
base and personally sign for
them.
One such
message came in about 4:30
a.m. on
May 8,
1952. It was from
a CAA
radio station in Jacksonville, Florida, and had
been forwarded over the Flight
Service teletype net. I
received the usual telephone call
from the teletype room at Wright-Patterson.
I think
I got
dressed, and I went out and
picked up the message. As
I signed
for it I remember the night
man in
the teletype
room said, "This is a lulu,
Captain."
It was a
lulu. About one o'clock that
morning a Pan-American airlines DC-4 was
flying south toward Puerto Rico.
A few hours after it had
left New York City it
was out
over the Atlantic Ocean,
about 600 miles off Jacksonville,
Florida, flying at 8,000
feet. It was a pitch-black
night; a high overcast even cut
out the
glow from the stars. The
pilot and copilot were awake but
really weren't concentrating on looking for other aircraft because
they had just passed into
the San Juan Oceanic
Control Area and they had
been advised by radio that
there were no other airplanes
in the
area. The copilot was
turning around to look at
number four engine when he noticed
a light
up ahead.
It looked
like the taillight of another airplane.
He watched
it closely
for a few seconds since ho
other airplanes were supposed to
be in the area. He glanced
out at
number four engine for a
few seconds, looked back,
and he
saw that
the light
was in
about the same position
as when
he'd first seen it. Then
he looked down at the prop
controls, synchronized the engines, and looked up again. In
the few
seconds that he had glanced
away from the light,
it had
moved to the right so
that it was now directly ahead
of the
DC-4, and it had increased
in size. The copilot reached over
and slapped
the pilot
on the shoulder and pointed. Just
at that
instant the light began to get
bigger and bigger until it
was "ten
times the size of a landing
light of an airplane." It continued to close
in and with a flash it
streaked by the DC-4's left
wing. Before the crew could react
and say
anything, two more
smaller balls of fire flashed
by. Both
pilots later said that they
sat in their seats for several
seconds with sweat trickling down
their backs.
It was
one of
these two pilots who later
said, "Were you ever traveling along
the highway
about 70 miles an hour
at night, have the
car that
you were
meeting suddenly swerve over into your
lane and then cut back
so that
you just miss it by inches?
You know
the sort
of sick,
empty feeling you get when
it's all over? That's just
the way
we felt."
As soon as
the crew
recovered from the shock, the
pilot picked up his mike, called
Jacksonville Radio, and told them about
the incident.
Minutes later we had the
report. The next afternoon Lieutenant Kerry Rothstien, who
had replaced
Lieutenant Metscher on the project, was
on his
way to New York to meet
the pilots
when they returned from Puerto Rico.
When Kerry
talked to the two pilots,
they couldn't add a great deal
to their
original story. Their final comment
was the
one we all had heard so
many times, "I always thought
these people who reported
flying saucers were crazy, but
now I don't know."
When Lieutenant
Rothstien returned to
Dayton he triple-checked with the
CAA for
aircraft in the area—but there
were none. Could
there have been airplanes in
the area
that CAA didn't know
about? The answer was almost
a flat
"No." No one would
fly 600
miles off the coast without
filing a flight plan;
if he
got into
trouble or went down, the Coast
Guard or Air Rescue Service
would have no idea where to
look.
Kerry was
given the same negative answer
when he checked on surface shipping.
The last
possibility was that the UFO's
were meteors, but several points in
the pilots'
story ruled these out. First,
there was a solid overcast at
about 18,000 feet. No meteor
cruises along straight and level below
18,000 feet. Second, on only
rare occasions have meteors
been seen traveling three in
trail. The chances of
seeing such a phenomenon are well over one in
a billion.
Some people
have guessed that some kind
of an
atmospheric phenomenon can form a
"wall of air" ahead of
an airplane that will act as
a mirror
and that
lights seen at night by pilots
are nothing
more than the reflection of the airplane's own lights.
This could be true in
some cases, but to have a
reflection you must have a
light to reflect. There are no
lights on an airplane that
even approach being "ten times the size of a
landing light."
What was
it? I
know a colonel who says
it was
the same
thing that the two
Eastern Airlines' pilots, Clarence Chiles
and John Whitted, saw near Montgomery,
Alabama, on July 24, 1948, and
he thinks
that Chiles and Whitted saw a
spaceship.
Reports for the
month of April set an
all-time high. These were all reports
that came from military installations.
In addition,
we received
possibly two hundred letters reporting
UFO's, but we were
so busy
all we
could do was file them tor future reference.
In May 1952
I'd been
out to
George AFB in California investigating a series
of sightings
and was
on my
way home.
I remember the flight
to Dayton
because the weather was bad all
the way.
I didn't
want to miss my connecting
flight in
Chicago, or get
grounded, because I had faithfully
promised my wife that we would
go out
to dinner
the night
that I returned to Dayton. I'd
called ahead from Los Angeles
to tell
her that I was
coming in, and she had
found a baby sitter and had dinner reservations. I hadn't been home
more than about two days a
week for the past three
months, and she was looking forward
to going
out for
the evening.
I reached Dayton
about midmorning and went right
out to the base. When I
arrived at the office, my
secretary was gone but there was
a big
note on my desk: "Call
Colonel Dunn as soon as you
get in."
I called Colonel
Dunn; then I called my
wife and told her to cancel
the baby
sitter, cancel the dinner reservations,
and pack my other
bag. I had to go
to Washington.
While I'd been
in California,
Colonel Dunn had received a
call from General Samford's office. It
seems that a few nights before,
one of
the top
people in the
Central Intelligence Agency was having a lawn party
at his
home just outside Alexandria,
Virginia. A number of notable
personages were in attendance
and they
had seen
a flying
saucer.. The report had been passed down
to Air
Force intelligence, and due to
the quality
of the
brass involved, it was "suggested"
that I get to Washington on the double and
talk to the host of the
party. I was at his
office before 5:00 p.m. and got his
report.
About ten
o'clock in the evening he
and two
other people were standing near the
edge of his yard talking;
he happened
to . be facing
south, looking off across the
countryside. He digressed a bit
from his story to explain
that his home is on a
hilltop in the country, and
when looking south, he had a
view of the entire countryside.
While he was talking to the
two other
people he noticed a light
approaching from the west. He
had assumed
it was
an airplane
and had casually watched it, but
when the light got fairly
close, the CIA man said that
he suddenly
realized there wasn't any sound associated
with it. If it were
an airplane
it would
have been close enough
for him
to hear
even above the hum of the
guests' conversations. He had actually
quit talking and was looking at
the light
when it stopped for an
instant and began to
climb almost vertically. He said
something to the other guests,
and they
looked up just in time
to see the light finish its
climb, stop, and level out.
They all watched it travel level
for a
few seconds,
then go into a nearly vertical
dive, level out, and streak
off to
the east.
Most everyone
at the
party had seen the light
before it disappeared, and within minutes
several friendly arguments as to what
it was
had developed,
I was
told. One person thought it was
a lighted
balloon, and a retired general
thought it was an airplane. To
settle the arguments, they had
made a few telephone calls. T
might add that these people
were such that the mention of
their names on a telephone got quick results. Radar
in the
Washington area said that there
had been no airplanes
flying west to east south
of Alexandria
in the past hour. The weather
station at Boiling AFB said
that there were no
balloons in the area, but
as a
double check the weather people looked
at their
records of high-altitude winds. It
couldn't have been a balloon
because none of the winds up
to 65,000
feet were blowing from west
to east—and to be able to
see a
light on a balloon, it
has to
be well below 65,000
feet; the man from CIA
told me that they had even
considered the possibility that the
UFO was
a meteor and that
the "jump"
had been
due to
some kind of an atmospheric distortion. But the light
had been
in sight too long to be
a meteor. He
added that an army chaplain
and two
teetotaler guests had also seen
the light
jump.
There wasn't much
left for me to do
when I finished talking to the man. He and
his guests
had already
made all of the checks that I'd have made.
All I
could do was go back
to Dayton, write up his report,
and stamp
it "Unknown."
Back in March,
when it had become apparent
that the press was reviving its
interest in UFO's, I had
suggested that Project Blue Book subscribe
to a
newspaper clipping service. Such a service
could provide several things. First,
it would
show us exactly how
much publicity the UFO's were
getting and what was being said,
and it
would give-us the feel of
the situation. Then it
would also provide a lot
of data
for our
files. In many cases
the newspapers
got reports
that didn't go to the Air
Force. Newspaper reporters rival any
intelligence officer when it comes
to digging
up facts,
and there
was always the possibility
that they would uncover and
print something we'd missed.
This was especially true in
the few
cases of hoaxes that
always accompany UFO publicity. Last, it would provide us
with material on which to
base a study of the effect
of newspaper
publicity upon the number and
type of UFO reports.
Colonel Dunn
liked the idea of the
clipping service, and it went into
effect soon after the first
publicity had appeared. Every three or
four days we would get
an envelope
full of clippings. In March the
clipping service was sending the
clippings to us in
letter-sized envelopes. The envelopes were
thin—maybe there would be
a dozen
or so
clippings in each one. Then they
began to get thicker and
thicker, until the people who were
doing the clipping switched to
using manila envelopes. Then the manila
envelopes began to get thicker and thicker. By May
we were
up to
old shoe
boxes. The majority of the newspaper
stories in the shoe boxes
were based on material that had
come from ATIC.
All of these
inquiries from the press were
adding to Blue Book's work load
and to
my problems.
Normally a military unit such as
ATIC has its own public
information officer, but we had none
so I
was it.
I was
being quoted quite freely in the
press and was repeatedly being snarled at by
someone in the Pentagon.
It was
almost a daily occurrence to have people from the
"puzzle palace" call and indignantly
ask, "Why did you tell
them that?" They usually referred
to some
bit of
information that somebody didn't think
should have been released.
I finally
gave up and complained to Colonel Dunn. I suggested
that any contacts with the
press be made through
the Office
of Public
Information in the Pentagon.
These people were trained and
paid to do this job; I
wasn't. Colonel Dunn heartily agreed
because every time I got chewed
out he
at least
got a
dirty look.
Colonel Dunn called
General Samford's office and they brought in General Sory Smith of
the Department
of Defense,
Office of Public Information.
General Smith appointed a civilian on the Air Force
Press Desk, Al Chop, to
handle all inquiries from the press.
The plan
was that
Al would
try to get his answers from
Major Dewey Fournet, Blue
Book's liaison officer in
the Pentagon,
and if
Dewey didn't have the answer, Al
had permission
to call
me.
This arrangement worked out fine because
Al Chop
had been through previous UFO publicity
battles when he was in the
Office of Public Information at Wright Field.
The interest in
the UFO's
that was shown by the
press in May was surpassed only
by the
interest of the Pentagon. Starting in May, I gave
on the
average of one briefing in
Washington every two weeks,
and there
was always
a full
house. From the tone
of the
official comments to the public
about UFO's, it would
indicate that there wasn't a
great deal of interest, but nothing
could be further from the
truth. People say a lot of
things behind a door bearing
a sign that reads "Secret
Briefing in Progress."
After one of
the briefings
a colonel
(who is now a brigadier general) presented a
plan that called for using
several flights of F-94C
jet interceptors
for the
specific purpose of trying to get
some good photographs of UFO's.
The flight
that he proposed would
be an
operational unit with six aircraft—two
would be on constant alert.
The F-94C's,
then the hottest operational
jet we
had, would be stripped of
all combat
gear to give them peak
performance, and they would carry a special camera in
the nose.
The squadrons
would be located at places in
the United
States where UFO's were most frequently
seen.
The plan progressed
to the
point of estimating how soon
enough airplanes for two
flights could be stripped, how
soon special cameras could be built,
and whether
or not
two specific Air Force bases in
the U.S.
could support the units.
Finally the colonel's
plan was shelved, but not
because he was considered to be
crazy. After considerable study and debate
at high
command level, it was decided
that twelve F-94C's couldn't be spared
for the
job and
it would
have been ineffective to use fewer airplanes.
The consideration
that the colonel's plan received
was an
indication of how some
of the
military people felt about the
importance of finding out
exactly what the UFO's really
were. And in the discussions the words "interplanetary craft" came up more than once.
Requests for briefings
came even from the highest
figure in the Air Force, Thomas
K. Finletter, then
the Secretary
for Air. On May
8, 1952,
Lieutenant Colonel R. J. Taylor
of Colonel Dunn's staff and I
presented an hour-long briefing to Secretary Finletter
and his
staff. He listened intendy and asked several
questions about specific sightings when
the briefing was finished. If he
was at
all worried
about the UFO's he certainly didn't
show it. His only comment
was, "You're doing a
fine job, Captain. It must
be interesting.
Thank you."
Then he made
the following
statement for the press: "No concrete evidence has yet
reached us either to prove
or disprove the existence
of the
so-called flying saucers. There remain, however, a number of
sightings that the Air Force
investigators have been unable
to explain.
As long
as this
is true, the Air
Force will continue to study
flying saucer reports."
In May
1952, Project Blue Book received
seventy-nine UFO reports compared
to ninety-nine
in April.
It looked
as if we'd passed the peak
and were now on the downhill
side. The 178 reports
of the
past two months, not counting
the thousand or so
letters that we'd received direcdy from the public, had piled
up a
sizable backlog since we'd had
time to investigate and analyze only the
better reports. During June we
planned to clear out the
backlog, and then we could relax.
But never
underestimate the power of a
UFO. In June the big flap
hit—they began to deliver clippings
in big
cardboard cartons.
chapter eleven
The Big Flap
In early June 1952, Project
Blue Book was operating according
to the
operational plan that had been
set up
in January 1952. It had taken
six months
to put
the plan
into effect, and to a person
who has
never been indoctrinated into the ways
of the
military, this may seem like
a long
time. But consult your nearest government
worker and you'll find that
it was about par for the
red tape
course.
We had learned
early in the project that
about 60 per cent of the
reported UFO's were actually balloons,
airplanes, or astronomical bodies viewed under
unusual conditions, so our operational plan was set up
to quickly
weed out this type of report.
This would give us more
time to concentrate on the unknown
cases.
To weed out
reports in which balloons, airplanes,
and astronomical bodies were
reported as UFO's, we utilized
a flow of data that continually
poured into Project Blue Book.
We received position reports
on all
flights of the big skyhook
balloons and, by merely picking
up the
telephone, we could get the details
about the flight of any
other research balloon or regularly scheduled
weather balloon in the United
States. The location of
aircraft in an area where
a UFO
had been reported was usually checked
by the
intelligence officer who made the report,
but we
double-checked his findings
by requesting the location
of flights
from CAA and military air bases. Astronomical almanacs and
journals, star charts, and data that
we got
from observatories furnished
us with
clue to UFO's that
might be astronomical bodies. All
of our
investigations in this category
of report
were double-checked by Project
Bear's astronomer.
Then we had
our newspaper
clipping file, which gave us
many clues. Hydrographic bulletins and Notams (notices to
airmen), published by the
government, sometimes gave us other clues.
Every six hours we received
a complete
set of weather data. A dozen
or more
other sources of data that might
shed some light on a
reported UFO were con* tinually being studied.
To get
all of
this information on balloons, aircraft,
astronomical bodies, and what have
you, I had to co-ordinate
Project Blue Book's operational plan with the Air
Force's Air Weather Service, Flight Service,
Research and Development Command,
and Air
Defense Command with the Navy's Office of
Naval Research, and the aerology branch of the Bureau of Aeronautics; and with
the Civil
Aeronautics Administration, Bureau
of Standards,
several astronomical observatories,
and our
own Project
Bear. Our entire operational plan was similar to a
Model A Ford I had
while I was in high school—just
about the time you would
get one
part working, another part would break
down.
When a report
came through our screening process
and still had the "Unknown" tag on it, it
went to the MO file,
where we checked its
characteristics against other
reports. For example, on May 25
we had
a report
from Randolph AFB, Texas. It went
through the screening process and
came out "Unknown"; it
wasn't a balloon, airplane, or
astronomical body. So then
it went
to the
MO file.
It was
a flock
of ducks
reflecting the city lights.
We knew
that the Texas UFO's were ducks because our MO file
showed that we had an
identical report from Moorhead,
Minnesota, and the UFO's at Moorhead were ducks.
Radar reports
that came into Blue Book
went to the radar specialists of ATIC's electronics branch.
Sifting through
reams of data in search
of the
answers to the many reports that
were pouring in each week
required many hours of overtime
work, but when a report
came out with the
final conclusion, "Unknown,"
we were
sure that it was
unknown.
To operate
Project Blue Book, I had
four officers, two airmen, and two
civilians on my permanent staff.
In addition,
there were three scientists employed full time on
Project Bear, along with several
others who worked part time.
In the Pentagon,
Major Foumet, who had taken
on the
Blue Book liaison job as an
extra duty, was now spending
full time on it. If you
add to
this the number of intelligence
officers all over the
world who were making preliminary
investigations and interviewing
UFO observers,
Project Blue Book was a sizable
effort.
Only the best
reports we received could be
personally investigated in the field
by Project
Blue Book personnel. The vast majority
of the
reports had to be evaluated
on the
basis of what the
intelligence officer who had written
the report had been able to
uncover, or what data we
could get by telephone or by
mailing out a questionnaire. Our instructions for "what
to do
before the Blue Book man
arrives," which had been
printed in many service publications,
were beginning to pay
off and
the reports
were continually getting more detailed.
The questionnaire we were using in
June 1952 was the one that
had recently
been developed by Project Bear.
Project Bear, along with psychologists
from a midwestem
university, had worked on it
for five
months. Many test models had been tried before it
reached its final form—the standard
questionnaire that Blue Book
is using
today.
It ran eight
pages and had sixty-eight questions which were booby-trapped in a couple of
places to give us a cross
check on the reliability
of the
reporter as an observer. We
received quite a few
questionnaires answered in
such a way that it was
obvious that the observer was
drawing heavily on his imagination.
From this standard
questionnaire the project worked up
two more specialized types. One dealt with
radar sightings of UFO's, the other
with sightings made from airplanes.
In Air Force
terminology a "flap" is a
condition, or situation, or state
of being
of a
group of people characterized by an advanced degree of
confusion that has not quite
yet reached panic proportions. It can
be brought
on by
any number of things, including the
unexpected visit of an inspecting
general, a major administrative reorganization, the arrival
of a
hot piece
of intelligence
information, or the
dramatic entrance
of a
well-stacked female into an officers'
club bar.
In early June
1952 the Air Force was
unknowingly in the initial stages of
a flap—a
flying saucer Qap—the
flying saucer
flap of 1952. The
situation had never been duplicated
before, and it hasn't been duplicated
since. All records for the
number of UFO reports
were not just broken, they
were disintegrated. In 1948,
167 UFO
reports had come into ATIC; this was considered a big year. In
June 1952 we received 149.
During the four years the
Air Force
had been
in the UFO business, 615 reports
had been
collected. During the "Big Flap"
our incoming-message
log showed
717 reports.
To anyone who
had anything
to do
with flying saucers, the summer of
1952 was just one big
swirl of UFO reports, hurried trips, midnight telephone calls,
reports to the Pentagon, press interviews, and very
little sleep.
If you can
pin down
a date
that the Big Flap started,
it would probably be about June
1.
It was also
on June
1 that
we received
a good
report of a UFO that had
been picked up on radar.
June 1 was a Sunday, but
I'd been
at the
office all day getting ready
to go to Los Alamos the
next day. About 5:00 p.m. the
telephone rang and the operator
told me that I had
a longdistance call from
California. My caller was the
chief of a radar test section
for Hughes
Aircraft Company in Los Angeles, and he was very
excited about a UFO he
had to
report.
That morning
he and
his test
crew had been checking out a new
late-model radar to get it
ready for some tests they planned to run early
Monday morning. To see if
their set was functioning properly, they
had been
tracking jets in the Los Angeles
area. About midmorning, the Hughes
test engineer told me,
the jet
traffic had begun to drop
off, and they were about ready
to close
down their operation when one of
the crew
picked up a slow-moving target coming across the
San Gabriel
Mountains north of Los Angeles.
He tracked the target
for a
few minutes
and, from the speed and altitude,
decided that it was a
DC-3. It was at
11,000 feet and traveling about 180
miles an hour toward Santa Monica. The operator was about ready
to yell
at the other crew members to
shut off the set when
he noticed
something mighty odd—there was
a big
gap between
the last
and the rest of
the regularly
spaced bright spots on the
radar-scope. The man on the
scope called the rest of
the crew
in because DC-3's just
don't triple their speed. They
watched the target as is made
a turn
and started
to climb
oyer Los Angeles. They plotted one, two, three,
and then
four points dining the target's climb;
then one of the crew
grabbed a slide rule. Whatever it
was, it was climbing 35,000
feet per minute and traveling about
550 miles
an hour
in the
process. Then as they watched
the^ scope, the target leveled
out for a few
seconds, went into a high-speed
dive, and again leveled out at
55,000 feet. When they lost
the target,
it was heading southeast somewhere near
Riverside, California.
During the
sighting my caller told me
that when the UFO was only
about ten miles from the
radar site two of the
crew had gone outside
but they
couldn't see anything. But, he explained,
even the high-flying jets that
they had been tracking hadn't been
leaving vapor trails.
The first thing
I asked
when the Hughes test engineer
finished his story was
if the
radar set had been working
properly. He said that
as soon
as the
UFO had
left the scope they had run
every possible check on the
radar and it was O.K.
I was just
about to ask my caller
if the
target might not have been some
experimental airplane from Edwards AFB
when he second-guessed me. He said that
after sitting around looking at each
other for about a minute,
someone suggested that they call Edwards.
They did, and Edwards' flight
operations told them that they
had nothing
in the
area.
I asked him
about the weather. The target
didn't look like a weather target
was the
answer, but just to be
sure, the test crew had checked.
One of
his men
was an
electronics weather specialist whom he had hired
because of his knowledge of the idiosyncrasies of radar under certain
weather conditions. This man
had looked
into the weather angle. He
had gotten the latest
weather data and checked it,
but there
wasn't the slightest indication
of an
inversion or any other weather that would cause a
false target.
Just before I
hung up I asked the
man what
he thought
he and his crew had picked
up, and
once again I got the
same old answer: "Yesterday
at this
time any of us would
have argued for hours
that flying saucers were a
bunch of nonsense but now, regardless
of what
you'll say about what we saw,
it was
something damned real."
I thanked the man for calling and
hung up. We couldn't make any more of an
analysis of this report than
had already
been made, it was another
unknown.
I went
over to the MO file
and pulled
out the
stack of cards behind the tab
"High-Sped Climb." There must have been at
least a hundred cards, each
one representing
a UFO
report in which the
reported object made a high-speed
climb. But this was the first
time radar had tracked a
UFO during
a climb.
During the
early part of June, Project
Blue Book took another jump up
on the
organizational chart. A
year before the UFO project
had consisted
of one
officer. It had risen from the
one-man operation to a project
within a group, then to a
group, and now it was
a section.
Neither Project Sign nor the
old Project
Grudge had been higher than
the project-within-a-group level. The
chief of a group normally
calls for a lieutenant colonel, and since I was just a captain this caused
some consternation in the ranks.
There was some talk about putting
Lieutenant Colonel Ray Taylor of
Colonel Dunn's staff in
charge. Colonel Taylor was very
much interested in UFO's;
he had
handled some of the press
contacts prior to turning
this function over to the
Pentagon and had gone along with
me on
briefings, so he knew something
about the project. But in
the end
Colonel Donald Bower, who was my
division chief, decided rank be damned,
and I stayed on as chief
of Project
Blue Book.
The location
within the organizational chart is
always indicative of the importance
placed on a project. In
June 1952 the Air Force was
taking the UFO problem seriously.
One of the reasons was that
there were a lot of
good UFO reports coming in from
Korea. Fighter pilots reported seeing
silver-colored spheres or disks
on several
occasions, and radar in Japan, Okinawa,
and in
Korea had tracked unidentified targets.
In June our
situation map, on which we
kept a plot of all of
our sightings,
began to show an ever
so slight
trend toward reports beginning to bunch
up on
the east
coast. We discussed this build-up, but
we couldn't
seem to find any explainable reason for it so
we decided
that we'd better pay special attention to reports coming
from the eastern states.
I had this
build-up of reports in my
mind one Sunday night, June 15
to be
exact, when the OD at
ATIC called me at home and
said that we were getting
a lot
of reports
from Virginia. Each report
by itself
wasn't too good, the OD
told me, but together they seemed
to mean
something. He suggested that I
come out and take a
look at them—so I did.
Individually they weren't
too good,
but when
I lined them up chronologically
and plotted
them on a map they
took the form of a hot
report.
At 3:40
p.m. a woman at Unionville, Virginia, had reported a
"very shiny .object" at high
altitude.
At 4:20
p.m. the operators of the CAA
radio facility at Gordonsville,
Virginia, had reported that they
saw a
"round, shiny object." It was southeast of
their station, or direcdy south of
Unionville.
At 4:25
p.m. the crew of an airliner
northwest of Richmond, Virginia, reported
a "silver
sphere at eleven o'clock high."
At 4:43
p.m. a Marine pilot in a
jet tried
to intercept
a "round shiny
sphere" south of Gordonsville.
At 5:43
p.m. an Air Force T-33 jet
tried to intercept a "shiny sphere" south of Gordonsville.
He got
above 35,000 feet and the UFO
was still
far above
him.
At 7:35
p.m. many people in Blackstone, Virginia, about 80 miles south
of Gordonsville,
reported it. It was a
"round, shiny object with
a golden
glow" moving from north to
south. By this time radio commentators
in central
Virginia were giving a running account
of the
UFO's progress.
At 7:59
p.m. the people in the CAA
radio facility at Black-Stone saw it.
At 8:00 p.
m. jets arrived from Langley AFB
to attempt
to intercept it, but
at 8:05
p.m. it disappeared.
This was a
good report because it was
the first
time we ever received a series
of reports
on the
same object, and there was no
doubt that all these people
had reported
the same
object. Whatever it was,
it wasn't
moving too fast, because it had traveled only about
90 miles
in four
hours and twenty-five minutes. I
was about
ready to give up until
morning and go home when
my wife
called. The local Associated Press man had called our
home and she assumed that
it was
about this sighting. She had just
said that I was out
so he
might not call the base. I
decided that I'd better keep
working so I'd have the answer
in time
to keep
the story
out of
the papers. A report like this
could cause some excitement.
The UFO obviously
wasn't a planet because it
was moving
from north to south, and
it was
too slow
to be
an airplane.
I called
the balloon-plotting
center at Lowry AFB, where the tracks of the
big skyhook
balloons are plotted, but the only
big balloons
in the
air were
in the
western United States, and
they were all accounted for.
It might have
been a weather balloon. The
wind charts showed that the high-altitude
winds were blowing in different
directions at different altitudes above
35,000 feet, so there was no
one flow
of air
that could have brought a
balloon in from a certain area,
and I
knew that the UFO had
to be
higher than 35,000 feet
because the T-33 jet had
been this high and the UFO
was still
above it. The only thing
to do
was to check with all of
the weather
stations in the area. I called
Richmond, Roanoke, several places in
the vicinity
of Washington, D.C.,
and four
or five
other weather stations, but all of
their balloons were accounted for
and none
had been anywhere close to the
central part of Virginia.
A balloon
can travel
only so far, so there
was no
sense in checking stations too far
away from where the people
had seen the UFO, but I
took a chance and called
Norfolk, Charleston, West Virginia;
Altoona, Pennsylvania and other stations within a 150-miles radius
of Cordonsville and Black-stone. Nothing.
I still
thought it might he a
balloon, so I started to
call more stations. At Pittsburgh I hit a lead.
Their radiosonde balloon had gone up
to about
60,000 feet and evidently had
sprung a slow leak
because it had leveled off
at that
altitude. Normally balloons go
up till
they burst at 80,000 or
90,000 feet. The weather forecaster at Pittsburgh said that
their records showed they had lost
contact with the balloon when
it was about 6 miles southeast
of their
station. He said that the winds
at 60,000
feet were constant, so it
shouldn't be too difficult to figure
out where
the balloon
went after they had lost it.
Things must be dull in
Pittsburgh at 2:00 a.m. on
Monday mornings, because he offered
to plot
the course that the balloon probably
took and call me back.
In about
twenty minutes I got my
call. It probably was their balloon,
the forecaster
said. Above 50,uJU feet there was a strong
flow of air southeast from
Pittsburgh, and this fed into a
stronger southerly flow that was
paralleling the Atlantic coast just east
of the
Appalachian Mountains. The
balloon would have floated
along in this flow of
air like
a log floating down a river.
As close
as he
could estimate, he said, the balloon
would arrive in the Gordonsville-Black-stone
area in the late afternoon
or early
evening. This was just about the
time the UFO had arrived.
"Probably a balloon" was a good enough
answer for me.
The next morning
at 8:00
a.m., Al Chop called from the
Pentagon to tell me
that people were crawling all
over his desk wanting to know
about a sighting in Virginia.
The reports continued
to come
in. At
Walnut Lake, Michigan, a group
of people
with binoculars watched a "soft
white light" go back
and forth
across the western sky for
nearly an hour. A
UFO "paced"
an Air
Force B-25 for thirty minutes in California. Both of
these happened on June 18,
and although we checked
and rechecked
them, they came out as unknowns.
On June 19
radar at Goose AFB in
Newfoundland picked up some odd targets.
The targets
came across Hie scope, suddenly
enlarged, and then became smaller
again. One unofficial comment was
that the object was flat
or disk-shaped,
and that the radar
target had gotten bigger because
the disk had banked in flight
to present
a greater
reflecting surface. tATIC's official comment
was weather.
Goose AFB
was famous
for unusual
reports. In early UFO history someone had taken a
very unusual colored photo of
a "split cloud." The photographer had seen
a huge
ball of fire streak down through
the sky
and pass
through a high layer of stratus
clouds. As the
fireball passed through the cloud
it cut out a perfect swath.
The conclusion
was that
the fireball
was a
meteor, but the case is
still one of the most
interesting in the file because
of the
photograph.
Then in
early 1952 there was another
good report from this area. It
was an
unknown.
The incident started
when the pilot of an
Air Force
C-54 transport radioed Goose AFB
and said
that at 10:42 p.m.
a large
fireball had buzzed his airplane.
It had
come in from behind the C-54, and
nobody had seen it until
it was
just off the left wing. The
fireball was so big that
the pilot
said it looked as if it
was only
a few
hundred feet away. The C-54 was
200 miles
southwest, coming into Goose AFB
from Westover AFB, Massachusetts,
when the incident occurred. The base officer-of-the-day, who was also a
pilot, happened to be
in the
flight operations office at Goose
when the message came in and
he overheard
the report.
He stepped
outside, walked over to
his command
car, and told his driver
about the radio message,
so the
driver got out and both
of them looked toward
the south.
They searched the horizon for a
few seconds;
then suddenly they saw a
light closing in from the southwest.
Within a second, it was
near the airfield. It had increased
in size
till it was as big
as a
"golf ball at arm's
length," and it looked like
a big
ball of fire. It was so
low that
both the OD and his
driver dove under the command car
because they were sure it
was going
to hit the airfield. When they
turned and looked up they
saw the fireball make
a 90-degree
turn over the airfield and
disappear into the northwest.
The time
was 10:47
p.m.
The control tower
operators saw the fireball too,
but didn't agree with the OD
and his
driver on how low it
was.
They did think
that it had made a
90-degree turn and they didn't think that it was
a meteor.
In the
years they'd been in towers they'd
seen hundreds of meteors, but
they'd never seen anything like this,
they reported.
And reports
continued to pour into Project
Blue Book. It was now not
uncommon to get ten or
eleven wires in one day. If
the letters
reporting UFO sightings were counted,
the total would rise
to twenty
or thirty
a day.
The majority
of the reports that came in
by wire
could be classified as being
good. They were reports
made by reliable people and
they were full of details. Some
were reports of balluous, airplanes,
etc., but the percentage
of unknowns
hovered right around 22 per cent.
To describe
and analyze
each report, or eyen the unknowns,
would require a book
the size
of an
unabridged dictionary, so I am covering
only the best and most
representative cases.
One day in
mid-June, Colonel Dunn called me.
He was
leaving for Washington and he wanted me
to come
in the
next day to give
a briefing
at a
meeting. By this time I
was taking these briefings as a
matter of course. We usually
gave the briefings to General Garland
and a
general from the Research and Development
Board, who passed the information
on'to General Samford,
the Director
of Intelligence.
But this time General Samford, some
of the
members of his staff, two Navy captains from the
Office of Naval Intelligence, and some people I can't
name were at the briefing.
When I arrived
in Washington,
Major Fournet told me that the purpose
of the
meetings, and my briefing, was
to try to find out if
there was any significance to the almost alarming increase in UFO reports
over the past few weeks.
By the time
that everyone had finished signing
into the briefing room in the
restricted area of the fourth-floor
"B" ring of the
Pentagon, it was about 9:15
a.m. I started my
briefing as soon as
everyone was seated.
I reviewed the
last month's UFO activities; then I briefly went over the more outstanding
"Unknown" UFO reports
and pointed out how
they were increasing in number-breaking
all previous
records. I also pointed out
that even though the UFO subject
was getting
a lot
of publicity,
it wasn't the scare-type publicity that
had accompanied
the earlier flaps—in fact, much of
the present
publicity was anti-saucer. Then I went
on to
say that
even though the reports we
were getting were detailed and
contained a great deal of good
data, we still had no
proof the UFO's were anything real. We could, I
said, prove that all UFO
reports were merely the misinterpretation of known objects if we made a few assumptions.
At this point
one of
the colonels
on General
Samford's staff stopped
me. "Isn't
it true,"
he asked,
"that if you make a
few positive assumptions instead of negative assumptions
you can just as
easily prove that the UFO's
are interplanetary
spaceships? Why, when you
have to make an assumption
to get an answer to a
report, do you always pick
the assumption
that proves the UFO's don't
exist?"
You could almost
hear the colonel add, "O.K.,
so now"
I've said it."
For several months
the belief
that Project Blue Book was
taking a negative attitude
and the
fact that the UFO's could
be interplanetary spaceships had been growing in
the Pentagon,
but these
ideas were usually discussed only
in the
privacy of offices with
doors that would close tight.
No one said
anything, so the colonel who
had broken
the ice plunged in. He used
the sighting
from Goose AFB, where the fireball
had buzzed
the C-54
and sent
the OD
and his
driver belly-whopping under the
command car as an example.
The colonel pointed out
that even though we had
labeled the report "Unknown"
it wasn't
accepted as proof. He wanted to
know why.
I said that
our philosophy
was that
the fireball
could have been two meteors: one
that buzzed the C-54 and
another that streaked across the airfield
at Goose
AFB. Granted a meteor doesn't come
within feet of an airplane
or make
a 90-degree turn, but these could
have been optical illusions of
some kind. The crew
of the
C-54, the OD, his driver,
and the tower operators didn't recognize
the UFO's
as meteors
because they were used
to seeing
the normal
'shooting stars" that are most commonly
seen.
But the
colonel had some more questions.
"What are the chances of having
two extremely
spectacular meteors in the same area,
traveling the same direction, only five minutes apart?"
I didn't
know the exact mathematical probability, but it was rather
small, I had to admit.
Then he
asked, "What kind of an
optical illusion would cause a meteor
to appear
to make
a 90-degree
rum?"
I had
asked our Project Bear astronomer
this same question, and he couldn't
answer it either. So the
only answer I could give the colonel was, "I
don't know."
I felt
as if
I were on a witness stand
being cross-examined, and that
is exacdy where I was, because
the colonel
cut loose.
"Why not
assume a point that is
more easily proved?" he asked. "Why
not assume
that the C-54 crew, the
OD, his
driver, and the tower
operators did know what they
were talking about? Maybe they had
seen spectacular meteors during
the hundreds
of hours
that they had flown at
night and the many nights that
they had been on duty
in the
tower. Maybe the ball
of fire
had made
a 90-degree
turn. Maybe it was some land
of an
intelligendy
controlled craft that had streaked northeast
across the Gulf of St.
Lawrence and Quebec Province at 2,400
miles an hour.
"Why not
just simply believe that most
people know what they saw?" the colonel said with
no small
amount of sarcasm in his
voice.
This last comment
started a lively discussion, and I was able to
retreat. The colonel had been
right in a sense—we were being conservative, but maybe
this was the right way
to be. In any scientific investigation you always assume
that you don't have enough proof
until you get a positive
answer. I didn't think that we
had a
positive answer—yet.
The colonel's comments
split the group, and a
hot exchange
of ideas,
pros and cons, and insinuations
that some people were imitating ostriches
to keep
from facing the truth followed.
The outcome of
the meeting
was a
directive to take further steps to obtain positive identification
of the
UFO's. Our original idea of attempting to get several separate
reports from one sighting so we
could use triangulation to measure
speed, altitude, and size
wasn't working out. We had
given the idea enough publicity, but reports where triangulation
could be used were
few and
far between.
Mr. or
Mrs. Average Citizen just doesn't look
up at
the sky
unless he or she sees'
a flash of light
or hears
a second.
Then even if he or
she does look up and sees
a UFO,
it is
very seldom that the report ever gets to Project
Blue Book. I think that
it would
be safe to say that Blue
Book only heard about 10
per cent
of the UFO's that were seen
in the
United States.
After the
meeting I went back to
ATIC, and the next day
Colonel Don Bower and
I left
for the
west coast to talk to
some people about how
to get
better UFO data. We brought
back the idea of
using an extremely long focal-length
camera equipped with a
diffraction grating.
The cameras would
be placed
at various
locations throughout the United States
where UFO's were most frequently
seen. We hoped that
photos of the UFO's taken
through the diffraction gratings
would give us some proof
one way
or the
other.
The diffraction
gratings we planned to use
over the lenses of the cameras
were the same thing as
prisms; they would split up the
light from the UFO into
its component
parts so that we could study
it and
determine whether it was a
meteor, an airplane, or
balloon reflecting sunlight, etc. Or
we might be able
to prove
that the photographed UFO was a craft completely foreign to
our knowledge.
A red-hot, A-l
priority was placed on the
camera project, and a section
at ATIC
that developed special equipment took over the job
of obtaining
the cameras,
or, if
necessary, having them designed and
built.
But the
UFO's weren't waiting around till
they could be photographed. Every day
the tempo
and confusion
were increasing a little
more.
By the
end of
June it was very noticeable
that most of the better reports
were coming from the eastern
United States. In Massachusetts,
New Jersey,
and Maryland
jet fighters had been scrambled almost
nightly for a week. On
three occasions radar-equipped F-94's had locked on
aerial targets only to
have the lock-on broken by
the apparent
violent maneuvers of the
target.
By the end
of June
there was also a lull
in the
newspaper publicity about the
UFO's. The forthcoming political conventions
had wiped
out any
mention of flying saucers. But
on July 1 there
was a
sudden outbreak of good reports.
The first one came
from Boston; then they worked
down the coast.
About seven
twenty-five on the morning of
July 1 two F-94's were scrambled
to intercept
a UFO
that a Ground Observer Corps
spotter reported was traveling southwest
across Boston. Radar couldn't
pick it up so the
two airplanes
were just vectored into the general
area. The F-94's searched the
area but couldn't see
anything. We got the report
at ATIC
and would have tossed
it out
if it
hadn't been for other reports from the Boston area
at that
same time.
One of
these reports came from a
man and
his wife
at Lynn, Massachusetts, nine miles northeast
of Boston.
At seven-thirty they had
noticed the two vapor trails
from the climbing jet interceptors. They looked around the
sky to
find out if they
could see what the jets
were after and off to the
west they saw a bright
silver "cigar-shaped object
about six times as
long at it
was wide"
traveling southwest across Boston.
It appeared
to be
traveling just a little faster
than the two jets.
As they
watched they saw that an
identical UFO was following the
first one some distance back.
The UFO's weren't leaving
vapor trails but, as the
man mentioned in his reports, this
didn't mean anything because you can get above the
vapor trail level. And the
two UFO's
appeared to be at
a very
high altitude. The two observers
watched as the two
F-94's searched back and forth
far below
the UFO's.
Then there was
another report, also made at
seven-thirty. An Air Force
captain was just leaving his
home in Bedford, about 15 miles
northwest of Boston and straight
west of Lynn, when he saw
the two
jets. In his report he
said that he, too, had looked
around the sky to see
if he
could see what they were trying
to intercept
when off to the east
he saw
a "silvery cigar-shaped object" traveling south. His
description of what he observed
was almost
identical to what the couple in Bedford reported except
that he saw only one
UFO.
When we received
the report,
I wanted to
send someone up to Boston
immediately in the hope of
getting more data from the civilian
couple and the Air Force
captain; this seemed to be a
tailor-made case for triangulation. But by July 1 we
were completely snowed under with
reports, and there just wasn't anybody
to send.
Then, to complicate matters, other reports
came in later in the
day.
Just two hours
after sighting in the Boston
area, Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, popped
back into UFO history. At
mne-thirty in
the morning
twelve student radar operators and three instructors were tracking
nine jets on an SCR
584 radar set when
two UFO
targets appeared on the scope.
The two targets came
in from
the northeast
at a
slow speed, much slower than the
jets that were being tracked,
hovered near Fort Monmouth at 50,000
feet for about five minutes,
and then took off
in a
"terrific burst of
speed" to the southwest.
When the targets
first appeared, some of the
class went outside with an instructor,
and after
searching the sky for about a
minute, they saw two shiny
objects in the same location as the radar showed
the two
unidentified targets to be. They watched
the two
UFO's for several minutes and
saw them go zipping
off to
the southwest
at exacdy the same time that the
two radar
targets moved off the scope
in that
direction.
We had
plotted these reports, the ones
from Boston and the one from
Fort Monmouth, on a map,
and without
injecting any imagination or wild
assumptions, it looked as if
two ''somethings"
had come
down across Boston on a
southwesterly heading, crossed
Long Island, hovered for a
few minutes over the Army's secret
laboratories at Fort Monmouth, then proceeded toward Washington.
In a
way we
half expected to get
a report
from Washington. Our expectations were rewarded because in
a few
hours a report arrived from that
city.
A physics
professor at George Washington University reported a "dull,
gray, smoky-colored" object
which hovered north northwest
of Washington
for about
eight minutes. Every once in a
while, the professor reported, it
would move through an arc of
about 15 degrees to the
right or left, but it always
returned to its original position.
While he was watching the UFO
he took
a 25-cent
piece out of his pocket
and held it at
arm's length so that he
could compare its size to that
of the
UFO. The UFO was about
half the diameter of the
quarter. When he first saw
the UFO,
it was
about 30 to 40 degrees above
the horizon,
but during
the eight minutes it was in
sight it steadily dropped lower
and lower until buildings
in downtown
Washington blocked off the view.
Besides being an
"Unknown," this report
was exceptionally
interesting to us because
the sighting
was made
from the center of downtown Washington,
D.C. The professor reported that
he had
noticed the UFO when he
saw people
all along the street
looking up in the air
and pointing.
He estimated
that at least 500 people
were looking at it, yet
his was the only report we
received. This seemed to substantiate
our theory that people
are very
hesitant to report UFO's to
the Air Force. But
they evidently do tell the
newspapers because later on
we picked
up a
short account of the sighting
in the Washington papers. It merely
said that hundreds of calls had
been received from people reporting
a UFO.
When reports were
pouring in at the rate
of twenty
or thirty a day, we were
glad that people were hesitant
to report
UFO's, but when we were
trying to find the answer
to a really knotty sighting we
always wished that more people
had reported it. The
old adage
of having
your cake and eating it,
too, held even for the
UFO.
Technically no one
in Washington,
besides, of course, Major General Samford
and his
superiors, had anything to do with
making policy decisions about the
operation of Project Blue Book or
the handling
of the
UFO situation
in general. Nevertheless, everyone was trying
to get
into the act. The split in
opinions on what to do
about the rising tide of UFO
reports, the split that first
came out in the open
at General Samford's briefing, was widening every
day. One group was getting dead-serious
about the situation. They thought we now had plenty
of evidence
to back
up an
official statement that the
UFO's were something real and,
to be
specific, not something from
this earth. This group wanted
Project Blue Book to
quit spending time investigating reports from the standpoint
of trying
to determine
if the
observer of a UFO had
actually seen something foreign to
our knowledge and start assuming that
he or
she had.
They wanted me to aim my
investigation at trying to find
out more about the UFO. Along
with this switch in operating
policy, they wanted to
clamp down on the release
of information.
They thought that the security
classification of the project
should go up to Top
Secret until we had all
of the answers, then the information
should be released to the public.
The investigation
of UFO's
along these lines should be a
maximum effort, they thought, and
their plans called for lining up
many top scientists to devote
their full time to the project.
Someone once said that enthusiasm
is infectious, and he
was right.
The enthusiasm
of this
group took a firm hold in
the Pentagon,
at Air
Defense Command Headquarters, on
the Research
and Development
Board, and many other agencies throughout
the government.
But General
Samford was still giving the
orders, and he said to
continue to operate just as
we had—keeping
an open
mind to any ideas.
After the
minor flurry of reports on
July 1 we
had a short breathing spell
and found
time to clean up a
sizable backlog of reports. People
were still seeing UFO's but
the frequency
of the
sighting curve was dropping steadily.
During the first few days of
July we were getting only
two or
three good reports a day.
On July
5 the
crew of a non-scheduled airliner made page two of
many newspapers by reporting a UFO over the AEC's super-secret Hanford, Washington,
installation. It was a skyhook balloon. On the
twelfth a huge meteor sliced
across Indiana, southern Illinois,
and Missouri
that netted us twenty or thirty
reports. Even before they had
stopped coming in, we had confirmation
from our astronomer that the
UFO was
a meteor.
But forty-two
minutes later there was a
sighting in Chicago that wasn't so
easily explained.
According to our
weather records, on the night
of July
12 it was hot in Chicago.
At nine
forty-two there were at least
400 people at Montrose
Beach trying to beat the
heat. Many of them were lying
down looking at the stars,
so that
they saw the UFO as it
came in from the west
northwest, made a 180-degree turn directly
over their heads, and disappeared
over the horizon. It
was a
"large red light with small
white lights on the side," most of the people
reported. Some of them said that
it changed
to a
single yellow light as it
made its turn. It was in
sight about five minutes, and
during this time no one reported
hearing any sound.
One of the
people at the beach was
the weather
officer from O'Hare International Airport, an
Air Force
captain. He immediately called O'Hare. They
checked on balloon flights and with radar, but both
were negative; radar said that
there had been no
aircraft in the area of
Montrose Beach for several hours.
I sent an
investigator to Chicago, and although
he came
back with a lot
of data
on the
sighting, it didn't add up
to be anything known.
The next day Dayton had its
first UFO sighting in a
long time when a Mr. Roy
T. Ellis,
president of the Rubber Seal
Products Company, and many
other people, reported a teardrop-shaped
object that hovered over Dayton
for several
minutes about midnight. This
sighting had an interesting twist because two years later
I was
in Dayton
and stopped
in at ATIC to see a
friend who is one of
the technical
advisers at the center. Naturally
the conversation
got around
to the subject of UFO's, and
he asked
me if
I remembered
tnig specific sighting.
I did,
so he
went on to say that
he and
his wife had seen
this UFO that night but
they had never told anybody. He
was very
serious when he admitted that
he had no idea what it
could have been. Now I'd
heard this statement a thousand times
before from other people, but
coming from t-his person, it was really something because
he was as anti-saucer as anyone
I knew.
Then he added,
"From that time
on I
didn't think your saucer reporters
were as crazy as
I used
to think
they were."
The Dayton
sighting also created quite a
stir in the press. In conjunction
with the sighting, the Dayton
Daily Journal had interviewed
Colonel Richard H. Magee, the
Dayton-Oak-wood civil defense
director; they wanted to know
what he thought about the UFO's.
The colonel's
answer made news: "There's
something flying around in our
skies and we wish we knew
what it was."
When the story
broke in other papers, the
colonel's affiliation with civil defense
wasn't mentioned, and he became
merely "a colonel from
Dayton." Dayton was quickly construed
by the
public to mean Wright-Patterson AFB and specifically ATIC. Some
people in the Pentagon screamed
while others gleefully clapped
their hands. The gleeful handclaps
were from those people who
wanted the UFO's to be socially
recognized, and they believed that
if they
couldn't talk their ideas into being
they might be able to
force them in with the help
of this
type of publicity.
The temporary lull
in reporting
that Project Blue Book had experienced
in early
July proved to be only
the calm
before the storm. By
mid-July we were getting about
twenty reports a day
plus frantic calls from intelligence
officers all over the United States
as every
Air Force
installation in the U.S. was being
swamped with reports. We told
the intelligence
officers to send in the
ones that sounded the best.
The build-up in
UFO reports
wasn't limited to the United
States—every day we would
receive reports from our air
attaches in other countries.
England and France led the
field, with the South
American countries running a close
third. Needless to say,
we didn't
investigate or evaluate foreign reports because
we had
our hands
full right at home.
Most of us
were putting in fourteen hours
a day,
six days
a week. It wasn't
at all
uncommon for Lieutenant Andy Flues, Bob Olsson, or Kerry
Rothstien, my
investigators, to get their
sleep on an airliner going
out or
coming back from an investigation. TWA airliners out of
Dayton were more like home than
home. But we hadn't seen
anything yet.
All the
reports that were coming in
were good ones, ones with no
answers. Unknowns were running about
40 per
cent. Rumors persist that
in mid-July
1952 the Air Force was braced
for -an
expected invasion by flying, saucers.
Had these rumor-mongers been at ATIC
in mid-July
they would have thought that the
invasion was already in full
swing. And they
would have thought that one
of the
beachheads for the invasion
was Patrick
AFB, the Air Force's Guided
Missile Long-Range Proving Ground
on the
east coast of Florida.
On the night
of July
18, at
ten forty-five,
two officers
were standing in front of base
operations at Patrick when they
noticed a fight at
about a 45-degree angle from
the horizon
and off to the
west. It was an amber
color and "quite a bit
brighter than a star."
Both officers had heard flying
saucer stories, and both
thought the light was a
balloon. But, to be comedians, they called to. several more officers and airmen
inside the operations office and
told them to come out and
"see the flying saucer." The people came out
and looked. A few were surprised
and took
the mysterious
light seriously, at the
expense of considerable laughter from
the rest of the group. The
discussion about the light grew
livelier and bets that it was
a balloon
were placed. In the meantime
the light
had drifted
over the base, had stopped
for about a minute, turned, and
was now
heading north. To settle the bet,
one of
the officers
stepped into the base weather officer to find out
about the balloon. Yes, one
was in the air and being
tracked by radar, he was
told. The weather officer said that
he would
call to find out exacdy where it was. He
called and found out that
the weather
balloon was being tracked
due west
of the
base and that the light had
gone out about ten minutes
before. The officer went back outside
to find
that what was first thought
to be
a balloon was now
straight north of the field
and still
lighted. To add to the confusion,
a second
amber light had appeared in the west about 20
degrees lower than where the
first one was initially seen, and
it was
also heading north but at
a much greater speed. In a
few seconds
the first
light stopped and started moving back
south over the base.
While the
group of officers and airmen
were watching the two lights, the
people from the weather officer
came out to tell the UFO
observers that the balloon was
still traveling straight west. They
were just in time to
see a
third fight come tearing across the
sky, direcüy overhead, from west to east. A weatherman
went inside and called the
balloon-tracking crew again—their
balloon was still far to
the west
of the base.
Inside of
fifteen minutes two more amber
lights came in from the west,
crossed the base, made a
180-degree turn over the ocean, and
came back over the observers.
In the midst
of the
melee a radar set had
been turned on but it couldn't
pick up any targets. This
did, however, eliminate the possibility of the lights' being
aircraft. They weren't stray balloons either,
because the winds at all
altitudes were blowing in a
westerly direction. They obviously weren't meteors. They weren't searchlights
on a
haze layer because there was
no weather
conducive to forming a haze
layer and there were
no searchlights.
They could have been some type
of natural
phenomenon, if one desires to
take the negative approach. Or, if
you take
the positive
approach, they could have
been spaceships.
The next night
radar at Washington National Airport
picked up UFO's and
one of
the most
highly publicized sightings of
UFO history
was in
the making.
It marked
the beginning of the end of
the Big
Flap.
The Washington Merry-Go-Round
No flying
saucer report in
the history
of the
UFO ever
won more world acclaim
than the Washington National Sightings.
When radars at
the Washington
National Airport and at Andrews AFB, both close to
the nation's
capital, picked up UFO's, the sightings
beat the Democratic National Convention
out of
headline space. They created such
a furor
that I had inquiries from the
office of the President of
the United
States and from the
press in London, Ottawa, and
Mexico City. A junior-sized riot was
only narrowly averted in the
lobby of the Roger
Smith Hotel in Washington when I refused to
tell U.S. newspaper reporters what
I knew
about the sightings.
Besides being the
most highly publicized UFO sightings
in the Air Force annals, they
were also the most monumentally
fouled-up messes that repose in
the files.
Although the Air Force said that
the incident
had been
fully investigated, the Civil Aeronautics
Authority wrote a formal report
on the
sightings, and numerous magazine writers
studied them, the complete story has
never fully been told. The
pros have been left
out of
the con
accounts, and the cons were nearly
overlooked by the pro writers.
For a year
after the twin sightings we
were still putting little pieces in
the puzzle.
In some aspects
the Washington
National Sightings could be classed as
a surprise—we
used this as an excuse
when things got fouled up—but in
other ways they weren't. A
few days prior to the incident
a scientist,
from an agency that I can't
name, and I
were talking about the build-up
of reports
along the east coast of
the United
States. We talked for about two
hours, and I was ready
to leave
when he said that he had
one last
comment to make—a prediction. From
his study of
the UFO
reports that he was getting
from Air Force Headquarters,
and from
discussions with his colleagues, he said that he thought
that we were sitting right
on top
of a big keg full of
loaded flying saucers. "Within the next few days," he told me, and
I remember
that he punctuated his slow, deliberate
remarks by bitting
the desk
with his fist, "they're
going to blow up and
you're going to have the
granddaddy of all UFO
sightings. The sighting will occur
in Washington or New
York," he predicted—"probably
Washington."
The trend in
the UFO
reports that this scientist based
his prediction on hadn't
gone unnoticed. We on Project
Blue Book had seen it, and
so had
the people
in the
Pentagon; we all had talked about
it.
On July 10
the crew
of a
National Airlines plane reported a light "too bright to
be a
lighted balloon and too slow
to be a big meteor" while they were flying
south at 2,000 feet near Quantico,
Virginia, just south of Washington.
On July 13
another airliner crew reported that
when they were 60 miles southwest
of Washington,
at 11,000
feet, they saw a light below
them. It came up to
their level, hovered off to the
left for several minutes, and
then it took off in
a fast,
steep climb when the
pilot turned on his landing
lights.
On July 14
the crew
of a
Pan American
airliner enroute from New York to
Miami reported eight UFO's near
Newport News, Virginia, about 130
miles south of Washington.
Two night later there
was another
sighting in exacdy
the same area but from the
ground. At 9:00 p.m. a high-ranking civilian scientist from
the National
Advisory Committee for Aeronautics
Laboratory at Langley AFB and
another maa
were standing near the
ocean looking south over Hampton
Roads when they saw
two amber-colored
lights, "much too large to be
aircraft lights," off to their
right, silently traveling north.
Just before the two lights
got abreast
of the
two men
they made a 180-degree
turn and started back toward
the spot where they had first
been seen. As they turned,
the two lights seemed to "jockey
for position
in the
formation." About this time
a third
light came out of the
west and joined the first two;
then as the three UFO's
climbed out of the area
toward the south, several
more lights joined the formation.
The entire episode had
lasted only three minutes.
The only
possible solution to the sighting
was that
the two men had seen airplanes.
We investigated
this report and found that there
were several B-26's from Langley
AFB in the area at the
time of the sighting, but
none of the B-26 pilots remembered being over Hampton
Roads. In fact, all of them
had generally
stayed well south of Norfolk
until about 10:30 p.m. because
of thunderstorm
activity northwest of Langley. Then there
were other factors—the observers heard no sound and they
were away from all city
noises, aircraft don't carry just
one or
two amber
lights, and the distance between the two lights was
such that had they been
on an
airplane the airplane would
have been huge or very
close to the observers. And last,
but not
least, the man from the
National Advisory Committee for
Aeronautics was a very famous aerodynamicist and of such
professional stature that if he said
the lights
weren't airplanes they weren't.
This then
was the
big build-up
to the
first Washington national sighting
and the
reason why my friend predicted
that the Air Force
was sitting
on a
big powder
keg of
loaded flying saucers.
When the
keg blew
the best
laid schemes of the mice
and men at ATIC,
they went the way best
laid schemes are supposed to. The
first one of the highly
publicized Washington national sightings started,
according to the CAA's logbook
at the
airport, at 11:40 p.m. on
the night
of July
19 when two radars at National
Airport picked up eight unidentified
targets east and south of
Andrews AFB. The targets weren't airplanes because they would
loaf along at 100 to
130 miles an hour
then suddenly accelerate to "fantastically
high speeds" and leave
the area.
During the night the crews
of several airliners saw
mysterious lights in the same
locations that the radars showed
the targets;
tower operators also saw fights, and
jet fighters
were brought in.
But nobody
bothered to tell Air Force
Intelligence about the sighting. When reporters
began to call intelligence and ask about the big
sighting behind the headlines, INTERCEPTORS CHASE FLYING SAUCERS
OVER WASHING-
TON, D.C., they
were told that no one
had ever
heard of such a sighting. In
the next
edition the headlines were supplemented
by, AIR
FORCE WONT TALK.
Thus intelligence
was notified
about the first Washington national sighting.
I heard
about the sighting about ten
o'clock Monday morning when Colonel Donald
Bower and I got off
an airliner
from Dayton and I bought
a newspaper
in the
lobby of the Washington National Airport
Terminal Building. I called the Pentagon from the airport
and talked
to Major
Dewey Fournet,
but all
he knew
was what
he'd read in the papers.
He told me that
he had
called the intelligence officer at
Boiling AFB and that
he was
making an investigation. We would get
a preliminary
official report by noon.
It was about
1:00 p.m. when
Major Foumet called me and said that
the intelligence
officer from Boiling was in
his office with the
preliminary report on the sightings,
I found
Colonel Bower, we went
up to
Major Fournet's office and listened to the
intelligence officer's briefing.
The officer started
by telling
us about
the location
of the
radars involved in the
incident. Washington National Airport, which
is located
about three miles south of
the heart
of the city, had two radars.
One was
a long-range radar in the Air
Route Traffic Control section. This
radar had 100-mile range and
was used
to control
all air
traffic approaching Washington.
It was
known as the ARTC radar.
The control
tower at National Airport had
a shorter-range radar that it used
to control
aircraft in the immediate vicinity
of the
airport. Boiling AFB, he
said, was located just east
of National
Airport, across the Potomac River.
Ten miles
Farther east, in
almost a direct line with
National and Boiling, was Andrews AFB. It also had
a short-range radar. All of
these airfields were linked
together by an intercom system.
Then the
intelligence officer went on to
tell about the sighting.
When a new shift
took over at the ARTC
radar room at National Airport, the
air traffic
was light
so only
one man
was watching the radarscope.
The senior
traffic controller and the six other
traffic controllers on the shift
were out of the room at
eleven-forty, when the man watching
the radar-scope
noticed a group of seven
targets appear. From their position on the scope he
knew that they were just
east and a little south of
Andrews AFB. In a way
the targets
looked like a formation of slow
airplanes, but no formations were due in the area.
As he
watched, the targets loafed along
at 100 to 130 miles an
hour; then in an apparent
sudden burst of speed two of
them streaked out of radar
range. These were no airplanes, the man thought, so
he let
out a
yell for the senior controller. The senior controller took one look at the
scope and called in two
more of the men. They
all agreed that these were no
airplanes. The targets could be
caused by a malfunction
in the
radar, they thought, so a
technician was called in—the
set was
in perfect
working order.
The senior
controller then called the control
tower at National Airport; they
reported that they also had
unidentified targets on their
scopes, so did Andrews. And
both of the other radars reported the same slow
speeds followed by a sudden
burst of speed. One
target was clocked at 7,000
miles an hour. By now the
targets had moved into every
sector of the scope and had
flown through the prohibited flying areas over the White
House and the Capitol.
Several times during
the night
the targets
passed close to commercial airliners in
the area
and on
two occasions
the pilots of the airlines saw
lights that they couldn't identify,
and the lights were
in the
same spots where the radar
showed UFO's to be. Other pilots
to whom
the AB.TC
radar men talked on the radio
didn't see .anything odd, at
least that's what they said, but
the senior
controller knew airline pilots and knew that they were
very reluctant to report UFO's.
The first sighting
of a
light by an airline pilot
took place shortly after midnight, when
an ARTC
controller called the pilot of a
Capital Airlines flight just taking
off from
National. The controller asked the pilot
to keep
watch for unusual lights—or anything. Soon
after the pilot cleared the
traffic pattern, and while
AB.TC was still in contact
with him, he suddenly yelled, "There's
one—off to the right—and there
it goes." The controller
had been
watching the scope, and a target
that had been off to
the right
of the
Capitaliner was gone.
During the next
fourteen minutes this pilot reported
six more identical lights.
About two
hours later another pilot, approaching
National Airport from the
south, excitedly called the control
tower to report that a light
was following
him at
"eight o'clock level." The
tower checked their radarscope and there was a target
behind and to the left
of the
airliner. The ARTC radar also had
the airliner
and the
UFO target.
The UFO
tagged along behind and
to the
left of the airliner until
it was within four miles of
touchdown on the runway. When
the pilot reported the
light was leaving, the two
radar-scopes showed that the target
was pulling away from
the airliner.
Once during
the night
all three
radars, the two at Washington
and the
one at
Andrews AFB, picked up a
target three miles north of the
Riverdale Radio beacon, north of
Washington. For thirty seconds
the three
radar operators compared notes
about the target over the
intercom, then suddenly the target
was gone—and
it left
all three
radarscopes simultaneously.
But the clincher
came in the wee hours
of the
morning, when an ARTC traffic controller
called the control tower at Andrews
AFB and
told the tower operators that
ARTC had a target just south
of their
tower, directly over the Andrews
Radio range station. The tower
operators looked and there was a
"huge fiery-orange sphere"
hovering in the sky directiy over their
range station.
Not too long
after this excitement had started,
in fact
just after the technician
had checked
the radar
and found
that the targets weren't
caused by a radar malfunction,
ARTC had called for Air Force
interceptors to come in and
look around. But they didn't show,
and finally
ARTC called again —then again. Finally,
just about daylight, an F-94
arrived, but by that time the
targets were gone. The F-94
crew searched the area for a
few minutes
but they
couldn't find anything unusual so they
returned to their base.
So ended
phase one of the Washington
National Sightings.
The Boiling
AFB intelhgence officer said he would
write up the complete report and
forward it to AT1C.
That afternoon
things bustled in the Pentagon.
Down on the first floor Al
Chop was doing his best
to stave
off the
press while up on
the fourth
floor intelligence officers were holding some serious conferences. There was talk of
temperature inversions and the false
targets they could cause; but the consensus was that
a good radar
operator could spot inversion-caused
targets, and the traffic controllers
who operated the radar at Washington
National Airport weren't just out of
radar school. Every day the
lives of thousands of people depended
upon their interpretation of the
radar targets they saw on their
scopes. And you don't get
a job
like this unless you've
spent a good many years
watching a luminous fine paint targets on a
good many radarscopes. Targets
caused by inversions aren't rare—in
the years
that these men had
been working with radar they
had undoubtedly seen every
kind of target, real or
false, that radar can detect. They
had told
the Boiling
AFB intelligence
officer that the targets
they saw were caused by
the radar
waves' bouncing off a
hard, solid object. The Air
Force radar operator at Andrews backed
them up; so did two
veteran airline pilots who saw
lights right where the radar
showed a UFO to
be.
Then on
top of
all this
there were the reports from
the Washington area during
the previous
two weeks—all
good —all from airline pilots or
equally reliable people.
To say the
least, the sighting at Washington
National was a jolt.
Besides trying
to figure
out what
the Washington
National UFO's were, we
had the
problem of what to tell
the press.
They were now beginning
to put
on a
squeeze by threatening to call a
congressman—and nothing chills
blood faster in the military. They wanted some kind
of an
official statement and they wanted it
soon. Some people in intelligence
wanted to say just, "We don't
know," but others held out
for a
more thorough investigation. I happened to
be in
this latter category. Many times
in the
past I had seen what
first seemed to be a good UFO report completely
fall apart under a thorough investigation, I was for stalling the press and
working all night if
necessary to go into every
aspect of the sighting. But to
go along
with the theme of the
Washington National Sightings—confusion—there was a
lot of
talk but no action and the
afternoon passed with no further
investigation.
Finally about
4:00 p.m. it
was decided
that the press, who. still wanted an
official comment, would get an
official "No comment" and that I would
stay in Washington and make a
more detailed investigation.
I called Lieutenant
Andy Flues, who was in
charge of Project Blue Book while
I was
gone, to tell him that
I was
staying over and I
found out that they were
in a
de luxe flap back in Dayton.
Reports were pouring out of
the teletype
machines at the rate of
thirty a day and many
were as good, if not better,
than the Washington incident. I
talked this over with Colonel Bower
and we
decided that even though things were
popping back at ATIC the
Washington sighting, from the
standpoint of national interest, was
more important.
Feeling like a
national martyr because I planned
to work
all night if necessary,
I laid
the course
of my
investigation. I would go
to Washington
National Airport, Andrews AFB, airlines offices, the weather bureau,
and a
half dozen other places scattered all
over the capital city. I
called the transportation section at
the Pentagon
to get
a staff
car but
it took
me only seconds to
find out that the regulations
said no staff cars except for
senior colonels or generals. Colonel
Bower tried—same thing. General
Samford and General Garland were
gone, so I couldn't get
them to try to pressure
a staff car out of the
hillbilly who was dispatching vehicles. I went down to
the finance
office—could I rent a car
and charge it as travel expense?
No—city buses are available. But I didn't know the
bus system
and it
would take me hours to get
to all
the places
I had
to visit,
I pleaded.
You can
take a cab if you want
to pay
for it
out of
your per diem was the answer.
Nine dollars a day per
diem and I should pay for a hotel room,
meals, and taxi fares all
over the District of Columbia.
Besides, the lady in finance
told me, my travel orders to
Washington covered only a visit
to the
Pentagon. In addition, she
said, I was supposed to
be on
my way back to Dayton right
now, and if I didn't
go through
all of the red tape of
getting the orders amended I
couldn't collect any per
diem and technically I'd be
AWOL. I couldn't talk to the finance officer,
the lady
informed me, because he always left
at 4:30
to avoid
the traffic
and it
was now exactly five
o'clock and she was quitting.
At five-one I
decided that if saucers were
buzzing Pennsylvania Avenue in formation
I couldn't
care less. I called Colonel Bower, explained my troubles,
and said
that I was through. He concurred,
and I
caught the next airliner to Dayton.
When I returned I
dropped in to see Captain
Roy James
in the radar branch and told
him about
the sighting.
He said
that he thought it
sounded as if the radar
targets had been caused by weather
but since
he didn't
have the finer details he naturally couldn't make any
definite evaluation.
The good
UFO reports
that Lieutenant Flues had told
me about when I
called him from Washington had tripled in number before
I got
around to looking at them.
Our daily
take had risen to
forty a day,
and about
a third
of them
were classified as unknowns.
More amber-red
lights like those seen on
July 18 had been observed over the Guided Missile
Long-Range Proving Ground at Patrick AFB,
Florida. In Uvalde, Texas, a
UFO described as "a large, round,
silver object that spun on
its vertical axis" was seen to
cross 100 degrees of afternoon
sky in forty-eight seconds. During part
of its
flight it passed between two towering
cumulus clouds. At Los Alamos
and Holyoke, Massachusetts, jets had chased
UFO's. In both cases the UFO's
had been
lost as they turned into
the sun.
In two night
encounters, one in New Jersey
and one
in Massachusetts, F-94's tried
unsuccessfully to intercept
unidentified lights reported by the
Ground Observer Corps. In both cases
the pilots
of the
radar-nosed jet interceptors saw a light;
they closed in and their
radar operators got a lock-on.
But the
lock-ons were broken
in a
few seconds,
in both
cases, as the light
apparendy took violent
evasive maneuvers.
Copies of
these and other reports were
going to the Pentagon, and I was constantly
on the
phone or having teleconferences with Major Fournet.
When the second
Washington national sighting came along,
almost a week to
the hour
from the first one, by
a stroke
of luck things weren't too fouled
up. The
method of reporting the sighting didn't
exacdy follow the
official reporting procedures that are
set forth
in Air
Force Letter 200-5, dated 5 April 1952, Subject: Reporting of Unidentified
Flying Objects—but it worked.
I first heard
about the sighting about ten
o'clock in the evening when I
received a telephone call from
Bob Ginna, Life
magazine's UFO
expert. He had gotten the
word from Life's
Washington News
Bureau and wanted a statement
about what the Air
Force planned to do. I
decided that instead of giving a
mysterious "no comment" I would
tell the truth: "I have no
idea what the Air Force
is doing;
in all probability it's doing nothing."
When he hung up, I
called the intelligence duty officer in
the Pentagon
and I
was correct,
intelligence hadn't heard about the
sighting. I asked the duty officer
to call
Major Fournet and ask him if
he would go out to the
airport, which was
only two or three miles from his home. When
he got
the call
from the duty officer Major Fournet called Lieutenant Holcomb; they
drove to the ARTC radar room
at National
Airport and found Al Chop already
there. So at this performance
the UFO's
had an official audience; Al Chop,
Major Dewey Fournet, and
Lieutenant Holcomb, a Navy
electronics specialist assigned to the Air
Force Directorate of Intelligence, all saw the radar targets
and heard
the radio
conversations as jets tried to intercept
the UFO's.
Being in
Dayton, 380 miles away, there
wasn't much that I could do,
but I
did call
Captain Roy James thinking possibily
he might
want to talk on the
phone to the people who were watching the UFO's
on the
radarscopes. But Captain James has
a powerful
dislike for UFO's—especially on Saturday night.
About five
o'clock Sunday morning Major Fournet called and told me the
story of the second sighting
at Washington
National Airport:
'About 10:30 p.m. on
July 26 the same radar
operators who had seen the UFO's
the week
before picked up several of the same slow-moving targets. This time the
mysterious craft, if that
is what
they were, were spread out
in an
arc around Washington from Hemdon, Virginia,
to Andrews
AFB. This time there
was no
hesitation in following the targets. The minute they appeared
on the
big 24-inch
radar-scope one of the controllers
placed a plastic marker representing
an unidentified
target near each blip on
the scope.
When all the targets
had been
carefully marked, one of the
controllers called the tower
and the
radar station at Andrews AFB—they also had the unknown
targets.
By 11:30
p.m. four or five of the
targets were continually being tracked at
all times,
so once
again a call went out
for jet interceptors. Once again there
was some
delay, but by midnight two F-94's
from New Casde
County AFB were airborne and headed
south. The reporters and photographers
were asked to leave the
radar room on the pretext
that classified radio frequencies and procedures were being used in vectoring the
interceptors. All civilian air traffic was cleared out of
the area
and the
jets moved in.
When I later found out
that the press had been
dismissed on the grounds that the
procedures used in an intercept
were classified, I knew that this -was absurd because
any ham radio operator worth his
salt could build equipment and listen in on any
intercept. The real reason for
the press
dismissal, I learned, was
that not a few people
in the
radar room were positive that this
night would be the big
night in UFO history—the night when
a pilot
would close in on and get
a good
look at a UFO—and they
didn't want the press to be
in on
it
But just as
the two
'94's arrived in the area
the targets
disappeared from the radarscopes. The two jets were
vectored into the areas where the
radar had shown the last
target plots, but even though the
visibility was excellent they could
see nothing. The two
airplanes stayed around a few
minutes more, made a systematic search of the area,
but since
they still couldn't see anything or
pick up anything on their
radars they returned to their base.
A few minutes
after the F-94's left the Washington area, the unidentified
targets were back on the
radarscopes in that same area.
What neither Major
Foumet nor I
knew at this time was
that a few minutes after the
targets left the radarscopes in Washington people in the
area around Langley AFB near
Newport News, Virginia, began
to call
Langley Tower to report that they
were looking at weird bright
lights that were "rotating
and giving
off alternating
colors." A few minutes after the calls began to
come in, the tower operators
themselves saw the same or
a similar
light and they called for
an interceptor.
An F-94 in
the area
was contacted
and visually
vectored to the light by the
tower operators. The F-94 pilot
saw the light and started toward
it, but
suddenly it went out, "like somebody turning off a
light bulb." The F-94 crew
continued their run and soon
got a
radar lock-on, but it was
broken in a few
seconds as die target apparentiy sped away. The fighter stayed
in the
area for several more minutes
and got two more lock-ons, only to
have them also broken after
a few seconds.
A few minutes
after the F-94 over Newport
News had the last lock-on broken, the targets came back
on the
scopes at Washington National.
With the targets
back at Washington the traffic
controller again called Air
Defense Command, and once again
two F-94's roared south toward Washington.
This time the targets stayed on the radarscopes when the airplanes arrived.
The controllers
vectored the jets toward group
after group of targets, but each
time, before the jets could
get close
enough to see anything
more than just a light,
the targets
had sped away. Then
one stayed
put. The pilot saw a
light right where the ARTC radar
said a target was located;
he cut in the F-94's after-burner
and went
after it, but just like the
light that the F-94 had
chased near Langley AFB, this one also disappeared. All during the chase
the radar
operator in the F-94
was trying
to get
the target
on his
set but he had
no luck.
After staying in
the area
about twenty minute, the jets
began to run low
on fuel
and returned
to their
base. Minutes later it began to
get light,
and when
the sun
came up all the targets were
gone.
Early Sunday morning,
in an
interview with the press, the
Korean veteran who piloted
the F-94,
Lieutenant William Patterson, said:
I tried to make contact with the
bogies below 1,000 feet, but they
[the radar controllers] vectored us
around. I saw several bright lights.
I was
at my
maximum speed, but even then I
had no
closing speed. I ceased chasing
them because I saw no
chance of overtaking them. I
was vectored
into new objects. Later I chased
a single
bright light which I estimated
about 10 miles away. I lost visual contact with
it about 2 miles.
When Major
Foumet finished telling
me about
the night's
activity, my first question
was, "How about the radar
targets—could they have
been caused by weather?" -
I knew that Lieutenant Holcomb was a
sharp electronics man and that Major
Foumet, although
no electronics
specialist,
was a
crackerjack engineer, so their opinion
meant a lot.
Dewey said
that everybody in the radar
room was convinced that the
targets were very probably caused
by solid
metallic objects. There had
been weather targets on the
scope too, he said,
but these
were common to the Washington
area and the controllers
were paying no attention to
them.
And this something
solid could poke along at
100 miles
an hour or outdistance
a jet,
I thought
to myself.
I didn't ask
Dewey any more
because he'd been up all
night and wanted to
get to
bed.
Monday morning Major
Ed Gregory,
another intelligence officer at
ATIC, and I left for
Washington, but our flight was delayed in Dayton so
we didn't
arrive until late afternoon. On the way through
the terminal
building to get a cab
downtown, I picked up
the evening
papers. Every headline was about the
UFO's:
FIERY OBJECTS
OUTRUN JETS OVER CAPITAL-INVESTIGATION VEILED IN
SECRECY FOLLOWING VAIN CHASE
JETS ALERTED
FOR SAUCERS-INTERCEPTORS
CHASE LIGHTS IN D.C.
SKIES
EXPERT HERE
TO PUSH
STUDY AS OBJECTS IN SKIES REPORTED
AGAIN
I jokingly commented
about wondering who the expert
was. In a half hour I
found out—I was. When Major
Gregory and I walked into the
lobby of the Roger Smith
Hotel to check in, reporters and
photographers rose from the easy
chairs and divans like a covey
of quail.
They wanted my secrets, but
I wasn't going to
tell nor would I pose
for pictures
while I wasn't telling anything. Newspaper
reporters are a determined lot, but Greg ran
interference and we reached the
elevator without even a
"no comment."
The next day
was one
of confusion.
After the first Washington sighting the prevailing air in the section
of the
Pentagon's fourth floor, which is
occupied by Air Force Intelligence,
could be described as excitement,
but this
day it
was confusion. There was
a maximum
of talk
and a
minimum of action. Everyone agreed that
both sightings should be thoroughly investigated, but nobody did
anything. Major Foumet and I spent the
entire morning "just leaving" for somewhere to investigate "something." Every
time we would start to leave,
something more pressing would come
up.
About 10:00 a.m. the
President's air aide, Brigadier General
Landry, called intelligence at President
Truman's request to find out
what was going on. Somehow
I got
the call.
I told General Landry that the
radar target could have been caused
by weather
but that
we had
no proof.
To add
to the
already confused situation, new UFO
reports were coming in hourly.
We kept
them quiet mainly because we weren't
able to investigate them right
away, or even confirm the facts.
And we
wanted to confirm the facts
because some of the
reports, even though they were
from military sources, were difficult to
believe.
Prior to the
Washington sightings in only a
very few of the many instances
in which
radar had picked up UFO
targets had the targets themselves
supposedly been seen visually. Radar experts had continually pointed out this fact
to us
as an indication that maybe all
of the
radar targets were caused by freak
weather conditions. "If people had
just seen a light, or an
object, near where the radar
showed the UFO target to be,
you would
have a lot more to
worry about," radar technicians
had told
me many
times.
Now people
were seeing the same targets
that the radars were picking up,
and not
just at Washington.
On the same
night as the second Washington
sighting we had a really good
report from California. An ADC radar had picked up an
unidentified target and an F-94C
had been scrambled. The radar vectored
the jet
interceptor into the target, the radar
operator in the '94 locked
on to
it, and
as the airplane closed in the
pilot and RO saw that
they were headed direcdy
toward a large, yellowish-orange light. For several minutes they
played tag with the UFO.
Both the radar on the ground
and the
radar in the F-94 showed
that as soon as the airplane
would get almost within gunnery
range of the UFO
it would
suddenly pull away at a
terrific speed. Then in
a minute
or two
it would
slow down enough to let the
F-94 catch it again.
When I talked to
the F-94
crew on the phone, the
pilot said that they felt as
if this
were just a big aerial
cat-and-mouse game—and they didn't like
it—at any moment they thought the cat might have
pounced.
Needless to
say, this was an unknown.
About midmorning
on Tuesday,
July 29th, Major General John Samford sent word down
that he would hold a
press conference that afternoon
in an
attempt to straighten out the UFO
situation with the press.
Donald Keyhoe reports on
the press
conference and the events leading up
to it
in detail
in his
book, Flying Saucers from Outer Space. He indicates
that before the conference
started, General Samford sat
behind his big walnut desk
in
Room 3A138 in the
Pentagon and battled with his
conscience.
Should he tell the
public "the real truth"—that our skies are
loaded with spaceships? No, the public might
panic. The
only answer would be
to debunk
the UFO's. *
This bit of
reporting makes Major Keyhoe the greatest
journalist in history. This
beats wire tapping. He read
minds. And not only that, he
can read
them right through the walls
of the Pentagon. But I'm glad
that Keyhoe was able to read the
General's mind and that he
wrote the true and accurate facts about what he
was really
thinking because I spent quite
a bit
of time
talking to the general that
day and he sure fooled me.
I had
no idea
he was
worried about what he should tell
the public.
When the press
conference, which was the largest
and longest
the Air
Force had held since World
War II,
convened at 4:00 p.m., General
Samford made an honest effort
to straighten out the Washington National Sightings, but the
cards were stacked against
him before
he started.
He had
to hedge on many
answers to questions from the
press because he didn't know
the answers.
This hedging gave the impression that he was trying
to cover
up something
more than just the fact that
his people
had fouled
up in
not fully investigating the sightings. Then he had brought
in Captain Roy James from ATIC
to handle
all the
queries about radar. James didn't do
any better
because he'd just arrived in Washington that morning and
didn't know very much more about
the sightings
than he'd read in the
papers. Major Dewey Foumet
and Lieutenant
Holcomb, who had been at
the airport during the
sightings, were extremely conspicuous by their absence, especially since it was common
knowledge among the press that
they weren't convinced the UFO's
picked up on radars
were weather targets.
But somehow out
of this
chaotic situation came exactly the
result that was intended—the
press got off our backs.
Captain James's answers about the
possibility of the radar targets
being caused by temperature
inversions had been construed by the press to
mean that this was the
Air Force's
answer, even though today
the twin
sightings are still carried as unknowns.
The next
morning headlines from Bangor to
Bogota read:
AIR FORCE DEBUNKS
SAUCERS AS JUST NATURAL PHENOMENA
The Washington National Sightings proved one
thing, something that many
of us
already knew: in order to
forestall any more trouble similar to
what we'd just been through
we always had to
get all
of the
facts and not try to
hide them. A great deal of
the press's
interest was caused by the
Air Force's reluctance to give out any
information, and the reluctance on the
part of the Air Force
was caused
by simply
not having gone out
to find
the answers.
But had someone
gone out and made a
more thorough investigation a
few big
question marks would have popped
up and taken some of the
intrigue out of the two
reports. It took me a year
to put
the question
marks together because I just picked
up the
information as I happened to
run across it, but it could
have been collected in a
day of
concentrated effort.
There was
some doubt about the visual
sighting of the "large fiery-orange-colored sphere" that the tower operators
at Andrews AFB saw
when the radar operators at
National Airport told them
they had a target over
the Andrews
Radio range station. When the tower
operators were later interrogated they completely changed their
story and said that what they
saw was
merely a star. They said
that on the night of the
sighting they "had been excited."
(According to astronomical charts, there were
no exceptionally
bright stars where the UFO was
seen over the range station,
however. And I heard from
a good
source that the tower men
had been "persuaded" a bit.)
Then the pilot
of the
F-94C changed his mind even
after he'd given the press and
later told me his story
about vainly trying to intercept unidentified
fights. In an official report
he says that all
he saw
was a
ground light reflecting off a
layer of haze.
Another question mark
arose about the lights that
the airline
pilots saw. Months
after the sighting I heard
from one of the pilots whom
the ARTC
controllers called to leam if he could
see a
UFO. This man's background was also impressive, he had
been flying in and out
of Washington
since 1936. This is what he
had to
say:
The most
outstanding incident happened just after
a takeoff
one night
from Washington National. The tower
man advised us that there was
a UFO
ahead of us on the
takeoff path and asked if
we would
aid in
tracking it down. We were given
headings to follow and shortly
we were
advised that we had passed the
UFO and
would be given a new
heading. None of us
in the
cockpit had seen anything unusual.
Several runs were made; each
time the tower man advised
us we
were passing the UFO we
noticed that we were over one
certain section of the Potomac
River, just east of Alexandria. Finally we were asked
to visually
check the terrain below for
anything which might cause such
an illusion.
We looked and the
only object we could see
where the radar had a target
turned out to be the
Wilson Lines moonlight steamboat
trip to Mount Vemon. Whether
there was an altitude gimmick on
the radar
unit at the time I
do not
know but the radar was sure
as hell
picking up the steamboat.
The pilot went
on to
say that
there is such a conglomeration
of lights around the
Washington area that no matter
where you look you see a
"mysterious light."
Then there was
another point: although the radars
at Washington National and Andrews overlap,
and many
of the targets appeared in the
overlap area, only once did
the three radars simultaneously pick up
a target.
The investigation brought out a few
more points on the pro side
too. We found out that
the UFO's
frequently visited Washington. On May 23
fifty targets had been tracked
from 800 p.m. till
midnight. They were back on
the Wednesday
night between the two
famous Saturday-night sightings,
the following Sunday night, and again
the night
of the
press conference; then during
August they were seen eight
more times. On several occasions military
and civilian
pilots saw fights exactly where the
radar showed the UFO's to
be.
On each
night that there was a sighting there was
a temperature inversion
but it
was never
strong enough to affect the radar
the way
inversions normally do. On each
occasion I checked the
strength of the inversion according
to the methods used by the
Air Defense
Command Weather Forecast Center.
Then there
was another
interesting fact: hardly a night
passed in June, July,
and August
in 1952
that there wasn't an inversion in
Washington, yet the slow-moving, "solid" radar targets
appeared on only a few
nights.
But the one
big factor
on the
pro side
of the
question is the people involved—good radar men—men who deal
in human lives. Each day they
use their
radar to bring thousands of people into Washington
National Airport and with a responsibility
like this they should know
a real
target from a weather target.
So the Washington
National Airport Sightings are still
unknowns.
Had the
press been aware of some
of the
other UFO activity in the
United States during this period,
the Washington
sightings might not have
been the center of interest.
True, they could be classed as
good reports but they were
not the best that we were
getting. In fact, less than
six hours
after the ladies and
gendemen of the
press said "Thank you" to General Samford for his
press conference, and before the UFO's could read the newspapers
and find
out that
they were natural phenomena, one of
them came down across the Canadian border into Michigan.
The incident
that occurred that night was
one of
those that even the most
ardent skeptic would have difficulty
explaining. I've heard a lot of
them try and I've heard
them all fail.
At nine-forty on the evening of
the twenty-ninth
an Air
Defense Command radar station
in central
Michigan started to get plots on
a target
that was coming straight south
across Saginaw Bay on
Lake Huron at 625 miles
an hour.
A quick check of
the flight
plans on file showed that
it was
an unidentified target.
Three F-94's were
in the
area just northeast of the
radar station, so the
ground controller called one of
the F-94's
and told the pilot to intercept
the unidentified
target. The F-94 pilot started climbing
out of
the practice
area on an intercept heading that the ground
controller gave him. When the
F-94 was at 20,000
feet, the ground controller told the pilot to turn
to the
right and he would be
on the
target. The pilot started to bring
the F-94
around and at that instant
both he and the radar operator
in the
back seat saw that they
were turning toward a large bluish-white
light, "many times larger than a star." In the
next second or two the
light "took on a reddish tinge,
and slowly
began to get smaller, as
if it
were moving away." Just then the
ground controller called and said that
he still
had both
the F-94
and the
unidentified target on his
scope and that the target
had just
made a tight 180-degree turn. The
turn was too tight for
a jet,
and at the speed the target
was traveling
it would
have to be a jet if
it were
an airplane.
Now the
target was heading back north. The
F-94 pilot gave the engine
full power and cut in the
after-burner to give chase. The
radar operator in the back seat
got a
good radar lock-on. Later he
said, "It was just
as solid
a lock-on
as you
get from
a B-36."
The object was at 4 miles
range and the F-94 was
closing slowly. For thirty seconds they
held the lock-on; then, just
as the
ground controller was telling
the pilot
that he was closing in, the light became brighter
and the
object pulled away to break the
lock-on. Without breaking his transmission,
the ground controller asked if the
radar operator still had the
lock-on because on the
scope the distance between two
blips had almost doubled in one
sweep of the antenna. This
indicated that the unknown target
had almost
doubled its speed in a matter
of seconds.
For ten
minutes the ground radar followed
the chase.
At times the unidentified target would
slow down and the F-94
would start to close
the gap,
but always,
just as the F-94 was getting
within radar range, the target
would put on a sudden burst
of speed
and pull
away from the pursuing jet.
The speed of the
UFO—for by this time all
concerned had decided that was what
it was—couldn't
be measured
too accurately because its
bursts of speed were of
such short duration; but on several
occasions the UFO traveled about
4 miles in one
ten-second sweep of the antenna,
or about
1,400 miles an hour.
The F-94 was
getting low on fuel, and
the pilot
had to
break off the chase
a minute
or two
before the UFO got out
of range of the
ground radar. The last few
plots on the UFO weren't too good but it
looked as if the target
slowed down to 200 to 300"
miles an hour as soon
as the
F-94 turned around.
What was it?
It obviously
wasn't a balloon or a
meteor. It might have been another
airplane except that in 1952
there was nothing flying,
except a few experimental airplanes that were far from
Michigan, that could so easily outdistance
an F-94. Then there
was the
fact that radar clocked it
at 1,400 miles an hour. The
F-94 was heading straight for
the star Capella, which is low
on the
horizon and is very brilliant,
but what about the
radar contracts? Some people said
"Weather targets," but the
chances of a weather target's
making a 180-degree turn just as an
airplane turns into it, giving a radar lock-on, then
changing speed to stay just
out of range of the airplane's
radar, and then slowing down
when the airplane leaves is as
close to nil as you
can get.
What was it?
A lot
of people
I knew
were absolutely convinced this report
was the
key—the final proof. Even if
all of the thousands of other
UFO reports
could be discarded on a technicality,
this one couldn't be. These
people believed that this report in
itself was proof enough to
officially accept the fact that UFO's
were interplanetary spaceships.
And when some people refused to
believe even this report, the
frustration was actually pitiful
to see.
As the
end of
July approached, there was a
group of officers in intelligence fighting hard to get
the UFO
"recognized." At ATIC,
Project Blue Book was still
trying to be impartial—but sometimes it
was difficult.
chapter thirteen
Hoax or Horror?
To the
military and
the public
who weren't
intimately associated with the higher
levels of Air Force Intelligence
during the summer of 1952—and few
were—General Samford's press conference seemed
to indicate
the peak
in official
interest in flying saucers. It did
take the pressure off Project
Blue Book—reports dropped from
fifty per day to ten
a day
inside of a week—but behind the
scenes the press conference was only the signal for
an all-out
drive to find out more
about the UFO. Work on the
special cameras continued on a
high-priority basis, and General Samford
directed us to enlist the
aid of top-ranking scientists.
During the past
four months we had collected
some 750 comparatively well-documented
reports, and we hoped that
something in these reports
might give us a good
lead on the UFO. My orders
were to tell the scientists
to whom
we talked that the Air Force
was officially
still very much interested in the UFO and
that their assistance, even if
it was only in giving us
ideas and comments on the
reports, was badly needed. Although the
statement of the problem was worded much more loosely,
in essence
it was,
"Do the UFO reports we have
collected indicate that the earth
is being visited by a people
from another planet?"
Such questions had
been asked of the scientists
before, but not in such a
serious vein.
Then a secondary
program was to be started,
one of
"educating" the military. The
old idea
that UFO reports would die out
when the thrill wore off
had long
been discarded. We all knew
that UFO reports would continue
to come in and that in
order to properly evaluate them
we had
to have every shred of evidence.
The Big
Flap had shown us that our
chances of getting a definite
answer on a sighting was direcdy proportional to the quality
of the
information we received from
the intelligence
officers in the field.
But soon
after the press conference we began to get
wires from intelligence officers saying they
had interpreted
the newspaper accounts of General Samford's press conference to mean that
we were
no longer
interested in UFO reports. A few other intelligence officers had evidently also
misinterpreted the general's
remarks because their reports of
excellent sightings were sloppy
and incomplete.
All of
this was bad, so to forestall
any misconceived
ideas about the future of
the Air Force's UFO
project, summaries of General Sam-ford's
press conference were distributed to intelligence officers. General Samford had outlined
the future
of the
UFO project^when
he'd said:
"So our present
course of action is to
continue on this problem with the
best of our ability, giving
it the
attention that we feel
it very
definitely warrants. We will give
it adequate
attention, but not frantic attention."
The summary of
the press
conference straighted things out to some extent
and our
flow of reports got back
to normal.
I was anxious
to start
enlisting the aid of scientists,
as General Samford had directed, but
before this could be done
we had a backlog of UFO
reports that had to be
evaluated. During July we
had been
swamped and had picked off
only the best ones. Some of
the reports
we were
working on during August had
simple answers, but many were
unknowns. There was one
report that was of special
interest because it was an excellent
example of how a UFO
report can at first appear to
be absolutely
insoluble then suddenly fall apart under thorough investigation. It also points up
the fact that our investigation and analysis were thorough
and that when we finally stamped
a report
"Unknown" it was
unknown. We weren't infallible
but we
didn't often let a clue slip by.
At exactly ten
forty-five on the morning of
August 1, 1952, an ADC radar
near Bellefontaine, Ohio, picked up
a highspeed unidentified target moving southwest,
just north of
Dayton. Two F-86's
from the 97th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron at Wright-Patterson were scrambled and in
a few
minutes they were climbing out
toward where the radar showed
the UFO to be.
The radar
didn't have any height-finding equipment so all
that the ground controller at the radar site
could do was to
get the
two F-86's
over or under the target,
and then they would
have to find it visually.
When the two
airplanes reached 30,000 feet, the
ground controller called them
and told
them that they were almost
on the target, which was still
continuing its southwesterly course
at about
525 miles
an hour.
In a
few seconds
the ground controller called back and
told the lead pilot that
the targets of his
airplane and the UFO had
blended on the radarscope and that
the pilot
would have to make a
visual search; this was
as close
in as
radar could get him. Then
the radar broke down
and went
off the
air.
But at
almost that exact second the
lead pilot looked up and
there in the clear
blue sky several thousand feet
above him was a silver-colored sphere. The lead pilot
pointed it out to his wing
man and
both of them started to
climb. They went to their maximum
altitude but they couldn't reach
the UFO. After ten minutes of
unsuccessful attempts to identify the huge silver sphere or
disk—because at times it looked
like a disk—one of the pilots
hauled the nose of his
F-86 up in a stall and
exposed several feet of gun
camera film. Just as he did
this the warning light on
his radar
gun sight
blinked on, indicating that something solid was
in front
of him—he wasn't photographing a sundog,
hallucination, or refracted light.
The two
pilots broke off the intercept
and started
back to Wright-Patterson when
they suddenly realized that they
were still northwest of the base,
in almost
the same
location they had been when they
started the intercept ten minutes
before. The UFO had evidently
slowed down from the speed
that the radar had
measured, 525 miles an hour,
until it was hovering almost completely
motionless.
As soon as
the pilots
were on the ground, the
magazine of film from the gun
camera was rushed to the
photo lab and developed. The photos
showed only a round, indistinct
blob
—no details—but they were proof that
some type of unidentified object had been in
the air
north of Dayton.
Lieutenant Andy
Flues was assigned to this
one. He checked the locations of
balloons and found out that
a 20-foot-diameter
radiosonde weather balloon
from Wright-Patterson had been very
near the area when the
unsuccessful intercept took place,
but the
balloon wasn't traveling 525 miles an
hour and it couldn't be
picked up by the ground
radar, so he investigated
further. The UFO couldn't have
been another airplane because
airplanes don't hover in one
spot and it was
no atmospheric
phenomenon. Andy wrote if off as
an unknown
but it
still bothered him; that balloon
in the area was mighty suspicious.
He talked
to the
two pilots
a half dozen times and spent
a day
at the
radar site at Bellefontaine before he
reversed his "Unknown",
decision and came up with the
answer.
The unidentified target that the radar
had tracked
across Ohio was a low-flying jet. The jet was
unidentified because there was a mix-up
and the
radar station didn't get its
flight plan. Andy checked and found
that a jet out of
Cleveland had landed at Memphis at
about eleven-forty. At ten forty-five
this jet would have been
north of Dayton on a
southwesterly 'heading. When
the ground
controller blended the targets of the
two F-86's
into the unidentified target, they
were at 30,000 feet
and were
looking for the target at
their altitude or higher
so they
missed the low-flying jet-but they
did see
the balloon.
Since the radar went out
just as the pilots saw the
balloon, the ground controller couldn't see that the unidentified
target he'd been watching was
continuing on to the
southwest. The pilots didn't bother
to look around any
more once they'd spotted the
balloon because they thought they
had the
target in sight.
The only part
of the
sighting that still wasn't explained
was the radar pickup
on the
F-86's gun sight. Lieutenant Flues checked around, did a
little experimenting, and found out that
the small
transmitter box on a radiosonde balloon will give an indication
on the
radar used in F-86 gun
sights.
To get a
final bit of proof, Lieutenant
Flues took the gun camera photos to the photo
lab. The two F-86's had
been at about 40,000 feet when
the photos
were taken and the 20-foot
balloon was at about 70,000
feet. Andy's question to the photo
lab was,
"How big should a 20-foot
balloon appear on a frame
of 16-mm.
movie film when the balloon
is 30,000 feet awayf"
The people
in the
photo lab made a few
calculations and measurements and came up
with the answer. "A 20-foot
balloon photographed from 30,000
feet away would be the
same size as the
UFO in
the gun
camera photos."
By the
middle of August, Project Blue
Book was back to normal. Lieutenant Flues's
Coca-Cola consumption had dropped
from twenty bottles a day
in mid-July
to his
normal five. We were all getting
a good
night's sleep and it was
now a rare occasion when my
home telephone would ring in the
middle of the night to
report a new UFO.
But then on
the morning
of August
20 I
was happily
taking a shower, getting
ready to go to work,
when one of these rare occasions
occurred and the phone rang—it
was the
ATIC OD. An operational
immediate wire had just come
in for Blue Book. He had
gone over to the message
center and gotten it. He thought
that it was important and
wanted me to come right out.
For some
reason he didn't want to
read it over the
phone, although it was not
classified. I should come out, so
I left
in a
hurry.
The wire was
from the intelligence officer at
an air
base in Florida. The previous night
a scoutmaster
and three
boy scouts had seen a UFO.
The scoutmaster
had been
burned when he approached too close
to the
UFO. The wire went on to
give a few sketchy details
and state
that the scoutmaster was a
"solid citizen."
I immediately
put in
a long-distance
call to the intelligence officer. He confirmed the
data in the wire. He
had talked briefly to the scoutmaster
on the
phone and from all he could
gather it was no hoax.
The local
police had been contacted and they
verified the story and the
fact of the bums. I asked
the intelligence
officer to contact the scoutmaster
and ask
if he
would submit to a physical
examination immediately. I could
imagine the rumors that could
start about the scoutmaster's condition, and I wanted proof.
The report sounded good, so I
told the intelligence officer I'd
get down to see
him as
soon as possible.
I immediately called Colonel Dunn, then
chief at ATIC, and gave him
a brief
rundown. He agreed that I
should go down to Florida as
soon as possible and offered
to try
to get
an Air Force B-25, which would
save time over the airlines!
I told
Bob Olsson
to borrow
a Geiger
counter at Wright Field, then check out
a camera.
I called
my wife
and asked
her to pack a few clothes
and bring
them out to me. Bob
got the equipment, ran home and packed
a bag,
and in
two hours he and I and
our two
pilots, Captain Bill Hoey and Captain David Douglas, were on
our way
to Florida
to investigate
one of
the weirdest
UFO reports
that I came up against.
When we
arrived, the intelligence officer arranged
for the
scoutmaster to come out
to the
air base.
The latter
knew we were coming, so he
arrived at the base in
a few
minutes. He was a very pleasant
chap, in his early thirties,
not at
all talkative but apparentiy willing to co-operate.
While he was
giving us a brief personal
history, I had the immediate impression
that he was telling the
truth. He'd lived in Florida all
of his
life. He'd gone to a
private military prep school, had some
college, and then had joined
the Marines.
He told
us that
he had
been in the Pacific most
of the
war and repeated some
rather hairy stories of what
he'd been through. After the war
he'd worked as an auto
mechanic, then
gone to Georgia for a
while to work in a
turpentine plant. After returning
to Florida,
he opened
a gas
station, but some hard luck had
forced him to sell out.
He was
now working as a clerk in
a hardware
store. Some months back a local
church had decided to organize
a boy scout
troop and he had offered to
be the
scoutmaster.
On the night
before the weekly scout meeting
had broken
up early. He said
that he had offered to
give four of the boys a
ride home. He had let
one of
the boys
out when
the conversation turned to
a stock
car race
that was to take place
soon. They talked about
the condition
of the
track. It had been raining frequently,
and they
wondered if the track was flooded,
so they
drove out to look at
it. Then
they started south toward a nearby town to take another of
the boys home. They
took a black-top road about
10 miles
inland from the heavily-traveled coastal highway
that passes through sparsely
settled areas of scrub pine
and palmetto
thickets.
They were riding
along when the scoutmaster said that he noticed a
light off to his left
in the
pines. He slowed down and asked
the boys
if they'd
seen it; none of them
had. He started to drive on,
when he saw the lights
again. This time all of the
boys saw them too, so
he stopped.
He said
that he wanted to
go back
into the woods to see
what was going on, but that
the boys
were afraid to stay alone.
Again he started to drive on,
but in
a few
seconds decided he had to go
back. So he turned the
car around,
went back, and parked beside the
road at a point just
opposite where he'd seen the lights.
I stopped
him at
this point to find out
a little
bit more
about why he'd decided
to go
back. People normally didn't go running
off into
palmetto thickets infested with rattlesnakes
at night.
He had
a logical
answer. The lights looked like an airplane crashing into
the woods
some distance away. He didn't believe
that was what he saw,
but the
thought that this could be a possibility bothered him.
After all he had said, he
was a
scoutmaster, and if somebody was
in trouble, his conscience would have
bothered him the rest of his
life if he hadn't investigated
and it
had been
somebody in need of help.
A fifteen-minute
radio program had just started,
and he
told the boys that
he was
going to go into the
woods, and that if he wasn't
back by the time the
program ended they should run down
the road
to a
farmhouse that they had passed and get help. He
got out
and started
directly into the wood, wearing a
faded denim billed cap and
carrying a machete and two flashlights. One of
the lights
was a
spare he carried in his back
pocket.
He had traveled
about 50 yards off the
road when he ran into a
palmetto thicket, so he stopped
and looked
for a clear path. But finding none, he
started pushing his way through the waist-high tangle of
brush.
When he
stopped, he recalled later, he
had first
become aware of an odd odor.
He couldn't
exactly describe it to us,
except to say that
it was
"sharp" or "pungent."
It was
very faint, actually more like a subconscious awareness at
first. Another sensation he
recalled after the incident was
a very
slight difference in temperature,
hardly perceivable, like walking
by a
brick building in the evening
after the sun has set. He
hadn't thought anything about either
the odor
or the heat at the time
but later,
when they became important, he remembered them.
Paying no attention
to these
sensations then, he pushed on
through the brush, looking
up occasionally
to check
the north star, so that he could
keep traveling straight east. After struggling through about 30
yards of palmetto undergrowth, he noticed a change in the shadows ahead of
him and stopped to
shine the flashlight farth ahead of
him to find out if he
was walking
into a clearing or into
one of the many ponds that
dot that
particular Florida area. Tt was a
clearing.
The boy
scouts in the car had
been watching the scoutmaster's progress since they could
see his
light bobbing around. Occasionally
he would
shine it up at a
tree or across the landscape for
an instant,
so they
knew where he was in
relation to the trees
and thickets.
They saw him stop at
the edge of the open, shadowed
area and shine his fight
ahead of him.
The scoutmaster then told us that
when he stopped this second time he first became
consciously aware of the odor
and the heat. Both
became much more noticeable as he stepped into the
clearing. In fact, the heat
became almost unbearable or, as he
put it,
"oppressively moist, making
it hard to breathe."
He walked a
few more
paces and suddenly got a horrible feeling that somebody
was watching
him. He took another step, stopped, and looked up
to find
the north star. But
he couldn't see the north star, or any stars.
Then he suddenly saw that
almost the whole sky was
blanked out by a large dark sh ne about 30 feet above him.
He said
that he had stood in
this position for several seconds, or minutes—he didn't know
how long—because
now the feeling of being watched
had overcome
any power
of reasoning he had. He managed
to step
back a few paces, and
apparently got out from
under the object, because he
could see the edge of it
silhouetted against the sky.
As he
backed up, he said, the
air became
much cooler and fresher, helping him
to think
more clearly. He shone his
light up at the edge of
the object
and got
a quick
but good
look. It was circular-shaped and slightly
concave on the bottom. The surface was smooth and
a grayish
color. He pointed to a gray
linoleum-topped desk in
the intelligence
officer's room. "Just like that," he said. The upper
part had a dome in
the middle, like a turret. The
edge of the saucer-shaped object was thick and had
vanes spaced about every foot,
like buckets on a turbine wheel.
Between each vane was a
small opening, like a nozzle.
The next
reaction that the scoutmaster recalled was one of
fury. He wanted to
harm or destroy whatever it
was that
he saw. All he
had was
a machete,
but he
wanted to try to jump up
and strike
at whatever
he was
looking at. No sooner did he
get this
idea than he noticed the
shadows on the turret change ever
so slightly
and heard
a sound,
"like the opening of a well-oiled
safe door." He froze where
he stood
and noticed a small
ball of red fire began
to drift
toward him. As it floated down
it expanded
into a cloud of red
mist. He dropped his light and
machete, and put his arms
over his face. As the mist
envoloped him, he
passed out.
The boy scouts
in the
car estimated
that their scoutmaster had been gone
about five minutes when they
saw him
stop at the edge of the
clearing, then walk on in.
They saw him stop seconds later,
hesitate a few more seconds,
then shine the light up in
the air.
They thought he was just
looking at the trees again. The
next thing they said they
saw was
a big
red ball of fire
engulfing him. They saw him
fall, so they spilled out of
the car
and took
off down
the road
toward the farmhouse.
The farmer
and his
wife had a little difficulty
getting the story out of the
boys, they were so excited.
All they
could get was something about the
boys' scoutmaster being in trouble down the road. The
farmer called the Florida State
Highway Patrol, who relayed
the message
to the
county sheriff's office. In
a few
minutes a deputy sheriff and
the local
constable arrived. They picked
up the
scouts and drove to where their
car was
parked.
The scoutmaster had no idea of
how long
he had
been unconscious. He vaguely
remembered leaning against a tree,
the feeling of wet,
dew-covered grass, and suddenly regaining
his consciousness.
His first
reaction was to get out
to the
highway, so he started
to run.
About halfway through palmetto thicket
he saw
a car
stop on the highway. He
ran toward it and found the
deputy and constable with the
boys.
He was so
excited he could hardly get
his story
told coherently. Later the
deputy said that in all
his years
as a law-enforcement officer
he had
never seen anyone as scared
as the scoutmaster was as he
came up out of the
ditch beside the road and
walked into the glare of
the headlights.
As soon as he'd told his
story, they all went back
into the woods, picking their way
around the palmetto thicket. The
first thing they noticed was the
flashlight, still burning, in a
clump of grass. Next to it
was a
place where the grass was
flattened down, as if
a person
had been
lying there. They looked around for the extra light
that the scoutmaster had been
carrying, but it was
gone. Later searches for this
missing flashlight were equally
fruitless. They marked the spot
where the crushed grass was located
and left.
The constable
took the boy scouts home and
the scoutmaster
followed the deputy to the sheriff's
office. On the way to
town the scoutmaster said he first
noticed that his arms and
face burned. When he arrived at the sheriff's office,
he found
that his arms, face, and
cap were
burned. The
deputy called the Air Force.
There were
six people
listening to his story. Bob
Olsson, the two pilots, the intelligence
officer, his sergeant, and I.
We each had previously
agreed to pick one insignificant
detail from the story and
then requestion the scoutmaster when he had
finished. Our theory was that
if he
had made
up the
story he would either
repeat the details perfectly or
not remember
what he'd said. I'd used
this many times before, and it was a good
indicator of a lie. He
passed the test with flying colors. His story sounded
good to all of us.
We talked for
about another hour, discussing the event and his background.
He kept
asking, "What did I see?"—evidendy
thinking that I knew. He
said that the newspapers were after him, since the
sheriff's office had inadvertendy leaked the story, but that he
had been
stalling them off pending our
arrival. I told him
it was
Air Force
policy to allow people to say
anything they wanted to about
a UFO
sighting. We had never muzzled anyone;
it was
his choice.
With that, we thanked him, arranged
to pick
up the
cap and
machete to take back to Dayton,
and sent
him home
in a
staff car.
By this
time it was getting late,
but I wanted to talk to the flight surgeon
who had
examined the man that morning.
The intelligence officer found
him at
the hospital
and he
said he would be
right over. His report was
very thorough. The only thing he
could find out of the
ordinary were minor burns on his arms
and the
back of bis
hands. There were also indications that the inside of
his nostrils
might be burned. The degree of
bum could
be compared
to a light
sunburn. The hair had also been
singed, indicating
a flash
heat.
The flight surgeon
had no
idea how this specifically could have happened. It could
have even been done with
a cigarette
lighter, and he took his
lighter and singed a small
area of his arm to demonstrate.
He had
been asked only to make
a physical check, so
that is what he'd done,
but he
did offer
a suggestion. Check his
Marine records; something didn't ring true. I didn't quite
agree; the story sounded good
to me.
The next
morning my crew from ATIC,
three people from the intelligence office, and the two law
officers went out to where the
incident had taken place. We
found the spot .where somebody had
apparendy been lying
and the
scoutmaster's path through
the thicket.
We checked
the area
with a Geiger counter, as a
precautionary measure, not expecting to find anything; we
didn't. We went over the
area inch by inch, hoping to
find a burned match with
which a flare or fireworks could
have been lighted, drippings from
a flare, or anything that shouldn't
have been in a deserted
area of woods. We
looked at the trees; they
hadn't been hit by Hghtning. The
blades of grass under which
the UFO
supposedly hovered were not burned.
We found
nothing to contradict the story.
We-took a few photos of
the area
and went back to town. On
the way
back we talked to the
constable and the deputy. All
they could do was to
confirm what we'd heard.
We talked to
the farmer
and his
wife, but they couldn't help. The few facts that
the boy
scouts had given them before
they had a chance to
talk to their scoutmaster correlated with his story. We
talked to the scoutmaster's employer and some of his
friends; he was a fine
person. We questioned people who might
have been in a position
to also
observe something; they saw
nothing. The local citizens had
a dozen
theories, and we thoroughly
checked each one.
He hadn't been
struck by fightning. He
hadn't run across a still. There
was no
indication that he'd surprised a
gang of illegal turtle butcherers, smugglers,
or bootleggers.
There was no indication of marsh
gas or
swamp fire. The mysterious blue lights in the
area turned out to be
a farmer
arc-welding at night. The other
flying saucers were the landing
lights of airplanes landing
at a
nearby airport.
To be very
honest, we were trying to
prove that this was a hoax,
but were
having absolutely no success. Every
new lead we dug up pointed
to the
same thing, a true story.
We finished our
work on a Friday night
and planned
to leave early Saturday morning. Bob
Olsson and I planned to
fly back on a
commercial airliner, as the B-25
was grounded
for maintenance. Just after
dinner that night I got
a call
from the sheriff's office. It was
from a deputy I had
talked to, not the one who
met the
scoutmaster coming out of the
woods, but another one, who had
been very interested in the
incident. He had been doing
a little
independent checking and found that our
singed UFO observer's background was not as clean as
he led
one to
believe. He had been booted
out of the Marines after a
few months
for being
AWOL and stealing an aulumobile, and
had spent
some time in a federal
reformatory in (Jhillicothe, Ohio. The
deputy pointed out that this fact
alone meant nothing but that
he thought
I might
be interested in it.
I agreed.
The next morning,
early, I was awakened by a
phone call from the intelligence office. The morning paper
carried the UFO story on the
front page. It quoted the
scoutmaster as saying that "high brass" from Washington had questioned him late into
the night.
There was no "high brass," just four captains, a second lieutenant, and a sergeant. He
knew we were from Dayton because
v/e had
discussed who we were and where
we were
stationed. The newspaper story went
on to say that "he, the
scoutmaster, and the Air Force
knew what he'd seen but he
couldn't tell—it would create a
national panic." He'd also
hired a press agent. I
could understand the "high
brass from the Pentagon" as literary license by
the press, but this
"national panic" pitch was too much.
I had just
about decided to give up
on this
incident and write it off as
"Unknown" until this
happened. From all appearances, our scoutmaster was going
to make
a fast
buck on his experience. Just before
leaving for Dayton, I called
Major Dewey Foumet in the Pentagon and
asked him to do seme checking.
Monday morning
the machete
went to the materials lab
at Wright-Patterson. The question
we asked
was, "Is there anything unusual
about this machete? Is it
magnetized? Is it radioactive? Has it
been heated?" No knife was
ever tested so thoroughly for so
many things. As in using
a Geiger
counter to check the
area over which the UFO
had hovered
in the Florida woods, our idea
was to
investigate every possible aspect of
the sighting.
They found nothing, just a
plain, unmagnetized,
unradioactive, unheated,
common, everyday knife.
The cap
was sent
to a
laboratory in Washington, D.C., along with the scoutmaster's story. Our question here
was, "Does the cap
in any
way (bums,
chemicals, etc.) substantiate or refute
the story?"
I thought
that we'd collected all the
items that could be analyzed in
a lab
until somebody thought of one
I'd missed, the most obvious of
them all—soil and grass samples
from under the spot
where the UFO had hovered.
We'd had samples, but in the
last-minute rush to get back
to Dayton
they had been left in
Florida. I called Florida and
they were shipped to Dayton and
turned over to an agronomy
lab for analysis.
By the end
of the
week I received a report
on our
ex-Marine's military and reformatory records. They confirmed a
few suspicions and added
new facts.
They were not complimentary. The discrepancy between what
we'd heard about the scoutmaster while we were in
Florida and the records was considered a major factor.
I decided
that we should go back to
Florida and try to resolve
this discrepancy.
Since it was
hurricane season, we had to
wait a few days, then sneak back
between two hurricanes. We contacted
a dozen people in the city
where the scoutmaster lived. All
of them had known him for
some time. We traced him
from his early boyhood to the
time of the sighting. To
be sure
that the people we talked to
were reliable, we checked on
them. The specific things we found
out cannot
be told
since they were given to us
in confidence,
but we
were convinced that the whole incident
was a
hoax.
We didn't talk
to the
scoutmaster again but we did
talk to all the boy scouts
one night
at their
scout meeting, and they retold how
they had seen their scoutmaster
knocked down by the ball of
fire. The night before, we
had gone
out to the area of the
sighting and, under approximately the same lighting conditions as existed on the
night of the sighting, had re-enacted the scene—especially the part where the
boy scouts saw their scoutmaster fall, covered with red
fire. We found that not even
by standing
on top of the car could you see
a person
silhouetted in the clearing where
the scoutmaster
supposedly fell. The rest
of their
stories fell apart to some
extent too. They were
not as
positive of details as they
had been previously.
When we returned
to Dayton,
the report
on the
cap had
come back. The pattern
of the
scorch showed that the hat
was flat when it
was scorched,
but the
burned holes—the lab found some minute
holes we had missed—had very probably been made by
an electrical
spark. This was all the
lab could
find.
During our previous
visit we repeatedly asked the
question, "Was the hat
burned before you went into
the woods?"
and,
"Had the cap
been ironed?" We had received
the same
an-iwers each time:
"The hat was not burned
because we [the boy scouts] were
playing with it at the
scout meeting and would have noticed
the burns,"
and, "The cap was new;
it had not been washed or
ironed." It is rumored that
the cap
was never returned because
it was
proof of the authenticity of the sighting. The hat
wasn't returned simply because the
scoutmaster said that he
didn't want it back. No
secrets, no intrigue; it's as simple
as that.
Everyone who was
familiar with the incident, except
a few people in the Pentagon,
were convinced that this was
a hoax until the lab called
me about
the grass
samples we'd sent in. "How did
the roots
get charred?"
Roots charred? I didn't even know
what my caller was talking
about. He explained that when they'd
examined the grass they had
knocked the dirt and
sand off the roots of
the grass
clumps and found them charred. The
blades of grass themselves were not damaged; they had
never been heated, except on
the extreme tips of the longer
blades. These had evidently been
bending over touching the
ground and were also charred.
The lab had duplicated the charring
and had
found that by placing live grass clumps in a
pan of
sand and dirt and heating
it to about 300 degrees F.
over a gas burner the
charring could be duplicated. How it
was actually
done outside the lab they
couldn't even guess.
As soon
as we
got the
lab report,
we checked
a few
possibilities ourselves. There were no hot
underground springs to heat the earth, no chemicals in the
soil, not a thing we
found could explain it.
The only
way it
could have been faked would have
been to heat the earth
from underneath to 300 degrees F.,
and how
do you
do this
without using big and cumbersome equipment and disturbing the ground? You can't. Only
a few
people handled the grass specimens:
the lab, the intelligence
officer in Florida, and I.
The lab
wouldn't do it as
a joke,
then write an
official report, and I didn't do
it. This
leaves the intelligence officer; I'm
positive that he wouldn't do it.
There may be a single
answer everyone is overlooking, but as of now
the charred
grass roots from Florida are still
a mystery.
Writing an
official report on this incident
was difficult.
On one side of the ledger
was a
huge mass of circumstantial evidence very heavily weighed
against the scoutmaster's story being true. On our second trip
to Florida,
Lieutenant Olsson and I heard story after
story about the man's aptitude
for dreaming up tall tales. One
man told
us, "If
he told
me the
sun was shining, I'd
look up to make sure."
There were parts of his story
and those
of the
boy scouts
that didn't quite mesh. None of
us ever
believed the boy scouts were
in on
the hoax. They were
undoubtedly so impressed by the
story that they imagined a few
things they didn't actually see.
The scoutmaster's burns weren't
proof of anything; the flight
surgeon had duplicated these by burning his
own arm
with a cigarette lighter. But we
didn't make step one in
proving the incident to be a
hoax. We thought up dozens
of ways
the man could have
set up
the hoax
but couldn't
prove one.
In the scoutmaster's
favor were the two pieces
of physical
evidence we couldn't explain,
the holes
burned in the cap and the
charred grass roots.
The deputy sheriff
who had
first told me about the
scoutmaster's Marine and
prison record had also said,
"Maybe this is the
one time
in his
life he's telling the truth,
but I
doubt it."
So did we;
we wrote
off the
incident as a hoax. The best
hoax in UFO history.
Many people have
asked why we didn't give
the scoutmaster
a lie
detector test. We seriously considered
it and
consulted some experts in
this field. They advised against
it. In some definite types of
cases the lie detector will
not give valid results. This, they
thought, was one of those
cases. Had we done it and
had he
passed on the faulty results,
the publicity would have been a
headache.
There is
one way
to explain
the charred
grass roots, the burned cap, and
a few
other aspects of the incident.
It's pure speculation; I don't believe
that it is the answer,
yet it
is interesting. Since the
blades of the grass were
not damaged
and the ground had
not been
disturbed, this one way is
the only way (nobody has thought
of any
other way) the soil could have been heated. It
could have been done by
induction heating.
To quote from
a section
entided "Induction Heating" from an electrical engineering textbook:
A rod
of solid
metal or any electrical conductor, when subjected
to an
alternating magnetic field, has electromotive
forces set up in
it. These
electromotive forces cause what are known
as "eddy
currents." A rise
in temperature
results from "eddy currents."
Induction heating
is a
common method of melting metals
in a foundry.
Replace the "rod
of solid
metal" mentioned above with damp sand,
an electrical
conductor, and assume that a
something that was generating a powerful alternating magnetio field was hovering over
the ground, and you can explain
how the grass roots were charred.
To get
an alternating
magnetic field, some type
of electrical
equipment was needed. Electricity—electrical sparks—the holes burned in the
cap "by
electric sparks."
UFO propulsion comes into the picture
when one remembers Dr. Einstein's
unified field theory, concerning the relationship between
electro-magnetism and gravitation.
If this alternating
magnetic field can heat metal,
why didn't
everything the scoutmaster had that was metal
get hot
enough to burn him?
He had
a flashlight,
machete, coins in his pocket, etc.
The answer—he
wasn't under the UFO for
more than a few
seconds. He said that when
he stopped
to really look at it he
had backed
away from under it. He
did feel some heat,
possibly radiating from the ground.
To further pursue
this line of speculation, the scoutmaster repeatedly
mentioned the unusual odor near
the UFO.
He described it as being "sharp"
or "pungent."
Ozone gas is "sharp"
or "pungent."
To quote
from a chemistry book: "Ozone is prepared by passing
air between
two plates
which are charged at a high
electrical potential." Electrical equipment again. Breathing too high a
concentration of ozone gas will also
cause you to lose consciousness.
I used
to try
out this
induction heating theory on people
to get their reaction. I tried
it out
one day
on a
scientist from Rand. He
practically leaped at the idea.
I laughed
when I explained that I thought
this theory just happened to tie
together the unanswered aspects of the incident
in Florida
and was not the
answer; he was slightly perturbed.
"What do you want?" he said.
"Does a UFO have to
come in and land on your
desk at ATICP"
chapter fourteen
Digesting the Data
It was soon after
we had
written a finis to the Case of the
Scoutmaster that I went
into Washington to give another
briefing on the latest
UFO developments.
Several reports had come in during
early August that had been
read with a good deal of
interest in the military and
other governmental agencies. By
late August 1952 several groups
in Washington
were following the UFO
situation very closely.
The sighting that
had stirred
everyone up came from Haneda AFB, now
Tokyo International Airport, in Japan.
Since the sighting came
from outside the U.S., we
couldn't go out and investigate it, but the intelligence
officers in the Far East Air
Force had done a good
job, so we had the
complete story of this startling
account of an encounter with
a UFO. Only
the answers
to a
few minor
questions had been unanswered, and a
quick wire to FEAF brought
back these missing data. Normally it
took up to three months
to get
routine questions back and
forth, but this time the
exchange of wires took only
a matter
of hours.
Several months after
the sighting
I talked
to one
of the
FEAF intelligence officers who
had investigated
it, and
in his estimation it was one
of the
best to come out of
the Far
East.
The first people
to see
the UFO
were two control tower operators who were walking across
the ramp
at the
air base
heading toward the tower
to start
the midnight
shift. They were about a half
hour early so they weren't
in any
big hurry
to get up into the tower—at
least not until they saw
a large
brilliant light off to
the northeast
over Tokyo Bay. They stopped to look at the
light for a few seconds
thinking that it might be an
exceptionally brilliant star, but both
men had spent many lonely nights
in a
control tower when they had nothing
to look
at except
stars and they had never
seen anything this bright before. Besides,
the light
was moving.
The two men had
lined it up with the
comer of a hangar and could see that it
was continually
moving closer and drifting a little
off to
their right.
In a minute
they had run across the
ramp, up the several hundred steps to the tower,
and were
looking at the light through 7x50 binoculars. Both of
the men,
and the
two tower
operators whom they were
relieving, got a good look
at the
UFO. The light was
circular in shape and had
a constant
brilliance. It appeared to be
the upper
portion of a large, round,
dark shape which was
about four times the diameter
of the
light itself. As they
watched, the UFO moved in
closer, or at least it appeared
to be
getting closer because it became
more distinct. When it
moved in, the men could
see a
second and dimmer light on the
lower edge of the dark,
shadowy portion.
In a few minutes
the UFO
had moved
off to
the east,
getting dimmer and dimmer as it disappeared. The four tower
men kept watching the
eastern sky, and suddenly the
light began to reappear. It stayed
in sight
a few
seconds, was gone again, and then
for the
third time it came back,
heading toward the air base.
This time
one of
the tower
operators picked up a microphone,
called the pilot of a
C-54 that was crossing Tokyo
Bay, and asked if
he could
see the
light. The pilot didn't see anything unusual.
At 11:45
p.m., according to the
logbook in the tower, one
of the operators called a nearby
radar site and asked if
they had an unidentified target on
their scopes. They did.
The FEAF intelligence
officers who investigated the sighting
made a special effort to
try to
find out if the radar's
unidentified target and the light
were the same
object. They deduced that they were
since, when the tower operators
and the radar operators compared notes
over the telephone, the light and
the radar
target were in the same
location and were moving in the
same direction.
For about
five minutes the radar tracked
the UFO
as it.
cut back
and forth
across the central part of
Tokyo Bay, sometimes traveling
so slowly
that it almost hovered and
then speeding up to
300 miles
an hour.
AH of
this time the tower operators were
watching the light through binoculars.
Several times when the
UFO approached
the radar
station-once it came within 10
miles—a radar operator went outside
to find
out if
he could
see the
light but no one at
the radar site ever saw it.
Back at the air base
the tower
operators had called other people and
they saw the light. Later
on the tower man said that
he had
the distinct
feeling that the light was highly
directional, like a spotlight.
Some of the
people who were watching thought
that the UFO might be a
lighted balloon; so, for the
sake of comparison, a lighted
weather balloon was released. But
the light
on the balloon was much more
"yellowish" than the
UFO and in a matter of
seconds it had traveled far
enough away that the fight was
no longer
visible. This gave the observers
a chance to compare
the size
of the
balloon and the size of
the dark, shadowy part
of the
UFO. Had the UFO been
10 miles away it would have
been 50 feet in diameter.
Three minutes after
midnight an F-94 scrambled from
nearby Johnson AFB came into
the area.
The ground
controller
sent the F-94 south of Yokahama, up Tokyo Bay,
and brought
him in "behind" the UFO. The
second that the ground controller
had the
F-94 pilot lined up and
told him that he was in
line for a radar run,
the radar
operator in the rear seat of
the F-94
called out that he had
a lock-on.
His target
was at 6,000 yards, 10 degrees
to the
right and 10 degrees below the F-94. The lock-on
was held
for ninety
seconds as the ground controller watched both the UFO
and the
F-94 make a turn
and come
toward the ground radar site.
Just as the target
entered the "ground clutter"—the permanent and solid target
near the radar station caused
by the
radar beam's striking the ground—the
lock-on was broken. The target seemed to pull away
swifdy from the
jet interceptor.
At almost this exact
instant the tower operators reported
that they had lost
visual contact with the UFO.
The tower
called the F-94 and
asked if they had seen
anything visually during the case—they hadn't.
The F-94
crew stayed in the area ten
or fifteen
more minutes but couldn't see
anything or pick up any more
targets on their radar.
Soon after
the F-94
left the area, both the
ground radar and the tower operators
picked up the UFO again.
In about
two minutes radar called
the tower
to say
that their target had just "broken
into three pieces" and that
the three
"pieces," spaced about a
quarter of a mile apart,
were leaving the area, going northeast.
Seconds later tower operators lost sight of the
fight.
The FEAF intelligence
officers had checked every possible
angle but they could
offer nothing to account for
the sighting.
There were lots
of opinions,
weather targets for example, but once again the chances
of a
weather target's being in exacdy the same
direction as a bright star
and having
the star appear to move with
the false
radar target aren't too likely—to say the least. And
then the same type of
thing had happened twice before inside
of a
month's time, once in California and once in Michigan.
As one of
the men
at the
briefing I gave said, "It's
incredible, and I can't believe
it, but
those boys in FEAF are
in a war—they're veterans—and
by damn,
I think
they know what they're talking about
when they say they've never
seen anything like this
before."
I could go into a long discourse
on the
possible explanations for this sighting;
I heard
many, but in the end
there would be only one positive
answer—the UFO could not be
identified as something we
knew about. It could have
been an interplanetary spaceship.
Many people thought this was
the answer and were all for
sticking their necks out and
establishing a category of conclusions
for UFO
reports and labeling it spacecraft. But the majority ruled,
and a
UFO remained
an unidentified flying object.
On my
next trip to the Pentagon
I spent
the whole
day talking to Major Dewey Foumet and two of his
bosses, Colonel W. A.
Adams and Colonel Weldon Smith,
about the UFO subject in general.
One of
the things
we talked
about was a new approach to
the UFO
problem—that of trying to prove that
the motion
of a
UFO as
it flew
through the air was inteUigendy controlled.
I don't
know who would get credit
for originating
the idea
of trying to analyze
the motion
of the
UFO's. It was one of those
kinds of ideas that are
passed around, with everyone adding
a few
modifications. We'd been
talking about making a study of
this idea for a long
time, but we hadn't had many reports to work
with; but now, with the
mass of data that we had
accumulated in June and July
and August,
the prospects of such
a study
looked promising.
The basic aim
of the
study would be to learn
whether the motion of the reported
UFO's was random or ordered.
Random motion is an unordered,
helter-skelter motion very
similar to a swarm of
gnats or flies milling around.
There is no apparent pattern or
purpose to their flight paths.
But take,
for example, swallows flying
around a chimney—they wheel, dart, and dip, but if
you watch
them closely, they have a definite
pattern in their movements—an ordered motion. The definite pattern
is intelligendy controlled because they are catching
bugs or getting in line
to go
down the chimney.
By the fall
of 1952
we had
a considerable
number of well-documented reports in
which the UFO's made a
series of maneuvers. If we could
prove that these maneuvers were
not random, but ordered,
it would
be proof
that the UFO's were things that
were intelligently controlled.
During our
discussion Major Fournet
brought up two reports in
which the UFO seemed to
know what it was doing
and wasn't just aimlessly
darting around. One of these
was the recent sighting from Haneda AFB, Japan, and the
other was the incident that happened
on the
night of July 29, when
an F-94 attempted to
intercept a UFO over eastern
Michigan. In both cases radar
had established
the track
of the
UFO.
In the
Haneda Incident, according
to the
sketch of the UFO's track, each
turn the UFO made was
constant and the straight 'legs" between the turns were
about the same length. The sketch of the UFO's
flight path as it moved
back and forth over Tokyo Bay
reminded me very much of
the "crisscross"
search patterns we used to
fly during
World War II when we were
searching for the crew of
a ditched
airplane. The only time the UFO
seriously deviated from this pattern
was when the F-94
got on
its tail.
The Michigan sighting
was even
better, however. In this case there
was a
definite reason for every move
that the UFO made. It made
a 180-degree
turn because the F-94 was
closing on it head on.
It alternately
increased and decreased its speed, but every time it
did this
it was
because the F-94 was closing in
and it
evidendy put on
speed to pull out ahead
far enough to get
out of
range of the F-94's radar.
To say
that this motion was
random and that it was
just a coincidence that the
UFO made
the 180-degree
turn when the F-94 closed in
head on and that it
was just
a coincidence
that the UFO speeded
up every
time the F-94 began to
get within radar range is pushing
the chance
of coincidence
pretty hard.
The idea
of the
motion analysis study sounded interesting
to me, but we were so
busy on Project Blue Book
we didn't
have time to do
it. So
Major Fournet offered to look into
it further and I promised him
all the
help we could give him.
In the
meantime my people in Project
Blue Book were contacting various scientists
in the
U.S., and indirectly in Europe, telling them about our
data, and collecting opinions.
We did this
in two
ways. In the United States
we briefed
various scientific meetings and
groups. To get the word
to the other countries, we enlisted
the gratis
aid of
scientists who were planning to attend
conferences or meetings in Europe.
We would brief these
European-bound scientists on all of the aspects
of the
UFO problem
so they
could informally discuss the problem with
their European colleagues.
The one thing
about these briefings that never
failed to amaze me, although it
happened time and time again,
was the interest in UFO's within
scientific circles. As soon as
the word spread that Project Blue
Book was giving official briefings
to groups
with the proper security clearances,
we had
no trouble in getting scientists to swap free advice
for a
briefing. I might add that we briefed only
groups who were engaged in government work and who
had the
proper security clearances solely because
we could
discuss any government project that
might be of help to
us in
pinning down the UFO. Our briefings
weren't just squeezed in either;
in many
instances we would arrive at
a place
to find
that a whole day had been
set aside
to talk
about UFO's. And never once
did I meet anyone who laughed
off the
whole subject of flying saucers even
though publicly these same people
had jovially sloughed off the press
with answers of "hallucinations," "absurd," or "a waste of
time and pioney." They
weren't wild-eyed fans but
they were certainly interested.
Colonel S. H.
Kirldand and I
once spent a whole day
briefing and talking to the
Beacon Hill Group, the code
name for a collection of some
of the
world's leading scientists and industrialists. This group, formed to
consider and analyze the toughest of
military problems, took a very
serious interest in our project
and gave
much good advice. At Los
Alamos and again at
Sandia Base our briefings were
given in auditoriums to standing room
only crowds. In addition I
gave my briefings at National Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics laboratories,
at Air
Research and Development centers, at
Office of Naval Research
facilities and at the Air
Force University. Then we
briefed special groups of scientists.
Normally scientists are a cautious lot
and stick
close to proven facts, keeping their
personal opinions confined to small groups
of friends,
but when
they know that there is
a sign on a door that
says "Classified Briefing
in Progress,"
inhibitions collapse like the
theories that explain all the
UFO's away. People say
just what they think.
I could
jazz up this part of
the UFO
story as so many other historians of the UFO
have and say that Dr.
So-and-So believes that the
reported flying saucers are from
outer space or that Dr. Whositz is firmly convinced that
Mars is inhabited. I talked to
plenty of Dr. So-and-Sos who believed
that flying saucers were real
and who
were absolutely convinced that
other planets or bodies in
the universe
were inhabited, but we
were looking for proven facts
and not
just personal opinions.
However, some of
the questions
we asked
the scientists
had to be answered by personal
opinions because the exact answers didn't exist. When such
questions came up, about all we
could do was to try
to get
the largest
and most
representative cross section
of personal
opinions upon which to base our
decisions. In this category of
questions probably the most frequently discussed was the possibility
that other celestial bodies in the
universe were populated with intelligent
beings. The exact answer to
this is that no one
knows. But the consensus was that
it wouldn't
be at
all surprising.
All the briefings
we were
giving added to our work
load because UFO reports were still
coming in in
record amounts. The lack of newspaper
publicity after the Washington sightings had had some
effect because the number of
reports dropped from nearly
500 in
July to 175 in August,
but this
was still far above
the normal
average of twenty to thirty
reports a month.
September 1952
started out with a rush,
and for
a while
it looked as if UFO sightings
were on the upswing again.
For some reason, we never could
determine why, we suddenly began
to get
reports from all over the
southeastern United States. Every morning, for
about a week or two,
we'd have a half .dozen or
so new
reports. Georgia and Alabama led
the field. Many of the reports
came from people in the
vicinity of the then new super-hush-hush
Atomic Energy Commission facility at
Savannah River, Georgia. And many
were coming from the port city
of Mobile,
Alabama. Our first thought, when the
reports began to pour in,
was that
the newspapers in these
areas were possibly stirring things
up with scare stories, but our
newspaper clipping service covered the majority of the southern
papers, and although we kept
looking for publicity, none showed up. In
fact, the papers only barely
mentioned one or two of
the sightings.
As they
came in, each of the sighting
reports went through our identification
processes; they were checked against
all balloon
flights, aircraft flights, celestial
bodies, and the MO file,
but more than half of them
came out as unknowns.
When the
reports first began to come
in, I
had called
the intelligence officers at
all of
the major
military installations in the Southeast unsuccessfully
trying to find out if
they could shed any light on
the cause
of the
sightings. One man, the man who
was responsible
for UFO
reports made to Brookley AFB, just
outside of Mobile, Alabama, took
a dim
view of all of the proceedings.
"They're all nuts," he said.
About a week later
his story
changed. It seems that one
night, about the fourth
night in a row that
UFO's had been reported near Mobile,
this man and several of
his assistants
decided to try to
see these
famous UFO's; about 10:00 p.m., the time
that the UFO's were usually
reported, they were gathered around the
telephone in the man's office
at Brookley AFB. Soon a report
came in. The first question
that the investigator who answered
the phone
asked was, "Can you still
see it?"
The answer
was "Yes,"
so the
officer took off to see
the UFO.
The same
thing happened twice more, and two
more officers left for different locations.
The fourth
time the phone rang the call
was from
the base
radar station. They were picking up a UFO on
radar, so the boss himself
took off. He saw the UFO
in air
out over
Mobile Bay and he saw
the return of the UFO on
the radarscope.
The next morning
he called
me at
ATIC and for over an
horn he told me
what had happened. Never have
I talked
to four more ardent flying saucer
believers.
We did
quite a bit of work
on the
combination radarvisual sighting at Brookley. First
of all,
radar-visual sightings were the best type
of UFO
sightings we received. There are
no explanations for how
radar can pick up a
UFO target
that is being watched visually at
the same
time. Maybe I should have said
there are no proven explanations
on how
this can happen, because, like everything
else associated with the UFO, there
was a
theory. During the Washington National Sightings several
people proposed the idea that
the same
temperature-inversion layer that
was causing
the radar
beam to bend down and pick
up a
ground target was causing the target to appear to
be in
the air.
They went on to say
that we couldn't get
a radar-visual
sighting unless the ground target was a truck, car,
house, or something else that
was lighted and could be seen
at a
great distance. The second reason the Brookley
AFB sighting
was so
interesting was that it knocked this
theory cold.
The radar
at Brookley AFB was so located
thajt part of
the area that it scanned was
over Mobile Bay. It was
in this
area that the UFO
was detected.
We thought
of the
theory that the same inversion layer
that bent the radar beam
also caused the target to appear
to be
in the
air, and we began to do
a little
checking. There was a slight
inversion but, according to our calculations,
it wasn't
enough to affect the radar. More important was the
fact that in the area
where the target appeared there were
no targets
to pick
up—let alone lighted targets. We checked
and rechecked
and found
that at the time
of the
sighting there were no ships,
buoys, or anything else that would
give a radar return in
the area
of Mobile Bay in
which we were interested.
Although this sighting
wasn't as glamorous as some
we had, it was highly significant
because it was possible to
show that the UFO
couldn't have been a lighted
surface target.
While we
were investigating the sighting we
talked to several electronics specialists about our radar-visual sightings. One of the most
frequent comments we heard was,
"Why do all of these radar-visual
sightings occur at night?"
The answer was
simple: they don't. On August
1, just before
dawn, an ADC radar station
outside of Yaak, Montana,
on the extreme northern border
of the
United States, picked
up a UFO. The
report was very
similar to
the sighting
at Brookley
except it happened
in the daylight
and, instead of seeing a light, the crew at
the radar station saw
a "dark, cigar-shaped object" right where the
radar had the UFO pinpointed.
What these
people saw is a mystery
to this
day.
Late in
September I made a trip
out to
Headquarters, ADC to brief General Chidlaw and his
staff on the past few
months' UFO activity.
Our plans
for periodic
briefings, which we had originally
set up with ADC, had suffered a bit in
the summer
because we were all busy elsewhere.
They were still giving us
the fullest co-operation, but
we hadn't
been keeping them as thoroughly read in as we
would have liked to. I'd
finished the briefing and was eating
lunch at the officers' club
with Major Veme Sadowski, Project Blue Book's
liaison officer in ADC Intelligence, and several other officers.
I had
a hunch
that something was bothering
these people. Then finally Major Sadowski said, "Look, Rupe, are you giving us
the Straight story on
these UFO's?"
I thought he
meant that I was trying
to spice
things up a little, so I
said that since he had copies of most
of our
reports and had read
them, he should know that
I was
giving them the facts straight
across the board.
Then one of the other officers
at the
table cut in. "That's just the point, we do
have the reports and we
have read them. None of us
can understand
why Intelligence
is so
hesitant to accept the
fact that something we just
don't know about is flying around
in our
skies—unless you are trying to cover up something big."
Everyone at the table put in his ideas.
One radar
man said that he'd looked over several
dozen radar reports and that his
conclusion was that the UFO's
couldn't be anything but interplanetary spaceships. He started to
give his reasons when another radar
man leaped
into the conversation. This man said
that he'd read every radar
report, too, and that there wasn't one that couldn't be explained
as a
weather phenomenon—even the radar-visual
sightings. In fact, he wasn't even
convinced that we had ever
gotten such a thing as radar-visual
sighting. He wanted to see
proof that an object that
was seen
visually was the same object
that the radar had picked up.
Did we
have it?
I got back
into the discussion at this
point with the answer. No, we didn't have proof
if you
want to get technical about
the degree of proof
needed. But we did have
reports where the radar and visual
bearings of the UFO coincided
almost exactly. Then we
had a
few reports
where airplanes had followed the UFO's
and the
maneuvers of the UFO that
the pilot reported were
the same
as the
maneuvers of the UFO that was
being tracked by radar.
A lieutenant colonel who had been
sitting quietly by interjected a well-chosen comment. "It
seems the difficulty that Project Blue
Book faces is what to
accept and what not to accept
as proof."
The colonel
had hit
the proverbial
nail on its proverbial head.
Then he
went on, "Everyone has a
different idea of what proof really is. Some people
think we should accept a
new model of an airplane after
only five or ten hours
of flight
testing. This is enough
proof for them that the
airplane will fly. But others wouldn't
be happy
unless it was flight-tested for five or ten years.
These people have set an
unreasonably high value on
the word
proof.' The answer is somewhere
in between these two
extremes."
But where
is this
point when it comes to
UFO's?
There was
about a thirty-second pause for
thought after the colonel's little speech.
Then someone asked, "What about these recent sightings at
Mainbrace?"
In late
September 1952 the NATO naval
forces had held maneuvers off the
coast of Europe; they were
called Operation Mainbrace. Before
they had started someone in
the Pentagon had half seriously mentioned
that Naval Intelligence should keep
an eye
open for UFO's, but no
one really
expected the UFO's to
show up. Nevertheless, once again
the UFO's were their old unpredictable
selves—they were there.
On September 26,
a U.S.
newspaper reporter aboard an aircraft carrier in the North
Sea was
photographing a carrier take-off in color
when he happened to look
back down the flight deck and
saw a
group of pilots and flight
deck crew watching something
in the
sky. He went back to
look and there was a silver
sphere moving across the sky
just behind the fleet of ships.
The object
appeared to be large, plenty
large enough to show
up in
a photo,
so the
reporter shot several pictures. They were
developed right away and turned
out to be excellent. He had
gotten the super-structure of the carrier
in each
one and,
judging by the size of
the object
in each
successive photo, one could see
that it was moving rapidly.
The intelligence
officers aboard the carrier studied
the photos. The object looked like
a balloon.
From its size it was apparent
that if it were a
balloon, it would have been
launched from one of
the ships,
so the
word went out on the
TBS radio: "Who launched
a balloon?"
The answer
came back on the TBS:
"Nobody."
Naval Intelligence
double-checked, triple-checked and quadruple-checked every
ship near the carrier but
they could find no one who
had launched
the UFO.
We kept after
the Navy.
The pilots
and the
flight deck crew who saw the
UFO had
mixed feelings— some were sure that
the UFO
was a
balloon while others were just
as sure that it
couldn't have been. It was
traveling too fast, and although it
resembled a balloon in some
ways it was far from being
identical to the hundreds of
balloons that the crew had seen
the aerologists
launch.
We probably wouldn't
have tried so hard to
get a
definite answer to the
Mainbrace photos if
it hadn't
been for the events that took
place during the rest of
the operation,
I explained to
the group
of ADC
officers.
The day after
the photos
had been
taken six RAF pilots flying a formation of jet
fighters over the North Sea
saw something
coming from the direction of
the Mainbrace fleet. It was a shiny,
spherical object, and they couldn't
recognize it as anything "friendly" so they
took after it. But in
a minute
or two they lost it. When
they neared their base, one
of the pilots looked back and
saw that
the UFO
was now
following him. He turned but
the UFO
also turned, and again it outdistanced
the Meteor
in a
matter of minutes.
Then on
the third
consecutive day a UFO showed
up near the fleet, this time
over Topcliffe Aerodrome in England. A
pilot in a Meteor was
scrambled and managed to get his
jet fairly
close to the UFO, close
enough to see that the object
was "round,
silvery, and white" and seemed
to "rotate
around its vertical axis and
sort of wobble." But before
he could close in
to get
a really
good look it was gone.
It was these
sightings, I was told by
an RAF
exchange intelligence officer in
the Pentagon, that
caused the RAF to officially recognize the UFO.
By the time
I'd finished
telling about the Mainbrace Sightings, it was after the
lunch hour in the club
and we
were getting some get-the-hell-out-of-here
looks from the waiters, who wanted to clean up
the dining
room. But before I could
suggest that we leave,
Major Sadowski repeated his original question—the one that
started the whole discussion—"Are you holding out on us?"
I gave him
an unqualified
"No." We wanted
more positive proof, and until we
had it,
UFO's would remain unidentified flying objects and no more.
The. horizontal
shaking of heads illustrated some of the group's thinking.
We had plans
for getting
more positive proof, however, and I said that just
as soon
as we
returned to Major Sadow-ski's office'I'd tell them what we
contemplated doing.
We moved
out onto
the sidewalk
in front
of the
club and, after discussing a few
more sightings, went back into
the security area to Sadowski's office and
I laid
out our
plans.
First of all,
in November
or December
the U.S.
was going to shoot the first
H-bomb during Project Ivy. Although
this was Top Secret
at the
time, it was about the
most poorly kept secret in history—everybody
seemed to know all about it.
Some people in the Pentagon
had the
idea that there were beings, earthly
or otherwise,
who might
be interested
in our activities in the Pacific,
as they
seemed to be in Operation Mainbrace. Consequently Project Blue
Book had been directed to get
transportation to the
test area to set up a
reporting net, brief people on
how to
report, and analyze their reports on
the spot.
Secondly, Project
Blue Book was working on
plans for an extensive system to
track UFO's by instruments. Brigadier General Garland, who
had been
Gener 1 Samford's Deputy Director for Production
and who
had been
riding herd on the UFO project
for General
Samford, was now chief at ATIC,
having replaced Colonel Dunn, who
went to the Air War College.
General Garland had long been
in favor
of trying to get
some concrete information, either positive
or negative, about the
UFO's. This planned tracking system
would replace the defraction grid cameras
that were still being developed at
ATIC.
Thirdly, as soon
as we
could we were planning to
gather together a group
of scientists
and let
them spend a full week
or two studying the UFO problem.
When I left ADC,
Major Sadowski and crew were satisfied
that we weren't just
sitting around twiddling our UFO
reports.
During the
fall of 1952 reports continued
to drop
off steadily. By December we were
down to the normal average
of thirty per month,
with about 20 per cent
of these
falling into the "Unknown"
category.
Our proposed
trip to the Pacific to
watch for UFO's during the H-bomb test was canceled
at the
last mi lute because we couldn't get space on
an airplane.
But the
crews of Navy and Air Force
security forces who did go
out to
the tests
were thoroughly briefed to
look for UFO's, and they
were given the procedures on how
to track
and report
them. Back at Dayton we stood
by to
make quick analysis of any
reports that might come in—none
came. Noth.ng that fell into the
UFO category
was seen
during the entire Project Ivy series of atomic shots.
By December work
on the
planning phase of our instrumentation
program was completed. During the
two months
we had been working on it
we had
considered everything from giving Ground Observer
Corps spotters simple wooden tracking devices to building special
radars and cameras. We had talked
over our problems with the
people at Wright
Field who knew
about missile-tracking equipment,
and we
had consulted the camera
technicians at the Air Force
Aerial Reconnaissance Laboratory. Astronomers explained their equipment and the techniques to use, and we
went to Rome, New York, and
Boston to enlist the aid
of the
people who develop the Air Force's
electronic equipment.
Our final plan
called for visual spotting stations
to be
established all over northern
New Mexico.
We'd picked this test location because
northern New Mexico still consistently
produced more reports than
any other
area in the U.S. These
visual spotting stations would
be equipped
with a sighting devise similar
to a
gun sight
on a
bomber. All the
operator would have to
do would
be to
follow the UFO with the
tracking device, and the
exact time and the UFO's
azimuth and elevation angles would be
automatically recorded. The visual spotting stations
would all be tied together
with an interphone system, so that
as soon
as the
tracker at one station saw something
he could
alert the other spotters in
the area. If two
stations tracked the same object,
we could
immediately compute its speed
and altitude.
This visual spotting
net would
be tied
into the existing radar defense net
in the
Albuquerque-Los Alamos area.
At each radar site we proposed
that a long focal-length camera be synchronized to the
turning radar antenna, so that
any time the operator saw a
target he could press a
button and photograph the portion of
the sky
exactly where the radar said a UFO was located.
These cameras would actually be
astronomical telescopes, so that
even the smallest light or
object could be photographed.
In addition
to this
photography system we proposed that
a number of sets of instruments be set out around
the area.
Each set would contain
instruments to measure nuclear radiation,
any disturbances
in the
earth's magnetic field, and the passage
of a
body that was giving off
heat. The instruments would continually
be sending
their information to a central "UFO command post,"
which would also get reports
direcdy from the
radars and the visual 'spotting
stations.
This instrumentation plan would cost about
$250,000 because we planned to
use as
much surplus equipment as possible and tie it into
existing communications systems, where
they already existed. After the
setup was established, it would cost
about $25,000 a year to
operate. At first glance this seemed like a lot
of money,
but when
we figured
out how much the UFO project
had cost
the Air
Force in the past and how
much it would probably cost
in the
future, the price didn't seem too
bad—especially if we
could solve the UFO problem once
and for
all.
The powers-that-be
at ATIC
o.k.'d the plan
in December
and it
went to Washington, where it
would have to be aproved by General
Samford before it went to
ADC and
then back to the
Pentagon for higher Air Force
official blessing. From all indications
it looked
as if
we would
get the
necessary blessings.
But the majority
of the
effort at Project Blue Book
during the fall of 1952 had
gone toward collecting together all
of the bits and pieces of
data that we had accumulated
over the past year and a
half. We had sorted out
the best
of the
"Unknowns" and made studies
of certain
aspects of the UFO problem, so
that when we could assemble
a panel
of scientists to review the data
we could
give them the overall picture,
not just
a basketful
of parts.
Everyone who knew
about the proposed panel meeting
was eager to get
started because everyone was interested
in knowing what this
panel would have to say.
Although the group of scientists wouldn't be empowered to
make the final decision, their recommendations
were to go to the
President if they decided that the
UFO's were real. And any
recommendations made by
the group
of names
we planned
to assemble
would carry a lot of
weight.
In the Pentagon
and at
ATIC book was being made
on what their recommendations would be.
When I put my money down,
the odds
were 5 to 3 in
favor of the UFO.
CHAPTER
FIFTEEN
The Radiation Story
The idea for gathering
together a group of scientists,
to whom we referred as our
"panel of experts," had been
conceived early in 1952—as soon
as serious
talk about the possibility that the UFO's might
be interplanetary
spaceships had taken hold in both
military and scientific circles. In
fact, when Project Grudge was reorganized
in the
summer of 1951 the idea had
been mentioned, and this was
the main
reason that our charter
had said
we were
to be
only a factfinding
group. The people on previous
UFO projects
had gone off on tangents of
speculation about the identity of
the UFO's; they first declared that
they were spacecraft, then later, in
a complete
about-face, they took the whole
UFO problem as one big belly
laugh. Both approaches had gotten
the Air Force into
trouble. Why they did this
I don't
know, because from the start we
realized that no one at
ATIC, in the Air Force, or
in the
whole military establishment was qualified to give a final
yes or
no answer
to the
UFO problem.
Giving a final answer would
require a serious decision —probably one of the most
serious since the beginning of
man.
During 1952
many highly qualified engineers and
scientists had visited Project
Blue Book and had spent
a day
or two
going over our reports.
Some were very much impressed
with the reports—some had all the
answers.
But all
of the
scientists who read our reports
readily admitted that even though
they may have thought that
the reports did or did not
indicate visitors from outer space,
they would want to give the
subject a good deal more
study before they ever committed
themselves in writing. Consequently these people's opinions, although
they were valuable, didn't give us
enough to base a decision
upon. We still needed a group
to study
our material
thoroughly and give us written conclusions and recommendations which could be sent to
the President
if necessary.
Our panel of
experts was to consist of
six or
eight of the top scientists in the United States.
We fully
realized that even the Air Force
didn't have enough "pull" just to ask all of
these people to drop the
important work they were engaged in and spend a
week or two studying our
reports. Nor did we want to
do it
this way; we wanted to
be sure
that we had something
worth while before asking for their
valuable time. So, working
through other government agencies, we organized a preliminary
review panel of four people. All of them were
competent scientists and we knew
their reputations were such
that if they recommended that a certain top scientist sit on a panel to
review pur material he would do
it.
In late
November 1952 the preliminary review panel met at ATIC
for three
days.
When the meeting
ended, the group unanimously recommended that a "higher
court" be formed to review
the case
of the UFO. In an hour
their recommendation was accepted by higher Air Force authorities,
and the
men proceeded
to recommend the members for our
proposed panel. They picked six men who had reputations
as being
both practical and theoretical
scientists and who were known
to have
no biased
opinions regarding the UFO's
The meeting of
the panel,
which would be held in
Washington, was tentatively scheduled for
late December or early January—depending upon when
all of
the scientists
who had been asked to attend
would be free. At Project
Blue Book activity went into high
gear as we made preparations
for the meeting. But
before we were very far
along our preparations were temporarily sidetracked—I got a lead
on the facts behind a rumor.
Normally we didn't pay attention
to rumors, but this
one was
in a
different class.
Ever since the
Air Force
had become
interested in UFO reports, the comment
of those
who had
been requested to look them over
and give
a professional
opinion was that we lacked the
type of data "you could
get your
teeth into." In even our best
reports we had to rely
upon what someone had seen.
I'd been
told many times that if
we had
even one piece of
information that was substantiated by some land of recorded
proof—a set of cinetheodolite movies of
a UFO, a spectrum photograph, or any other kind
of instrumented
data that one could sit
down and study—we would have no difficulty getting almost
any scientist
in the
world interested in actively
helping us find the answer
to the
UFO riddle.
The rumor that
caused me to temporarily halt our preparations for the high-level conference involved data that
we might be able to get
our teeth
into.
This is
the way
it went.
In the fall
of 1949,
at some
unspecified place in the United
States, a group of
scientists had set up equipment
to measure
background radiation, the small
amount of harmless radiation that is always present in
our atmosphere.
This natural radiation varies to
a certain
degree, but will never increase
by any appreciable amount unless there
is a
good reason.
According to
the rumor,
two of
the scientists
at the
unnamed place were watching the
equipment one day when, for no
apparent reason, a sudden increase
of radiation
was indicated. The radiation
remained high for a few
seconds, then
dropped back to normal. The
increase over normal was not sufficient
to be
dangerous, but it definitely was unusual All
indications pointed to equipment malfunction
as the
most probable explanation. A quick check
revealed no obvious trouble with the
gear, and the two scientists
were about to start a more
detailed check when a third
member of the radiation crew came
rushing into the lab.
Before they could
tell the newcomer about the
unexplained radiation they had just
picked up, he blurted out
a story of his own. He
had driven
to a
nearby town, and on his return
trip, as he approached the research lab, something in the sky suddenly caught
his eye.
High in the cloudless blue he saw three silvery
objects moving in a V
formation. They appeared to
be spherical
in shape,
but he
wasn't sure. The first fact that
had hit
him was
that the objects were traveling too fast to be
conventional aircraft. He jammed on
the brakes, stopped his
car, and shut off the
engine. No sound. All he could
hear was the quiet whir
of a
generator in the research lab. In
a few
seconds the objects had disappeared
from sight.
After the first
two scientists
had briefed
their excited colleague on the
unusual radiation they had detected,
the three
men asked each other
the $64
question: Was there any connection between the two incidents?
Had the
UFO's caused the excessive radiation?
They checked
the time.
Knowing almost exactly when the
instruments had registered the increased radiation, they checked on how long
it took
to drive
to the
lab from
the point where the three silver
objects had been seen. The
times correlated within a
minute or two. The three
men proceeded
to check
their radiation equipment thoroughly. Nothing was wrong.
The rumor stopped
here. Nothing that I or
anyone else on Project Blue Book
could find out shed any
further light on the source of
the story.
People associated with projects similar to the research lab
that was mentioned in the
rumor were sought out and questioned.
Many of them had heard
the story, but no
one could
add any
new details.
The three
unknown scientists, at the
unnamed lab, in an unknown
part of the United
States, might as well never
have existed. Maybe they hadn't.
Almost a year
after I had first heard
the UFO-radiation
story I got a
long-distance call from a friend
on the
west coast. I had seen him
several months before, at which
time I told him about this
curious rumor and expressed my
wish to find out how authentic
it was.
Now, on the phone, he
told me he had just been
in contact
with two people he knew
and they had the
whole story. He said they
would be in Los
Angeles the following
night and would like very
much to talk to me.
I hated
to fly
clear to the west coast
on what
might be a wild-goose chase, but
I did.
I couldn't
afford to run the risk
of losing an opportunity
to turn
that old recurrent rumor into fact.
Twenty hours
later I met the two
people at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. We talked
for several
hours that night, and got the
details on the rumor and
a lot
more that I hadn't bargained for.
Both of my informants were physicists working for
the Atomic
Energy Commission, and were recognized in their fields. They
wanted no publicity and I
promised them that they
would get none. One of
the men
knew all the details
behind the rumor, and did
most of the talking. To keep
my promise
of no
publicity, I'll call him the
"scientist."
The rumor
version of the UFO-radiation story that had been kicking
around in Air Force and
scientific circles for so long had
been correct in detail but
it was
by no
means complete. The scientist said
that after the initial sighting
had taken place word was spread
at the
research lab that the next time
the instruments
registered abnormal amounts of radiation, some of the personnel
were to go outside immediately
and look
for some
object in the sky.
About three weeks
after the first incident a
repetition did occur. While
excessive radiation was registering on the instruments in the lab, a
lone dark object vvas seen streaking
across the sky. Again the instruments were checked but, as
before, no malfunction was found.
After this
second sighting, according to the
scientist, an investigation was started at
the laboratory.
The people
who made the visual observations weren't sure that the
object they had seen couldn't have
been an airplane. Someone thought that perhaps some type
of radar
equipment in the airplane, if that's
what the object was, might
have affected the radiation-detection
equipment. So arrangements were made to
fly all
types of aircraft over the
area with their radar in operation.
Nothing unusual happened. All possible
types of airborne research
equipment were traced during similar flights in the hope
that some special equipment not
normally carried in aircraft
would be found to have
caused the jump in radiation. But nothing out of
the ordinary
occurred during these tests either.
It was tentatively
concluded, the scientist continued, that the abnormally high radiation
readings were "officially"
due to some freakish equipment malfunction
and that
the objects
sighted visually were birds or
airplanes. A reports
to this
effect was made to
military authorities, but since the
conclusion stated that no flying
saucers were involved, the report
went into some unknown
file. Project Blue Book never
got it.
Shortly after
the second
UFO-radiation episode the research group
finished its work. It was
at this
time that the scientist had first
become aware of the incidents
he related
to me. A friend of his,
one of
the men
involved in the sightings, had sent the details
in a
letter.
As the
story of the sightings spread
it was
widely discussed in scientific circles, with the result
that the conclusion, an equipment
malfunction, began to be more
seriously questioned. Among the
scientists who felt that further
investigation of such
phenomena was in order, were
the man
to whom I was
talking and some of the
people who had made the original
sightings.
About a year later
the scientist
and these
original investigators were working together.
They decided to make a
few more tests, on their own
time, but with radiation-detection equipment so designed
that the possibility of malfunction
would be almost nil.
They formed a group of
people who were interested in the
project, and on evenings and
weekends assembled and set up
their equipment in an abandoned
building on a small
mountain peak. To insure privacy
and to avoid arousing undue interest
among people not in on
the project, the scientist
and his
colleagues told everyone that they had
formed a mineral club. The
"mineral club" deception covered
their weekend expeditions because "rock
hounds" are notorious for
their addiction to scrambling around on mountains in search
for specimens.
The equipment
that the group had installed
in the
abandoned building was designed to
be self-operating.
Geiger tubes were arranged in a
pattern so that some idea
as to the direction
of the
radiation source could be oDtained. During the original
sightings the equipment-mali unction
factor could not be definitely established or refuted because
certain critical data had
not been
measured.
To get
data on visual sightings, the "mineral club" had to rely on the flying saucer grapevine,
which exists at every major scientific laboratory in the
country.
By late
summer of 1950 they were
in business.
For the
next three months the
scientist and his group kept
their radiation equipment operating
twenty-four hours a day, but the
tapes showed nothing except the
usual background activity. The
saucer grapevine reported sightings in
the general area of the tests,
but none
close to the instrumented mountaintop.
The trip
to the
instrument shack, which had to
be made
every two days to
change tapes, began to get
tiresome for the "rock hounds," and there was some
talk of discontinuing the watch.
But persistence paid off. Early in
December, about ten o'clock in the
morning, the grapevine reported sightings
of a
silvery, circular-shaped object near
the instrument
shack. The UFO was seen by
several people.
When the "rock
hounds" checked the recording tapes
in the shack they found that
several of the Geiger tubes
had been triggered at 10:17 a.m. The
registered radiation increase was about
100 times
greater than the normal background
activity.
Three more
times during the next two
months the "mineral club's"
equipment recorded abnormal radiation on
occasions when the grapevine
reported visual sightings of (JFO's.
One of the visual sightings was
substantiated by radar.
After these incidents
the "mineral
club" kept its instruments in operation until June
1951, but nothing more was
recorded. And, curiously enough,
during this period while the radiation
level remained normal, the visual
sightings in the area dropped off
too. The "mineral club" decided to concéntrate on determining the significance
of the
data they had obtained.
Accordingly, the scientist
and the
group made a detailed study of their mountaintop findings. They had friends
working* on many research projects
throughout the United States and managed to visit and
confer with them while on
business trips. They investigated
the posibility of unusual sunspot activity, but sunspots had been
normal during the brief periods of high radiation. To clinch the elimination
of sun-spots
as a
cause, their record tapes showed
no bursts
of radiation when sunspot activity had
been abnormal.
The "rock
hounds" checked every possible research
project that might have produced
some stray radiation for their
instruments to pick up.
They found nothing. They checked
and rechecked their instruments,
but could
find no factor that might have
induced false readings. They let
other scientists in on their
findings, hoping that these outsiders
might be able to put their
fingers on errors that had
been overlooked.
Now, more
than a year after the
occurrance of the
mysterious incidents that they had
recorded, a year spent in
analyzing their data, the
"rock hounds" had no answer.
By the best
scientific tests that they had
been able to apply, the visual
sightings and the high radiation
had taken place more or less simultaneously.
Intriguing ideas
are hard
to kill,
and this
one had
more than one life, possibly because
of the
element of mystery which surrounds the
subject of flying saucers. But
the scientific mind thrives
on taking
the mystery
out of
unexplained events, so it is
not surprising
that the investigation went on.
According to
my friend
the scientist,
a few
people outside the laboratory where the "rock hounds" worked were told about
the activities
of the
"mineral club," and they started radiation-detection groups
of their
own.
For instance, two
graduate astronomy students from a
southwestern university started a
similar watch, on a modest
scale, using a modified
standard Geiger counter as their
detection unit. They did not
build a recorder into their
equipment, however, and consequently were forced to man
their equipment continuously, which naturally cut down
the time
they were in operation.
On two
occasions they reportedly detected
a burst
of high
radiation.
Although the
veracity of the two astronomers
was not
doubted, the scientist felt
that the accuracy of their
readings was poor because of the
rather low quality of their
equipment.
The scientist then
told me about a far
more impressive effort to verify or
disprove the findings of the
"mineral club." Word of the "rock
hounds" and their work had
also spread to a large laboratory
in the
East. An Air Force colonel,
on duty at the lab, told
the story
to some
of his
friends, and they decided to look
personally into the situation.
Fortunately these people
were in a wonderful spot
to make such
an investigation.
At their
laboratory an extensive survey of the
surrounding area was being made.
An elaborate
system of radiation-detection equipment had been set
up for
a radius of 100
miles around the lab. In
addition, the defenses of the
area included a
radar net.
Thanks to the
flashing of silver eagles, the
colonel's group got permission to check
the records
of the
radiation-survey station and to
look over the logs of
the radar
stations. They found instances where, during
the same
period of time that radiation in the area had
been much higher than normal,
radar had had a
UFO on
the scope.
These events had occurred during
the period
from January 1951 until about
June 1951.
Upon learning of
the tentative
but encouraging
findings that the colonel's group had
dug out
of their
past records, people on both the
radiation-survey crews and
at the
radar sites became interested in co-operating
for further
investigation. A tie-in
with the local saucer grapevine
established a three-way check.
One evening in
July, just before sunset, two
of the
colonel's group were driving home from the
laboratory. As they sped along the highway they noticed
two cars
stopped ahead of them. The
occupants were standing beside the
road, looking at something in the
sky.
The two
scientists stopped, got out of
their car, and scanned the sky
too. Low on the eastern
horizon they saw a bright circular
object moving slowly north. They
watched it for a while, took
a few
notes, then drove back to the
lab.
Some interesting
news awaited them there. Radar
had picked up an unidentified target near the spot
where the scientists in the car
had seen
the UFO,
and it
had been
traveling north. A fighter
had been
scrambled, but when it got into
the proper
area, the radar target was
off the
scope. The pilot glimpsed something that
looked like the reported UFO, but before he could
check further he had to
turn into the sun to get
on an
interception course, and he lost
the object.
Several days
passed before the radiation reports
from all stations could be collected.
When the reports did come
in they showed that stations east
of the
laboratory, on an approximate line with the radar
track, had shown the highest
increase in radiation. Stations west of the
lab showed
nothing.
The possible
significance of this well-covered incident spurred the colonel's group
to extend
and refine
their activities. Their idea was
to build
a radiation-detection
instrument in an empty wing tank
and hang
the tank
on an
F-47. Then when a UFO was
reported they would fly a
search pattern in the area and
try to
establish whether or not a
certain sector of the
sky was
more radioactive than other sectors.
Also, they proposed to
build a highly directional detector for the F-47 and
attempt actually to track a
UFO.
The design
of such
equipment was started, but many
delays occurred. Before the colonel's
group could get any of
the equipment built, some of the
members left the lab for
other jobs, and the colonel, who
sparked the operation, was himself
transferred elsewhere. The entire effort
collapsed.
The scientist was
not surprised
that I hadn't heard the
story of the colonel's
group. All the people involved,
he said,
had kept it quiet
in order
to avoid
ridicule. The scientist added that he
would be glad to give
me all
the data
he had
on the sightings of his "mineral
club," and he told me
where to get the information about the two astronomers
and the
colonel's group.
Armed with
the scientist's
notes and recorder tapes, I
left for my office at Wright-Patterson
Air Force
Base, Dayton.
With the blessings
of my
chief, I started to run
down the rest of the radiation
information. The data we had,
especially that from the
scientist's "mineral club,"
had been
thoroughly analyzed, but we thought
that since we now had
access to more general data something
new and
more significant might be found.
First I contacted the
government agency for which all
of the people involved in these
investigations had been
working, the scientists who recorded
the original
incident, the scientist and his "mineral
club," the colonel's group, and
the rest.
The people
in the
agency were very co-operative but stressed the fact that
the activities
I was
investigating were strictly the extracurricular affairs of the scientists
involved, had no official sanction, and
should not be tied in
with the agency in any way,
shape, or form. This closed-door
reaction was typical of how the
words "flying saucer"
seem to scare
some people.
They did help
me locate
the report
on the
original incident, however, and since
it seemed
to be
the only
existing copy, I arranged
to borrow
it.
About this
same time we located the
two graduate
astronomy students in New Mexico.
Both now had their Ph.D.'s
and held responsible jobs on highly classified
projects. They repeated their story, which I
had first
heard from the scientist, but had kept no
record of their activities.
On one occasion,
just before dawn on a
Sunday morning, they were on the
roof, making some meteorological observations. One of them
was listening
to the
Geiger counter when he detected a
definite increase in the clicking.
Just as the
frequency of the clicks reached
its highest
peak—almost a steady buzz—a
large fireball, described by them as
"spectacular," flashed across
the sky.
Both of the observers had seen
several of the green fireballs
and said
that this object was
similar in all respects except
that the color was a brilliant
blue-white.
With the
disappearance of the fireball, the
counter once more settled down to
a steady click
per second.
They added that once before they
had detected
a similar
increase in the frequency of the
clicks but had seen nothing
in the
sky.
In telling their
story, both astronomers stressed the
point that their data were open
to a
great deal of criticism, mainly because of the limited
instrumentation they had
used. We agreed. Still their work
tended to support the findings
of the
more elaborate and systematic
radiation investigations.
The gods
who watch
over the UFO project were
smiling about this time, because one
morning I got a call
from a colonel on Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
He was
going to be in our area
that morning and planned to
stop in to see me.
He arrived in
a few minutes
and turned
out to
be none
other than the colonel
who had
headed the group which had
investigated UFO's and radiation
at the
eastern laboratory. He repeated
his story.
It was
the same
as I
had heard
from the scientist, with a few
insignificant changes. The colonel had no records of his
group's operations, but knew who
had them. He promised to get
a wire off
to the
person immediately, which he did.
The answer was
a bit disappointing.
During the intervening months the
data had been scattered out
among the members of the colonel's
group, and when the group
broke up, so did its collection
of records.
So all we
had to
fall back on was the
colonel's word, but since he now
was heading
a top-priority
project at Wright, it would be
difficult not to believe him.
After obtaining the
colonel's story, we collected all
available data concerning known incidents
in which
there seemed to be a correlation
between the visual sighting of
UFO's and the presence of excess
atomic radiation in the area
of the
sightings.
There was one
last thing to do. I
wanted to take the dates and
times of all the reported
radiation increases and check them against
all sources
of UFO
reports. This project would take a
lot of
leg work
and digging,
but T
felt that it would offer the
most positive and complete evidence
we could
assemble as to whether
or not
a correlation
existed.
Accordingly, we
dug into
our files,
ADC radar
logs, press wire service files, newspaper
morgues in the sighting area,
and the files of
individuals who collect data on
saucers. Whenever we found a
visual report that correlated with a radiation peak we checked it
against weather conditions, balloon tracks, astronomical reports, etc.
As soon as
the data
had all
been assembled, I arranged for
a group of
Air Force
consultants to look it over.
I got
the same old answer—the data still
aren't good enough. The men
were very much interested
in the
reports, but when it came
time to putting their
comments on paper they said,
"Not enough conclusive evidence." If in some
way the
UFO's could have been photographed at the same time
that the radiation detectors
were going wild, it would
have been a different story, they
later told me, but with
the data
I had
for them this was
the only
answer they could give. No
one could explain the sudden bursts
of radiation,
but there
was no proof that they were
associated with UFO's.
The board's ruling
wrote finish to this investigation.
I informed
the colonel,
and he
didn't like the decision. Later
I passed through the
city where the scientist was
working. I stopped over a few
hours to brief him on
the board's
decision. He shook his head
in disbelief.
It is interesting
to note
that both the colonel and
the scientist reacted in the same
way. We're not fools—we were
there—we saw it—they didn't.
What do they want for
proof?
CHAPTER
SIXTEEN
The Hierarchy Ponders
By early January 1953
the scientists
who were
to be
members of our panel of
experts had been contacted and
had agreed to sit in judgment
of the
UFO. In turn, we agreed
to give them every detail about
the UFO.
We had
our best
reports for them to
read, and we were going
to show
them the two movies that some
intelligence officers considered as the "positive
proof—the Tremonton Movie and the
Montana Movie.
When this
high court convened on the
morning of January 12, the first
thing it received was its
orders; one of three verdicts would be acceptable:
1.
All UFO reports
are explainable
as known
objects or natural phenomena; therefore the
investigation should be permanently discontinued.
2.
The UFO reports
do not
contain enough data upon which to base a final
conclusion. Project Blue Book should be continued in hopes
of obtaining
better data.
3.
The UFO's are
interplanetary spacecraft.
The written
verdict, the group was told,
would be given to the National
Security Council, a council made
up of
the directors of all U.S. intelligence
agencies, and thence it would go
to the
President -of the United States—if
they should decide that the UFO's
were interplanetary spacecraft.
Because of
military regulations, the names of
the panel
275
members, like
the names
of so
many other people associated with the UFO story, cannot
be revealed.
Two of
the men
had made names for
themselves as practical physicists—they could transform the
highest theory for practical uses.
One of
these men had developed
the radar
that pulled us out of
a big hole at the beginning
of World
War II,
and the
other had been one of the
fathers of the H-bomb. Another
of the
panel members is now
the chief
civilian adviser to one of
our top military commanders,
and another
was an
astronomer whose unpublished fight to get the
UFO recognized
is respected
throughout scientific circles. There was
a man
who is noted for his highly
theoretical physics and mathematics, and another who had pioneered
operations research during World War II.
The sixth
member of the panel had
been honored by the American Rocket
Society and the International Astronautical Federation for his work in
moving space travel from the Buck
Rogers realm to a point
of near
reality and who is
now a
rocket expert.
It was
an impressive
collection of top scientific talent.
During the first
two days
of the
meeting I reviewed our findings for the scientists. Since June 1947, when
the first
UFO report had been
made, ATIC had analyzed 1,593
UFO reports. About 4,400
had actually
been received, but all except 1,593
had been
immediately rejected for analysis. From our studies, we estimated
that ATIC received reports of only 10 per cent
of the
UFO sightings
that were made in the United
States, therefore in five and
a half
years something like 44,000 UFO
sightings had been made.
Of the 1,593
reports that had been analyzed
by Project
Blue Book, and we
had studied
and evaluated
every report in the Air
Force files, we had been
able to explain a great many.
The actual
breakdown was like this:
Balloons 18.512
Known 1.57
Probable Possible
4.99 11.95
18.51
UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECTS 277
Aircraft 11.76%
Known 0.98
Probable 7.74 Possible 3.04
11.76
Astronomical
Bodies 14.20%
Known 2.79 Probable 4.01 Possible 7.40
14.20
Other 4.21*
Searchlights on
clouds, birds, blowing paper, inversions, reflections, etc.
Hoaxes ....................................................................... 1.66%
Reports with
insufficient data to evaluate 22.72%
(In addition
to those
initially eliminated)
Unknowns ................................................................. 26.94%
By using
the terms
"Known," "Probable," and "Possible,"
we were able to
differentiate how positive we were
of our
conclusions. But even in
the "Possible"
cases we were, in our own
minds, sure that we had
identified the reported UFO.
And who
made these reports? Pilots and
air crews
made 17.1 per cent from the
air. Scientists and engineers made
5.7 per cent, airport
control tower operators made an
even 1.0 per cent of the
reports, and 12.5 per cent
of the
total were radar reports. The remaining
63.7 per cent were made
by military and civilian
observers in general.
The reports that
we were
interested in were the 26.94
per cent or 429 "Unknowns," so we
had studied
them in great detail. We
studied the reported colors of
the UFO's,
the shapes,
the directions they were
traveling, the times of day
they were observed, and many more
details, but we could find
no significant
pattern or trends. We did
find that the most often
reported shape was elliptical
and that
the most
often reported color was white
or "metallic."
About the same number of UFO's were
reported as being seen in
daytime as at night, and the direction of travel
equally covered the sixteen cardinal
headings of the compass.
Seventy per cent
of the
"Unknowns" had been
seen visually from the air; 12
per cent
had been
seen visually from the ground; 10 per cent had
been picked up by ground
or airborne
radar; and 8 per cent
were combination visual-radar
sightings.
In the
over-all total of 1,593 sightings
women made two reports for every
one made
by a
man, but in the "Unknowns"
the men beat out
women ten to one.
There were two
other factors we could never
resolve, the frequency of the sightings
and their
geographical distribution. Since the
first flurry of reports in
July of 1947, each July
brought a definite peak
in reports;
then a definite secondary peak occurred just before each
Christmas. We plotted these peaks in sightings against high
tides, world-wide atomic tests,
the positions
of the
moon and planets, the general
cloudiness over the United
States, and a dozen and
one other things, but we could
never say what caused more
people to see UFO's at
certain times of the year.
Then the UFO's
were habitually reported from areas
around "technically interesting" places like our atomic
energy installations, harbors, and
critical manufacturing areas. Our studies showed that such vital
military areas as Strategic Air
Command and Air Defense
Command bases, some A-bomb storage areas, and large military
depots actually produced fewer
reports than could be expected
from a given area in
the United States. Large population centers devoid of any
major "technically interesting" facilities also produced few
reports.
According to the
laws of normal distribution, if UFO's are not intelligently
controlled vehicles, the distribution of reports should have been
similar to the distribution of population in the
United States—it wasn't.
Our study
of the
geographical locations of sightings also
covered other countries. The U.S. by no
means had a curb on the
UFO market.
In all
of our
"Unknown" reports we
never found one measurement of size,
speed, or altitude that could
be considered
to be
even fairly accurate. We could
say only
that some of the UFO's had
been traveling pretty fast.
As far
as radar
was concerned,
we had
reports of fantastic speeds—up to 50,000
miles an hour—but in all
of these
instances there was some doubt
as to
exactly what caused the target. The highest speeds reported
for our
combination radar-visual sightings,
which we considered to be
the best
type of sighting in our files,
were 700 to 800 miles
an hour.
We had never
picked up any "hardware"—any whole saucers, pieces, or parts—that couldn't be readily identified
as being something very
earthly. We had a contract
with a materials-testing laboratory,
and they
would analyze any piece of material
that we found or was
sent to us. The tar-covered
marble, aluminum broom handle, cow
manure, slag, pieces of plastic balloon,
«and the what-have-you that we
did receive and analyze
only served to give the
people in our material lab some
practice and added nothing but
laughs to the UFO project."
The same went
for the
reports of "contacts"
with spacemen. Since 1952 a
dozen or so people have
claimed that they have talked to
or ridden
with the crews of flying
saucers. They offer affidavits, pieces of material, photographs,
and other bits and
pieces of junk as proof.
We investigated
some of these reports
and could
find absolutely no fact behind
the stories.
We had a
hundred or so photos of
flying saucers, both stills and movies.
Many were fakes—some so expert
that it took careful study by
photo interpreters to show how
the photos had been faked. Some
were the crudest of fakes,
automobile hub caps thrown
into the air, homemade saucers
suspended by threads, and
just plain retouched negatives. The rest of the still
photos had been sent in
by well-meaning
citizens who couldn't recognize
a light
flare of flaw in the
negative, or who had
chanced to get an excellent
photo of a sundog or mirage.
But the
movies that were sent into
us were
different. In the first place, it
takes an expert with elaborate
equipment to fake a movie. We
had or
knew about four strips of
movie film that fell into the
"Unknown" category. Two
were the cinetheodolite movies that
had been
taken at White Sands Proving Ground in April and
May of
1950, one was the Montana Movie and the last
was the
Tremonton Movie. These latter two had
been subjected to thousands of
hours of analysis, and since we
planned to give the panel
of scientists
more thorough reports on them
on Friday,
I skipped
over their details and
went to the next point
I wanted
to cover—theories.
Periodically throughout the history of the
UFO people
have come up with
widely publicized theories to explain
all UFO reports. The one that
received the most publicity was
the one offered by
Dr. Donald
Menzel of Harvard
University. Dr. Menzel, writing in Time, Look, and later in
his Flying Saucers, claimed that
all UFO
reports could be explained as various types of light
phenomena. We studied this theory
thoroughly because it did
seem to have merit. Project
Bear's physicists studied it.
ATIC'c scientific consultants studied it and discussed
it with
several leading European physicists whose specialty was atmospheric physics. In general the
comments that Project Blue
Book received were, "He'd given the subject some thought
but his
explanations are not the panacea."
And there were
other widely publicized theories. One
man said that they were all
skyhook balloons, but we knew
the flight path of every skyhook
balloon and they were seldom
reported as UFO's. Their
little brothers, the weather balloons,
caused us a great
deal more trouble.
The Army
Engineers took a crack at
solving the UFO problem by making
an announcement
that a scientist in one
of their laboratories had duplicated a flying
saucer in his laboratory. Major Dewey
Fournet checked into
this one. It had all started
out as
a joke,
but it
was picked
up as
fact and the scientist was stuck
with it. He gained some
publicity but lost prestige because other
scientists wondered just how competent the man really was
to try
to pass
off such
an answer.
All in all,
the unsolicited
assistance of theorists didn't help
us a bit, I told the
panel members. Some of them
were evidently familiar with
the theories
because they nodded their heads in
agreement.
The next
topic I covered in my
briefing was a question that
came up quite frequently
in discussions
of the
UFO: Did UFO reports actually start
in 1947?
We had
spent a great deal of time
trying to resolve this question.
Old newspaper
files, journals, and books
that we found in the
Library of Congress contained many reports
of odd
things' being seen in the sky
as far
back as the Biblical times.
The old
Negro spiritual says, "Ezekiel
saw a
wheel 'way up in the
middle of the air." We couldn't
substantiate Ezekiel's sighting because many
of the
very old reports of odd
things observed in the sky could
be explained
as natural
phenomena that weren't fully understood in those days.
The first documented
reports of sightings similar to
the UFO sightings as we know
them today appeared in the
newspapers of 1896. In
fact, the series of sightings
that occurred in the year and
the next
had many
points of similarity with the
reports of today.
The sightings
started in the San Francisco
Bay area
on the
evening of November 22,
1896, when hundreds of people
going home from work
saw a
large, dark, "cigar-shaped
object with stubby wings" traveling northwest across Oakland.
Within hours after
the mystery
craft had disappeared over what is
now the
northern end of the Golden
Gate Bridge, the stories of people
in other
northern California towns began to
come in on the
telegraph wires. The citizens of
Santa Rosa, Sacramento, Chico,
and Red
Bluff—several thousand of them —saw it.
I tried to
find out if the people
in these
outlying communities saw the UFO'before they heard the news
from the San Francisco area or
afterward, but trying to run
down the details of a fifty-six-year-old
UFO report
is almost
hopeless. Once while I was
on a
trip to- Hamilton AFB I
called the offices of the San
Francisco Chronicle and they
put me
in touch with a
retired employee who had worked
on a
San Francisco paper in
1896. I called the old
gentleman on the phone and talked
to him
for a
long time. He had been a
copy boy at the time
and remembered
the incident,
but time had canceled
out the
details. He did tell me
that he, the editor of the
paper, and the news staff
had seen
"the ship," as he
referred to the UFO. His
story, even though it was fifty-six
years old, smacked of others
I'd heard
when he said that no one
at the
newspaper ever told anyone what
they had seen; they
didn't want people to think
that they were "crazy."
On November 30
the mystery
ship was back over the
San Francisco area and those people
who had
maintained that people were being fooled
by a
wag in
a balloon
became believers when the
object was seen moving into
the wind.
For four months
reports came in from villages,
cities, and farms in the West;
then the Midwest, as the
airship "moved eastward." In
early April of 1897 people
in Iowa,
Nebraska, Missouri, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Illinois reported
seeing it. On April 10 it
was reported
to be
over Chicago. Reports continued
to come
in to
the newspapers
until about April 20; then it,
or stories
about it, were gone. Literally
thousands of people had seen
it before
the last
report clicked in over the telegraph
wires.
A study of
the hundreds
of newspaper
accounts of this sighting that rocked
the world
in the
late 1890's was interesting because the same controversies
that arose then exist now. Those
who hadn't
seen the stubby-winged, cigar-shaped "craft" said,
"Phooey," or the
Nineteen-Century version thereof.
Those who had seen it
were almost ready to do
battle to uphold their
integrity. Some astronomers loudly yelled, "Venus," "Jupiter,"
and "Alpha
Orionis" while
others said, "We saw it." Thomas
Edison, the man of science of the day, disclaimed
any knowledge
of the
mystery craft "I prefer to devote
my time
to objects
of commercial
value," he told a
New York
Herald reporter. "At
best airships would only be toys."
Thomas—you goofed
on that
prediction.
I had
one more
important point to cover before
I finished
my briefing and opened
the meeting
to a
general question-and-answer session.
During the past
year and a half we
had had
several astronomers visit Project Blue
Book, and they were not
at all
hesitant to give us their opinions
but they
didn't care to say much
about what their colleagues
were thinking, although they did indicate
that they were thinking. We
decided that the opinions and comments
of astronomers
would be of value, so late
in 1952
we took
a poll.
We asked
an astronomer,
whom we knew to
be unbiased
about the UFO problem and
who knew every outstanding
astronomer in the United States,
to take a trip
and talk
to his
friends. We asked him not
to make a point of asking
about the UFO but just
to work
the subject into a friendly conversation.
This way we hoped to
get a completely frank opinion. To
protect his fellow astronomers, our astronomer gave them
all code
names and he kept the key
to the
code.
The report
we received
expressed the detailed opinions of
forty-five recognized authorities. Their opinions varied from
that of Dr. C,
who regarded
the UFO
project as a "silly waste of money to investigate
an even
sillier subject," to Dr. L, who has spent
a great
deal of his own valuable
time personally investigating UFO reports -because he
believes that they are something "real."
Of the
forty-five astronomers who were interviewed, 36 per cent were
not at
all interested
in the UFO reports, 41 per
cent were interested to the
point of offering their services if
they were ever needed, and
23 per
cent thought that the
UFO's were a much more
serious problem than most people
recognized.
None of the
astronomers, even during a friendly
discussion, admitted that he thought
the UFO's
could be interplanetary vehicles. All
of those
who were
interested would only go so far
as to
say, "We don't know what
they are, but they're something real."
During the
past few years I have
heard it said that if
the UFO's were really "solid objects" our astronomers would have seen them. Our
study shed some light on
this point-astronomers have seen UFO's.
None of them has ever
seen or photographed anything
resembling a UFO through his
telescope, but 11 per cent
of the
forty-five men had seen something
that they couldn't explain. Although,
technically speaking, these sightings were
no better
than hundreds of others in our
files as far as details
were concerned, they were good because of the caliber of
the observer.
Astronomers know what is in the
sky.
It is
interesting to note that out
of the
representative cross section of astronomers, five of
them, or 11 per cent,
had sighted UFO's. For a given
group of people this is
well above average. To check this
point, the astronomer who was
making our study picked ninety
people at random—people he met while
traveling—and got them into a
conversation about flying saucers. These people
were his "control group," to borrow a term
from the psychologists. Altough the percentage
of people who were
interested in UFO's was higher
for the
control group than for
the group
of astronomers,
only 41 per cent of the
astronomers were interested while 86
per cent of the control group
were interested; 11 per cent
of the astronomers had seen UFO's,
while only about 1 per
cent of the control
group had seen one. This
seemed to indicate that as
a group astronomers
see many
more UFO's than the average citizen.
When I finished
my briefing,
it was
too late
to start
the question-and-answer session, so
the first
day's meeting adjourned. But promptly
at nine
o'clock the next morning the
group was again gathered,
and from
the looks
of the
list of questions some of them
had, they must have been
thinking about UFO's all night.
One of
the first
questions was about the results
of photography
taken by the pairs of
huge "meteorite patrol"
cameras that are located in
several places throughout North America. Did they ever photograph
a UFO?
The cameras,
which are in operation
almost every clear night, can
photograph very dim lights, and
once a light is photographed
its speed and altitude can be
very accurately established.
If there were any objects giving
off light
as they
flew through our atmosphere,
there is a chance that
these cameras might have photographed them. But they hadn't
At first
this seemed to be an
important piece of evidence and we had just about
racked this fact up as
a definite
score against the UFO when we
did a
litde checking. If
the UFO
had been flying at
an altitude
of 100
miles, the chances of its being
picked up by the cameras
would be good, but the
chances of photographing something flying any lower
would be less.
This may
account for the fact that
while our "inquiring
astronomer" was at the
meteorite patrol camera sites, he
talked to an astronomer
who had
seen a UFO while operating
one of the patrol cameras.
Many people have
asked why our astronomers haven't seen anything through their
big telescopes.
They are focused light-years
away and their field of
vision is so narrow that
even if UFO's did
exist and littered the atmosphere
they wouldn't be seen.
Another question
the panel
had was
about Orson Welles' famous War of the Worlds broadcast of
October 1938, which caused thousands of
people to panic. Had we
studied this to see if there
were any similarities between it
and the
current UFO reporting?
We had.
Our psychologist looked into the matter
and gave
us an
opinion—to make a complete
study and get a positive
answer would require an effort
that would dwarf the entire
UFO project. But he
did have
a few
comments. There were many documented cases in which a
series of innocent circumstances triggered by the broadcast
had caused
people to completely lose all sense
of good
judgment—to panic. There were some similar
reports in our UFO files.
But we had
many reports in which people
reported UFO's and obviously hadn't panicked.
Reports from pilots
who had seen mysterious lights at
night and, thinking that they
might be a cockpit
reflection, had turned off all
their cockpit lights.
Or the pilots
who turned
and rolled
their airplanes to see if
they could change the angle
of reflection
and get rid of the UFO.'
Or those
pilots who climbed and dove
thousands of feet and
then leveled out to see
if the
UFO would change its relative position
to the
airplane. Or the amateur astronomer who made an excellent
sighting and before he reluctantly
reported it as a UFO had talked to a half dozen professional astronomers
and physicists
in hopes
of finding an explanation.
All of
these people were thinking clearly, questioning themselves as to
what the sightings could be; then
trying to answer their questions.
These people weren't panicked.
The question-and-answer
period went on for a
full day as the scientists dug into the details
of the
general facts I had given
them in my briefing.
The following day
and a
half was devoted to reviewing
and discussing fifty of
our best
sighting reports that we had classed
as "Unknowns."
The next
item on the agenda-, when
the panel
had finished
absorbing all of the
details of the fifty selected
top reports,
was a review of a very
hot and
very highly controversial study.
It was
based on the idea that
Major Dewey Foumet and I
had talked
about several months before—an analysis
of the motions of the reported
UFO's in an attempt to
determine whether they were intelligently
controlled. The study was hot because
it wasn't
official and the reason it
wasn't official was bcause it was so hot.
It concluded
that the UFO's were interplanetary spaceships. The report had
circulated around high command
levels of intelligence and it
had been
read with a good
deal of interest. But even
though some officers at command levels
just a notch below General
Sam-ford bought it, the space
behind the words "Approved by" was blank—no one would
stick his neck out and
officially send it to
the top.
Dewey Foumet, who
had completed
his tour
of active
duty in the Air
Force and was now a civilian, was
called from Houston, Texas, to tell
the scientists
about the study since he had
worked very closely with the
group that had prepared it.
The study covered
several hundred of our most
detailed UFO reports. By a very critical process of
elimination, based on the motion of
the reported
UFO's, Foumet told the panel how he
and any
previous analysis by Project Blue
Book had been disregarded and how
those reports that could have
been caused by any
one of
the many
dozen known objects— balloons,
airplanes, astronomical bodies, etc., were
sifted out. This sifting took quite
a toll,
and the
study ended up with only ten
or twenty
reports that fell into the
"Unknown" category. Since such
critical methods of evaluation had been used, these few
reports proved beyond a doubt
that the UFO's were intelligendy controlled by persons with brains
equal to or far
surpassing ours.
The next step
in the
study, Foumet explained, was to find
out where they came
from. "Earthlings" were
eliminated, leaving the final
answer—spacemen.
Both Dewey and
I had
been somewhat worried about how
the panel would react
to a
study with such definite conclusions.
But when
he finished
his presentation,
it was
obvious from the tone of
the questioning
that the men were giving the conclusions serious thought.
Fournet's excellent reputation was well
known.
On Friday morning
we presented
the feature
attractions of the session,
the Tremonton
Movie and the Montana Movie.
These two bits of
evidence represented the best photos
of UFO's that Project Blue Book
had to
offer. The scientists knew about them,
especially the Tremonton Movie, because
since late July they
had been
the subject
of many
closed-door conferences. Generals, admirals, and
GS-16's had seen them at "command
performances," and they
had been
flown to Kelly AFB in Texas
to be
shown to a conference of intelligence officers from
all over
the world.
Two of
the country's
best military photo laboratories, the Air Force lab
at Wright Field and the Navy's
lab at
Anacostia, Maryland, had spent many hours
trying to prove that the
UFO's were balloons, airplanes,
or stray
light reflections, but they failed
—the UFO's were true
unknowns. The possibility that the
movie had been faked
was considered
but quickly
rejected because only a
Hollywood studio with elaborate equipment
could do such a
job and
the people
who filmed
the movies
didn't have this kind
of equipment.
The Montana Movie
had been
taken on August 15, 1950,
by Nick Mariana, the
manager of the Great Falls
baseball team. It showed
two large
bright lights flying -across the
blue sky in an
echelon formation. There were no
clouds in the movie to give
an indication
of the
UFOs" speed, but at one time
they passed behind a water
tower. The lights didn't show any
detail; they appeared to be
large circular objects.
Mariana had
sent his movies to the
Air Force
back in 1950, but in 1950
there was no interest in
the UFO
so, after
a quick viewing,
Project Grudge had written them
off as
"the reflections from two
F-94 jet fighters that were
in the
area."
In 1952, at
the request
of the
Pentagon, I reopened the investigation of the Montana Movie.
Working through an intelligence
officer at the Great Falls
AFB, I had Mariana reinterrogated
and obtained
a copy
of his
movie, which I sent to the
photo lab.
When the photo
lab got
the movie,
they had a little something
to work
with because the two UFO's
had passed
behind a reference point, the water
tower. Their calculations quickly confirmed
that the objects were not
birds, balloons, or meteors. Balloons drift
with the wind and the
wind was not blowing in the
direction that the two UFO's
were traveling. No exact speeds could
be measured,
but the
lab could
determine that the lights
were traveling too fast to
be birds
and too slow to
be meteors.
This left airplanes
as the
only answer. The intelligence officer at Great
Falls had dug through huge
stacks of files and found that
only two airplane, two F-94's
were near the city during the
sighting and that they had
landed about two minutes afterwards. Both Mariana and his
secretary, who had also seen the
UFO's, had said that the
two jets
had appeared in another part of
the sky
only a minute or two
after the two UFO's
had disappeared
in the
southeast. This in itself would eliminate
the jets
as candidates
for the
UFO, but we wanted to double-check.
The two
circular lights didn't look like F-94's,
but anyone
who had
done any flying can tell you
that an airplane so far
away that it can't be
seen can suddenly catch
the sun's
rays and make a brilliant
flash.
First we
studied the flight paths of
the two
F-94's. We knew the landing pattern
that was being used on
the day
of the sighting, and we knew
when the two F-94's landed.
The two jets
just weren't anywhere close to
where the two UFO's had been.
Next we studied each individual
light and both appeared to be
too steady
to be
reflections.
We drew
a blank
on the
Montana Movie—it was an unknown.
We also
drew a blank on the
Tremonton Movie, a movie that had been taken by
a Navy
Chief Photographer, Warrant Officer Delbert
C. Newhouse,
on July
2, 1952.
Our report on
the incident
showed that Newhouse, his wife, and
their two children were driving
to Oakland,
California, from the east coast
on this
eventful day. They had just passed
through Tremonton, Utah, a town
north of Salt Lake City, and
had traveled
about 7 miles on U. S. Highway 30S when Mrs. Newhouse noticed
a group
of objects
in the
sky. She pointed them
out to
her husband;
he looked,
pulled over to the side of
the road,
stopped the car, and jumped
out to get a better look.
He didn't
have to look very long
to realize that something highly unusual
was taking
place because in his twenty-one
years in the Navy and
2,000 hours* flying time as an
aerial photographer, he'd never seen
anything like this. About a
dozen shiny disklike
objects were "milling around
the sky
in a
rough formation."
Newhouse had his
movie camera so he turned
the turret
around to a 3-inch
telephoto lens and started to
photograph the UFO's. He
held the camera still and
took several feet of film, getting
all of
the bright
objects in one photo. All
of the UFO's had stayed in
a compact
group from the time the Newhouse
family had first seen them,
but just
before they disappeared over the western
horizon one of them left
the main group and
headed east. Newhouse swung his
camera around and took several
shots of it, holding his
camera steady and letting the UFO
pass through the field of
view before it disappeared in the
east.
When I received
the Tremonton
films I took them right over to the Wright
Field photo lab, along-with the Montana Movie, and the
photo technicians and I ran them twenty or thirty times. The
two movies
were similar in that in
both of them the objects appeared
to be
large circular lights—in neither
one could
you see
any detail.
But, unlike the Montana Movie,
the lights
in the
Tremonton Movie would fade out, then come back in again.
This fading immediately suggested airplanes reflecting light, but
the roar
of a
king-sized dogfight could have been
heard for miles and the
Newhouse family had heard
no sound.
We called
in several
fighter pilots and they
watched the UFO's circling and
darting in and out in the
cloudless blue sky. Their unqualified
comment was that no
airplane could do what the
UFO's were doing.
Balloons came
under suspicion, but the lab
eliminated them just as
quickly by studying the kind
of a
reflection given off by a balloon—it
is a
steady reflection since a balloon
is spherical. Then, to further scuttle
the balloon
theory, clusters of balloons are tied
together and don't mill around.
Of course,
the lone UFO that
took off to the east
by itself
was the
biggest argument against balloons.
Newhouse told an
intelligence officer from the Western
Air Defense Forces that he had
held his camera still and
let this single UFO fly through
the field
of view,
so the
people in the lab measured its
angular velocity. Unfortunately
there were no clouds in the
sky, nor was he able
to include
any of the ground in the
pictures, so our estimates of
angular velocity had to
be made
assuming that the photographer held his camera still. Had
the lone
UFO been
10 miles
away it would have been traveling
several thousand miles an hour.
After studying the
movies for several weeks, the
Air Force
photo lab at Wright
Field gave up. A\\ they had
to say
was, "We don't know
what they are but they
aren't airplanes or balloons, and
we don't
think they are birds."
While the
lab had
been working on the movies
at Wright
Field, Major Foumet had been
talking to the Navy photo
people at Anacostia; they thought they had
some good ideas on how to
analyze the movies, so as
soon as we were through
with them I sent
them to Major Foumet and he
took them over to the Navy
lab.
The Navy
lab spent
about two months studying the
films and had just completed their
analysis. The men who had
done the work were
on hand
to brief
the panel
of scientists
on their analysis after
the panel
had seen
the movies.
We darkened
the room
and I would imagine that we
ran each film ten times before
every panel member was satisfied
that he had seen
and.could remember all
of the
details. We ran both films together
so that
the men
could compare them.
The Navy
analysts didn't use the words
"interplanetary space-craft"
when they told of their
conclusions, but they did say that
the UFO's
were intelligently controlled
vehicles and that they weren't airplanes
or birds.
They had arrived at this conclusion
by making
a frame-by-frame
study of the motion of the
lights and the changes in
the fights'
intensity.
When the Navy
people had finished with their
presentation, the scientists
had questions.
None of the panel members
were trying to find fault
with the work the Navy
people had done, but they weren't
going to accept the study
until they had meticulously searched for
every loophole. Then they found one.
Li measuring
the brilliance
of the
lights, the photo analysts had used an instrument called a densitometer. The astronomer on the
panel knew all about measuring
the density
of an extremely small photographic image with a densitometer
because he did it
all the
time in his studies of
the stars.
And the astronomer didn't think that the
Navy analysts had used the correct
technique in making their measurements.
This didn't necessarily mean that their data
were all wrong, but it did
mean that they should recheck
their work.
When the discussion
of the
Navy's report ended, one of
the scientists asked to
see the
Tremonton Movie again; so I had
the projectionists
run it
several more times. The man
said that he thought
the UFO's
could be sea gulls soaring
on a thermal current. He lived
in Berkeley
and said
that he'd seen gulls high in
the air
over San Francisco Bay. We
had. thought
of this
possibility several months before because
the area around the Great Salt
Lake is inhabited by large
white gulls. But the
speed of the lone UFO
as it
left the main group had eliminated
the gulls.
I pointed
this out to the physicist. His answer was that
the Navy
warrant officer might have
thought he had held the
camera steady, but he cv-iiid have "panned with the
action" unconsciously. This would
throw all of our computations
way off.
I agreed
with this, but I
couldn't agree that they^ were
sea gulls.
But several months
later I was in San
Francisco waiting for an airliner to
Los Angeles
and I
watched gulls soaring in a cloudless
sky. They were "riding a thermal," and they
were so Ihgh that you couldn't see
them until they banked just a certain way; then
they appeared to be a
bright white flash, much larger than
one would
expect from sea gulls. There was a strong resemblance
to the
UFO's in the Tre-monton Movie. But
I'm not
sure that this is the
answer.
The presentation
of the
two movies
ended Project Blue Book's part of
the meeting.
In five
days we had given the
panel of scientists every pertinent detail in
the history
of the
UFO, and it was
up to
them to tell us if
they were real-some type of
a vehicle
flying through our atmosphere. If they were real, then
they would have to be
spacecraft because no one at the
meeting gave a second thought
to the
possibility that the UFO's might
be a
supersecret
U.S. aircraft or a Soviet development.
The scientists
knew everything that was going on
in the
U.S. and they knew that
no country
in the world had developed their
technology far enough to build a
craft that would perform as
the UFO's
were reported to do. In
addition, we were spending billions
of dollars on the research and
development and the procurement of airplanes that were
just nudging the speed of
sound. It would be absurd to
think that these billions were
being spent to cover the existence
of a
UFO-type weapon. And it would be
equally absurd to think that
the British,
French, Russians or any
other country could be far
enotfgh ahead of us
to have
a UFO.
The scientists
spent the next two days
pondering a conclusion. They reread
reports and looked at the
two movies
again and again, they
called other scientists to double-check
certain ideas that they
had, and they discussed the
problem among themselves. Then they wrote
out their
conclusions and each man signed the
document. The first paragraph said:
We as
a group
do not
believe that it is impossible
for some other celestial body to
be inhabited
by intelligent
creatures. Nor is it impossible
that these creatures could have
reached such a state
of development
that they could visit the earth.
However, there is nothing in
all of
the so-called
"flying saucer" reports that
we have
read that would indicate that
this is taking place.
The Themonton Movie had been
rejected as proof but the panel
did leave
the door
open a crack when they
suggested that the Navy photo
lab redo
their study. But the Navy lab
never rechecked their report, and
it was
over a year later
before new data came to
light.
After I got
out of
the Air
Force I met Newhouse and
talked to him for
two hours.
I've talked to many people
who have reported UFO's, but few
impressed me as much as Newhouse.
I learned
that when he and his
family first saw the UFO's they
were close to the car,
much closer than when he took
the movie.
To use
Newhouse's own words, "If they had been the size
of a
B-29 they would have been
at 10,000 feet altitude." And the
Navy man and his family
had taken a good
look at the objects—they looked like "two pie pans, one inverted on
the top
of the
otherl" He
didn't just think the UFO's were disk-shaped; he knew that they were; he had plainly seen
them. I asked him why
he hadn't told this
to the
intelligence officer who interrogated him. He said that he
had. Then I remembered that I'd sent the
intelligence officer a list
of questions
I wanted
Newhouse to answer. The question "What
did the
UFO's look like?" wasn't
one of
them because when you have
a picture
of something you don't normally ask
what it looks like. Why
the intelligence officer didn't
pass this information on to
us I'll never know.
The Montana Movie
was rejected
by the
panel as positive proof because even
though the two observers said
that the jets were in another
part of the sky when
they saw the UFO's and our
study backed them up, there
was still
a chance
that the two UFO's
could have been the two
jets. We couldn't prove the UFO's were the jets, but neither could we prove they
weren't.
The
controversial study of the UFOs' motions that Major Fournet had presented was discarded. All of the panel
agreed that if there had been some permanent record of the motion of the UFO's, a photograph of a UFO's flight path or a photograph of a
UFO's track on a radarscope, they could have given the study much more weight.
But in every one, of the ten or twenty reports that were offered as proof that
the UFO's were intelligently controlled, the motions were only those that the
observer had seen. And the human eye and mind are not accurate recorders. How
many different stories do you get when a group of people watch two cars collide at an intersection?
Each
of the fifty of
our best sightings that
we gave the scientists to study had some kind of a loophole. In many cases the
loopholes were extremely small, but scientific evaluation has no room for even
the smallest of loopholes and we had asked for a scientific evaluation.
When
they had finished commenting on the reports, the scientists pointed out the
seriousness of the decision they had been asked to make. They said that they
had tried hard to be objective and not to be picayunish, but actually all We had was circumstantial evidence. Good circumstantial evidence, to be
sure, but we had nothing concrete, no hardware, no photos
showing any detail of a UFO, no measured speeds, altitudes, or sizes—nothing
in the way of good, hard, cold, scientific facts. To stake the future course of
millions of lives on a decision based upon circumstantial
evidence would be one of the gravest mistakes in the history of the world.
In their conclusions they touched upon the
possibility tiaat the UFO's might be some type of new
or as yet undiscovered natural phenomenon. They explained that they hadn't
given this too much credence; however, if the UFO's were a new natural
phenomenon, the reports of their general appearance should follow a definite
pattern—the UFO reports didn't
This
ended the section of the panel's report that covered their
conclusions. The next section was entitied,
"Recommendations." I fully
expected that they would recommend
that we at least
reduce the activities of Project
Blue Book if not cancel it
entirely. I didn't like this
one bit
because I was firmly convinced that
we didn't
have the final answer. We needed more and better
proof before a final yes
or no
could be given.
The panel
didn't recommend that the activities
of Blue
Book be cut back,
and they
didn't recommend that it be
dropped. They recommended that it be expanded.
Too many of the reports had
been made by credible observers,
the report said, people who should
know what they're looking at
—people who think things
out carefully.
Data that was out of the
circumstantial-evidence class was
badly needed. And the panel must
have been at least partially
convinced that an expanded effort would
prove something interesting because the
expansion they recommended would require
a considerable sum of
money. The investigative force of
Project Blue Book should be quadrupled
in size,
they wrote, and it should be
staffed by specially trained experts
in the
fields of electronics, meteorology,
photography, physics, and other fields of science pertinent to
UFO investigations.
Every effort should be made to
set up
instruments in locations where UFO sightings
are frequent,
so that
data could be measured and recorded during a sighting.
In other
locations around the country military and
civilian scientists should be alerted
and instructed to use
every piece of available equipment
that could be used
to track
UFO's.
And lastly, they
said that the American public
should be told every detail of
every phase of the UFO
investigation —the details of
the sightings,
the official
conclusions, and why the conclusions were made. This would
serve a double purpose; it would
dispel any of the mystery
that security breeds and it would
keep the Air Force on
the ball—sloppy
investigations and analyses would
never occur.
When the panel's
conclusions were made known in
the government, they met
with mixed reactions. Some people
were satisfied, but others
weren't. Even the opinions of
a group of the country's top
scientists couldn't overcome the controversy that had dogged the
UFO for
five years. Some of those who
didn't like the decision had
sat in
on the
UFOs' trial as spectators and they
felt that the "jury" was definitely
prejudiced—afraid to stick their
necks out. They could see
no reason to continue to assume
that the UFO's weren't interplanetary
vehicles.
chapter seventeen
What Are UFO's?
While
the scientists were
in Washington,
D.C., pondering over the UFO, the
UFO's weren't just sitting idly
by waiting
to find
out what
they were—they were out doing
a little
"lobbying" for the cause—keeping
the interest
stirred up.
And they
were doing a good job,
too.
It was just
a few
minutes before midnight on January
28, 1953, when a message flashed
into Wright-Patterson for Project
Blue Book. It was sent
"Operational Immediate," so it had priority handling;
I was
reading it by 12:30 a.m.
A pilot
had chased
a UFO.
The report
didn't have many details but
it did
sound good. It gave the pilot's
name and said that he
could be reached at Moody AFB.
I put
in a
long-distance call, found the pilot,
and flipped on my
recorder so that I could
get his
story word for word.
He told
me that
he had
been flying an F-86 on
a "round-robin"
navigation flight from Moody AFB
to Lawson
AFB to Robins AFB, then back
to Moody—all
in Georgia.
At exactly nine thirty-five he was
at 6,000
feet, heading toward Lawson AFB on
the first
leg of
his flight.
He remembered
that he had just
looked down and had seen
the lights
of Albany, Georgia; then
he'd looked up again and
seen this bright white light at
"ten o'clock high." It was
an unusually
bright light, and he
said that he thought this
was why
it was so noticeable among the
stars. He flew on for
a few
minutes watching it as
he passed
over Albany. He decided that it must be an
extremely bright star or another
airplane —except it just
didn't look right. It had
too much
of a
definitely circular shape.
It was
a nice
night to fly and he
had to
get in
so much
time anyway, so he
thought he'd try to get
a little
closer to it. If it were
an airplane,
chances were he could close
in and if it were a
star, he should be able
to climb
up to
30,000 feet and the
fight shouldn't change its relative
position. He checked his oxygen
supply, increased the r.p.m. of the
engine, and started to climb.
In three
or four
minutes it was obvious diat he was
getting above the fight, and
he watched it; it had moved
in relation
to the
stars. It must be an airplane
then, he'd decided—an airplane so
far away
that he couldn't see
its red
and green
wing tip lights.
Since he'd gone
this far, he decided that
he'd get closer and make sure
it was an airplane, so he
dropped the nose of the F-86
and started
down. As the needle on
the mach-meter
nudged the red line, he
saw that
he was
getting closer because the light was
getting bigger, but still he
couldn't see any lights other than
the one
big white
one. Then it wasn't white any
longer; it was changing color.
In about
a two-second cycle it changed from
white to red, then back
to white again. It went through
this cycle two or three
times, and then before he could
realize what was going on,
he told me, the light changed
in shape
to a
perfect triangle. Then it split into
two triangles,
one above
the other.
By this
time he had leveled off and
wasn't closing in any more.
In a
flash the whole thing was gone.
He used
the old
standard description for a disappearing
UFO: "It was just like
someone turning off a
light—it's there, then it's gone."
I asked
him what
he thought
he'd seen. He'd thought about flying saucers, he said,
but he
"just couldn't swallow those stories." He thought he had
a case
of vertigo
and the
more he thought about
it, the
surer he was that this
was the answer. He'd felt pretty
foolish, he told me, and
he was glad that he was
alone.
Up ahead
he saw
the sprawling
lights of Fort Benning and Lawson
AFB, his turning point on
the flight,
and he'd
started to turn but
then he'd checked his fuel.
The climb
had used up quite
a bit,
so he
changed his mind about going
to Robins AFB and
started straight back to Moody.
He called
in to
the ground
station to change his flight
plan, but before he
could say anything the ground
radio operator asked him
if he'd
seen a mysterious light.
Well—he'd seen
a light.
Then the
ground operator proceeded to tell
him that
the UFO chase had been watched
on radar.
First the radar had the UFO
target on the scope, and
it was
a UFO
because it was traveling much
too slowly
to be
an airplane.
Then the radar operators
saw the
F-86 approach, climb, and make a
shallow dive toward the UFO.
At first
the F-86
had closed in on
the UFO,
but then
the UFO
had speeded
up just enough to
maintain a comfortable lead. This
went on for two or three
minutes; then it had moved
off the
scope at a terrific speed. The
radar site had tried to
call him, the ground station told
the F-86
pilot, but they couldn't raise
him so the message had to
be relayed
through the tower.
Rack up two
more points for the UFO—another
unknown and another confirmed believer.
Two or
three weeks after the meeting
of the
panel of scientists in Washington I received word that Project
Blue Book would follow the recommendations
that the panel had made. I
was to
start implementing the plan right
away. Our proposal for setting up
instruments had gone to the
Pentagon weeks before, so
that was already taken care
of. We
needed people, so I
drew up a new organizational
cable that called for more investigators
and analysts
and sent
it through
to ATIC's personnel section.
About this
time in the history of
the UFO
the first
of a series of
snags came up. The scientists
had strongly
recommended that we hold nothing
back—give the public everything. Accordingly, when the press
got wind
of the
Tre-monton Movie, which
up until
this time had been a
closely guarded secret, I
agreed to release it for
the newsmen
to see.
I wrote a press
release which was O.K.'d by
General Garland, then the chief
of ATIC,
and sent
it to
the Pentagon.
It told what the
panel had said about the
movies, "until proved otherwise
there is no reason why
the UFO's
couldn't have been sea gulls." Then the release went
on to
say that
we weren't sure exactly
what the UFO's were, the
sea gull
theory was only an
opinion. When the Pentagon got
the draft of the release they
screamed. "No!" No movie for
the press and no press release.
The sea
gull theory was too weak,
and we had a new publicity
policy as of now—don't say
anything.
This policy, incidentally,
is still
in effect.
The January
7, 1955, issue of the Air Force Information Services Letter said, in
essence, people in the Air
Force are talking too much
about UFO's—shut up. The
old theory
that if you ignore them they'll go away is
again being followed.
Inside of a
month the UFO project took
a few
more hard jolts. In December of
1952 I'd asked for a
transfer. I'd agreed to stay on
as chief
of Blue
Book until the end of
February so that a
replacement could be obtained and
be broken in. But no replacement
showed up. And none showed
up when Lieutenant Rothstien's tour of active duty
ended, when Lieutenant Andy Flues transferred
to the
Alaskan Air Command, or when others
left. When I left the
UFO project
for a two-month tour of temporary
duty in Denver, Lieutenant Bob Olsson took over
as chief.
His staff
consisted of Airman First Class Max
Futch. Both
men were
old veterans
of the UFO campaign of '52,
but two
people can do only so much.
When I came back
to ATIC
in July
1953 and took over another job, Lieutenant Olsson was
just getting out of the
Air Force and Al/c
Futch was now
it. He
said that he felt like the
President of Antarctica on a
non-expedition year. In
a few days I again had
Project Blue Book, as an
additional duty this time,
and I
had orders
to "build
it up."
While I had been
gone, our instrumentation plan had
been rejected. Higher headquarters
had decided
against establishing a net
of manned
tracking stations, astronomical
cameras Jied in with radars, and
our other
proposed instrumentation. General
Garland had argued long and
hard for the plan, but he'd
lost. It was decided that
the cameras
with diffraction gratings over
the lenses,
the cameras
that had been under development for a year, would
suffice.
The camera
program had started out as
a top-priority
project, but it had
lost momentum fast when we'd
tested these widely publicized instruments and found that they
wouldn't satisfactorily photograph a million-candle power flare at 450 yards. The
cameras themselves were all right,
but in combination with the gratings,
they were no good. However, Lieutenant Olsson had been
told to send them out,
so he sent them out.
The first
thing that I did when
I returned
to Project
Blue Book was to go over
the reports
that had come in while
I was away. There were several
good reports but only one
that was exceptional. It had taken place
at Luke
AFB, Arizona, the Air Force's
advanced fighter-bomber school that is named
after the famous "balloon buster" of World War
I, Lieutenant Frank Luke, Jr. It
was a
sighting that produced some very interesting
photographs.
There were only
a few
high cirrus clouds in the
sky late
on the morning of March 3
when a pilot took off
from Luke in an F-84 jet
to log
some time. He had been
flying F-51's in Korea and had
recendy started to
check out in the jets.
He took off, cleared
the traffic
pattern, and started climbing toward BIythe Radio, about 130 miles
west of Luke. He'd climbed for several minutes and
had just
picked up the coded letters BLH
that identified BIythe
Radio when he looked up through
the comer
glass in the front part
of his
canopy—high at about two
o'clock he saw what he
thought was an airplane angling across
his course
from left to right leaving a long, thin vapor
trail. He glanced down at
his altimeter
and saw
that he was at 23,000
feet. The object that was leaving
the vapor
trail must really be high, he remembered thinking, because
he couldn't
see any
airplane at the head of it.
He altered
his course
a few
degrees to the right so that
he could
follow the trail and increased
his rate
of climb. Before long he could
tell that he was gaining
on the
object, or whatever was
leaving the vapor trail, because
he was under the central part
of it.
But he
still couldn't see any object. This
was odd,
he thought,
because vapor trails don't just happen;
something has to leave them.
His altimeter had ticked off another
12,000 feet and he was
now at 35,000. He kept on
climbing, but soon the '84
began to mush; it was as
high as it would go.
The pilot
dropped down 1,000 feet and continued
on—now he was below the
front of the trail, but still
no airplane.
This bothered him too. Nothing that we have flies
over 55,000 feet except a
few experimental airplanes like
the D-558
or those
of the
"X" series, and they
don't stray far from Edwards
AFB in
California. He couldn't be more
than 15,000 feet from the
front of the trail, and you
can recognize
any kind
of an
airplane 15,000 feet away
in the
clear air of the substatosphere. He
looked and he looked
and he
looked. He rocked the F-84
back and forth thinking maybe he
had a
flaw in the plexiglass of the canopy
that was blinking out the
airplane, but still no airplane. Whatever it was, it
was darn
high or darn small. It was
moving about 300 miles an
hour because he had to
pull off power and
"S" to stay under it.
He was beginning
to get
low on
fuel about this time so
he hauled up the
nose of the jet, took
about 30 feet of gun
camera film, and started
down. When he landed and
told his story, the film was
quickly processed and rushed to
the projection room. It
showed a weird, thin, forked
vapor trail —but no airplane.
Lieutenant Olsson and
Airman Futch had worked this one over
thoroughly. 'The photo lab confirmed
that the trail was definitely a vapor
trad, not
a freak
cloud formation. But Air Force Flight
Service said, "No other airplanes
in the
area," and so did
Air Defense
Command, because minutes after the F-84
pilot broke off contact, the
"object" had passed
into an ADIZ—Air Defense
Identification Zone—and radar
had showed nothing.
There was one
last possibility: Blue Book's astronomer
said that the photos
looked exactly like a meteor's
smoke trail. But there was one
hitch: the pilot was positive
that the head of the vapor
trail was moving at about
300 miles
an hour. He didn't
known exacdy how much ground he'd
covered, but when he
first picked up Blythe Radio
he was
on Green airway, about 30 miles
west of his base, and
when he'd given up the chase
he'd gotten another radio bearing,
and he was now almost up
to Needles
Radio, 70 miles north of Blythe.
He could
see a
lake, Lake Mojave, in the
distance.
Could a high-altitude jet-stream wind have been
blowing the smoke cloud? Futch had checked
this—no. The winds above 20,000 feet
were the usual westerlies and the
jet stream was far to the
north.
Several months
later I talked to a
captain who had been at Luke
when this sighting occurred. He
knew the F-84 pilot and he'd
heard him tell his story
in great
detail. I won't say that he
was a
confirmed believer, but he was
interested. "I never thought
much about these reports," he said,
?Ibut I know this guy well. He's not
nuts. What do you think
he saw?"
I don't
know what he saw. Maybe
he didn't
travel as far as he thought
he did.
If he
didn't, then I'd guess that
he saw a meteor's smoke
trail. But if he did
know that he'd covered some 80 miles during the
case, I'd say that he
saw a UFO—a real one. And
I find
it hard
to believe
that pilots don't know what they're
doing.
During the summer
of 1953,
UFO reports
dropped off considerably. During
May, June, and July of
1952 we'd received 637 good reports.
During the same months in
1953 we received only seventy-six. We had been waiting
for the
magic month of July
to roll
around again because every July there had been the
sudden and unexplained peak in
reporting; we wanted to
know if it would happen
again. It didn't—only twenty-one
reports came in, to make
July the lowest month of the
year. But July did bring
new developments.
Project Blue
Book got a badly needed
shot in the arm when
an unpublicized but highly
important change took place: another intelligence agency began to
take over all field investigations.
Ever since I'd
returned to the project, the
orders had been to build it
up—get more people—do what the
panel recommended. But when I'd
asked for more people, all
I got
was a
polite "So sorry." So, I did the
next best thing and tried
to find some organization already in
being which could and would help
us. I
happened to be expounding my troubles one day at
Air Defense
Command Headquarters while I was
briefing General Burgess, ADC's
Director of Intelligence, and he told
me about
his 4602nd
Air Intelligence
Squadron, a specialized intelligence
unit that had recently become
operational. Maybe it could help—he'd
see what
he could
work out, he told me.
Now in
the military
all commitments
to do
something carry an almost standard time
factor. "I'll expedite it," means
nothing will happen for
at least
two weeks.
"Ill do it
right away," means from
a month
to six
weeks. An answer like, "111 see what I can
work out," requires writing a
memo that explains what the person
was going
to see
if he
could work out and sealing it
in a
time capsule for preservation so that when the answer
finally does come through the
future generation that receives it
will know how it all
started. But I underestimated the efficiency
of the
Air Defense
Command. Inside of two weeks
General Burgess had called General
Garland, they'd discussed the problem,
and I
was back
in Colorado Springs setting
up a
program with Colonel White's 4602nd.
The 4602nd's primary
function is to interrogate captured enemy airmen during wartime;
in peacetime
all that
they can do is participate in simulated problems. Investigating
UFO reports would supplement these problems,
and add
a factor
of realism that would
be invaluable
in their
training. The 4602nd had field teams
spread out all over the
United States, and these teams could
travel anywhere by airplane, helicopter,
canoe, jeep, or skis
on a
minute's notice. The field teams
had already established a working contact with
the highway
patrols, sheriffs*
officers, police, and the other
military in their respective areas, so
they were in an excellent
position to collect facts about
a UFO
report. Each member of the field
teams had been especially chosen and trained in
the art of interrogation,
and each
team had a technical specialist. We couldn't
have asked for a better
ally.
Project Blue
Book was once more back
in business.
Until the formal paper work went
through, our plan was that
whenever a UFO report
worth investigating came in we
would call the 4602nd
and they
would get a team out
right away. The team would make
a thorough
investigation and wire us their report.
If the
answer came back "Unknown," we would study
the details
of the
sighting and, with the help of
Project Bear, try to find
the answer.
A few weeks
after the final plans had
been made with the 4602nd, I
again bade farewell to Project
Blue Book. In a simple ceremony
on the
poop deck of one of
the flying
saucers that I frequentiy have been accused of
capturing, before a formation
of the
three-foot-tall green men
that I have equally as frequentiy been accused of keeping
prisoner, I turned my command over
to Al/c
Max Futch and walked out the door
into civilian life with separation
orders in hand.
The UFO's
must have known that I
was leaving
because the day I found out
that officers with my specialty,
technical intelligence, were no longer
on the
critical list and that I could
soon get out of the
service, they really put on
a show. The show they put
on is
still the best UFO report
in the Air Force files.
I first
heard about the sighting about
two o'clock
on the
morning of August 13,
1953, when Max Futch called me
from ATIC. A few
minutes before a wire had
come in carrying a priority
just under that reserved for
flashing the word the U.S. has
been attacked. Max had been
called over to ATIC by the
OD to
see the
report, and he thought that
I should see
it. I
was a
little hesitant to get dressed
and go
out to the base, so I
asked Max what he thought
about the report. His classic
answer will go down in
UFO history,
"Captain," Max said
in his
slow, pure Louisiana drawl, "you
know that for a year I've
read every flying saucer report
that's come in and that I
never really believed in the
things." Then he hesitated and added,
so fast
that I could hardly understand
him, "But you should read
this wire." The
speed with which he uttered this
last statement was in itself
enough to convince me. When Max
talked fast, something was important.
A half
horn later I was at
ATIC—just in time to get
a call from the Pentagon. Someone
else, had gotten
out of
bed to read his copy of
the wire.
I used
the emergency
orders that I always kept
in my
desk and caught the
first airliner out of Dayton
to Rapid
City, South Dakota. I
didn't call the 4602nd because
I wanted
to investigate this one
personally. I talked to everyone
involved in the incident and
pieced together an amazing story.
Shortly after dark
on the
night of the twelfth, the
Air Defense Command radar station at
Ellsworth AFB, just east of Rapid
City, had received a call
from the local Ground Observer Corps filter center. A
lady spotter at Black Hawk,
about 10 miles west
of Ellsworth,
had reported
an extremely
bright light low on the
horizon, off to the northeast.
The radar had been scanning an
area to the west, working
a jet
fighter in some practice
patrols, but when they got
the report
they moved the sector scan
to the
northeast quadrant. There was a target
exacdy where the
lady reported the light to be.
The warrant
officer, who was the duty
controller for the night,
told me that he'd studied
the target
for several
minutes. He knew how weather
could affect radar but this target was "well defined, solid, and bright."
It seemed
to be moving, but very slowly.
He called
for an
altitude reading, and the man
on the
height-finding radar checked
his scope. He also had the
target—it was at 16,000 feet.
The warrant officer
pickedvup the phone
and asked
the filter center to connect him
with the spotter. They did,
and the two people compared notes
on the
UFO's position for several minutes. But
right in the middle of
a sentence
the lady suddenly stopped and excitedly
said, "It's starting to move—it's moving southwest toward Rapid."
The controller
looked down at his scope
and the
target was beginning to pick up
speed and move southwest. He yelled at two of
his njen to ran outside and
take a look. In a
second or two one of them
shouted back they they could both
see a
large bluish-white light moving
toward Rapid City. The controller looked down at his
scope—the target was moving toward Rapid City. As all
three parties watched the light
and kept up a steady cross
conversation of the description, the UFO swiftly made a
wide sweep around Rapid City
and returned to its original position
in the
sky.
A master
sergeant who had seen and
heard the happenings told me
that in all his years
of duty—combat
radar operations in both
Europe and Korea—he'd never been
so completely awed by anything. When
the warrant
officer had yelled down at him
and asked
him what
he thought
they should do, he'd just stood
there. "After all," he told
me, "what
in hell could we
do—they're bigger than all of
us."
But the warrant
officer did do something. He called to the F-84
pilot he had on combat
air patrol
west of the base and told
him to
get ready
for an
intercept. He brought the pilot around
south of the base and
gave him a course correction
that would take him right
into the light, which was
still at 16,000 feet.
By this
time the pilot had it
spotted. He made the turn, and
when he closed to within
about 3 miles of the target,
it began
to move.
The controller
saw it
begin to move, the spotter
saw it
begin to move and the
pilot saw it begin to move—all
at the
same time. There was now
no doubt that all
of them
were watching the same object.
Once it began
to move,
the UFO
picked up speed fast and started
to climb,
heading north, but the F-84
was right
on its tail. The pilot would
notice that the light was
getting brighter, and he'd
call the controller to tell
him about
it. But the controller's answer would
always be the same, "Roger, we can see it
on the
scope."
There was always
a limit
as to
how near
the jet
could get, however. The controller told me that it
was just
as if
the UFO had some
kind of an
automatic warning radar
linked to its power supply. When
something got too close to
it, it would automatically pick up
speed and pull away. The
separation distance always remained
about 3 miles.
The chase
continued on north—out of sight
of the
lights of Rapid City and the
base—into some very black night.
When the
UFO and
the F-84
got about
120 miles
to the
north, the pilot checked
his fuel;
he had
to come
back. And when I talked to
him, he said he was
damn glad that he was
running out of fuel
because being out over some
mighty desolate country alone
with a UFO can cause
some worry.
Both the
UFO and
the F-84
had gone
off the
scope, but in a few minutes
the jet
was back
on, heading
for home.
Then 10 or 15
miles behind it was the
UFO target
also coming back.
While the
UFO and
the F-84
were returning to the base
—the F-84 was planning
to land—the
controller received a call from the
jet interceptor
squadron on the base. The
alert pilots at the squadron had
heard the conversations on their
radio and didn't believe it.
"Who's nuts up
there?" was the comment that
passed over the wire from
the pilots
to the
radar people. There was an F-84
on the
line ready to scramble, the man on the phone
said, and one of the
pilots, a World War II and
Korean veteran, wanted to go
up and
see a
flying saucer. The controller
said, "O.K., go."
In a minute
or two
the F-84
was airborne
and the
controller was working him
toward the light. The pilot
saw it
right away and closed in. Again
the light
began to climb out, this
time more toward the
northeast. The pilot also began
to climb, and before long-the light,
which at first had been
about 30 degrees above
his horizontal
line of sight, was now below
him. He nosed the '84
down to pick up speed,
but it was the same old
story—as soon as he'd get
within 3 miles of the UFO,
it would
put on
a burst
of speed
and stay out ahead.
Even though the
pilot could see the light
and hear
the ground controller telling him that
he was
above it, and alternately gaining on it or
dropping back, he still couldn't
believe it—there must be
a simple
explanation. He turned off all of
his lights—it
wasn't a reflection from any
of the
airplane's lights because there it
was. A reflection
from a ground fight, maybe.
He rolled
the airplane—the
position of the light didn't change.
A star—he
picked out three bright stars
near the light and
watched carefully. The UFO moved
in relation to the three stars.
Well, he thought to himself,
if it's a real object out
there, my radar should pick
it up
too; so he flipped on his
radar-ranging gunsight. In a few
seconds the red light on his
sight blinked on—something real and
solid was in front
of him.
Then he was scared. When
I talked to him, he readily
admitted that he'd been scared.
He'd met MD 109's,
FW 190's
and ME
262's over Germany and he'd met
MIG-15's over Korea but the
large, bright, bluish-white light
had scared
him—he asked the controller if he could break off
the intercept.
This time the light
didn't come back.
When the UFO
went off the scope it
was headed
toward Fargo, North Dakota, so the
controller called the Fargo filter center. "Had they had
any reports
of unidentified
lights?" he asked. They
hadn't.
But in a
few minutes
a call
came back. Spotter posts on
a southwest-northeast line
a few
miles west of Fargo had
reported a fast-moving, bright bluish-white light.
This was
an unknown—the
best.
The sighting was
thoroughly investigated, and I could
devote pages of detail
on how
we looked
into every facet of the incident;
but it
will suffice to say that
in every
facet we looked into we saw
nothing. Nothing but a big question mark asking what
was it.
When I left
Project Blue Book and the
Air Force
I severed
all official associations with the UFO. But
the UFO
is like
hard drink; you always
seem to drift back to
it. People
I've met, people at work, and
friends of friends are continually
asking about the subject.
In the
past few months the circulation
manager of a large Los
Angeles newspaper, one of Douglas Aircraft Company's top scientists,
a man
who is
guiding the future development
of the
supersecret
Atlas intercontinental guided
missile, a movie star, and
a German
rocket expert have called
me and
wanted to get together to talk about UFO's. Some
of them
had seen
one.
I have
kept up with the activity
of the
UFO and
Project Blue Book over the past
two years
through friends who are still in
intelligence. Before Max Futch got out
of the
Air
Force and went
back to law school he
wrote to me quite often and part of his
letters were always devoted to
the latest about the UFO's.
Then I make frequent
business trips to ATIC, and
I always stop
in to
see Captain
Charles Hardin, who is now
in charge of Blue
Book, for a "What's new?" I always go
to ATIC with the
proper security clearances so I'm
sure I get a straight answer to my
question.
Since I left
ATIC, the UFO's haven't gone
away and neither has the interest.
There hasn't been too much
about them in the newspapers because of the present
Air Force
policy of silence, but
they're with us. That the
interest is still with us is
attested to by the fact
that in late 1953 Donald Keyhoe's book about UFO's, Flying Saucers from Outer Space,
immediately appeared
on best
seller lists. The book was based
on a
few of
our good
UFO reports
that were released to the press.
To say
that the book is factual
depends entirely upon how one
uses the word. The details
of the specific UFO sightings that
he credits
to the
Air Force are factual, but in
his interpretations
of the
incidents he blasts way out into
the wild
blue yonder.
During the past
two years
the bulk
of the
UFO activity
has taken place in
Europe. I might add here
that I have never seen any
recent official UFO reports or
studies from other countries; all of
my information
about the European Flap came from
friends. But when these friends
are in
the intelligence branches of
the U.
S. Air
Force, the RAF, and the Royal
Netherlands Air Force, the data
can be
considered at least good.
The European Flap
started in the summer of
1953, when reports began to pop
up in
England and France. Quality-wise these first reports weren't
too good,
however. But then, like a few
reports that ocurred
early in the stateside Big
Flap of 1952, sightings
began to drift in that
packed a bit of a jolt.
Reports came in that had
been made by personal friends of the brass in
the British
and French
Air forces.
Then some of the
brass saw them. Corners of
mouths started down.
In September
several radar sites in the
London area picked up unidentified targets streaking across the
city at altitudes of from 44,000
to 68,000
feet. The crews who saw
the targets
said, "Not weather,"
and some
of these
crews had been through the bloody
Battle of Britain. They knew
their radar.
In October the
crew of a British European
Airways airliner reported that a "strange
aerial object" had paced their
twin-engined
Elizabethan for thirty minutes. Then
on November
3, about two-thirty in the afternoon, radar in the London
area again picked up
targets. This time two Vampire
jets were scrambled and the pilots
saw a
"strange aerial object." The
men at
the radar
site saw it too; through
their telescope it looked like a
"flat, white-coloured tennis ball."
The flap
continued into 1954. In January
those people who officially keep track
of the
UFO's pricked up their ears
when the report of
two Swedish
airline pilots came in. The
pilots had gotten a
good look before the UFO
had streaked
into a cloud bank. It looked
like a discus with a
hump in the middle.
On through the spring
reports poured out of every
country in Europe. Some were bad, some were
good.
On July 3,
1954, at eight-fifteen in the
morning, the captain, the officers
and 463
passengers on a Dutch ocean
liner watched a "greenish-colored,
saucer-shaped object about half the size
of a
full moon" as it sped
across the sky and disappeared into a patch of
high clouds.
There was one
fully documented and substantiated case of a "landing" during the flap. On
August 25 two young ladies in Mosjoen, Norway,
made every major newspaper in the world when they
encountered a "saucerman."
They said that they were picking
berries when suddenly a dark
man, with long shaggy
hair, stepped out from behind
some bushes. He was friendly; he
stepped right up to them
and started to talk rapidly. The
two young
ladies could understand English but
they couldn't understand him. At
first they were frightened, but his
smile soon "disarmed"
them. He drew a few pictures
of flying
saucers and pointed up in the
sky. "He was obviously trying
to make
a point,"
one of the young ladies said.
A few
days later it was discovered
that the man from
"outer space"
was a
lost USAF helicopter pilot who
was flying
with NATO forces in
Norway.
As I've always
said, "Ya gotta watch those Air Force
pilots—especially those shaggy-haired ones from Brooklyn."
The reporting spread
to Italy,
where thousands of people in
Rome saw a strange cigar-shaped
object hang over the city for
forty minutes. Newspapers claimed that
Italian Air Force radar had the
UFO on
their scopes, but as far
as I could determine, this was
never officially acknowledged.
In December
a photograph
of two
UFO's over Taormina, Sicily, appeared in
many newspapers. The picture showed
three men standing on
a bridge,
with a fourth running up
with a camera. All were intendy watching two disk-shaped objects. The photo
looked good, but there was
one flaw,
the men weren't looking
at the
UFO's; they were looking off to the right of
them. I'm inclined to agree
with Captain Hardin of Blue Book—the
photographer just fouled up on
his double exposure.
Sightings spread
across southern Europe, and at
the end
of October, the Yugoslav
Government expressed official interest. Belgrade newspapers said that
a "thoughtful
inquiry" would be
set up,
since reports had come from
"control tower operators, weather stations and hundreds
of farmers."
But the part of
the statement
that swung the most weight
was, "Scientists in astronomical
observatories have seen these strange objects with their own
eyes."
During 1954
and the
early part of 1955 my
friends in Europe tried to keep
me up-to-date
on all
of the
better reports, but this soon
approached a full-time job. Airline
pilots saw them, radar picked
them up, and military pilots
chased them. The press
took sides, and the controversy
that had plagued the U.S. since
1947 bloomed forth in all
its confusion.
An ex-Air
Chief Marshal in the RAF,
Lord Dowding, went to bat for
the UFO's.
The Netherlands
Air Chief
of Staff said they can't be.
Herman Oberth, the father of
the German rocket development, said that
the UFO's
were definitely interplanetary
vehicles.
In Belgium
a senator
put the
screws on the Secretary of
Defense—he wanted an
answer. The Secretary of Defense
questioned the idea that
the saucers
were "real" and said that the
military wasn't officially interested. In France a member
of parliament
received a different answer—the French military was interested. The French General Staff
had set up a committee to
study UFO reports.
In Italy, Clare
Boothe Luce, American
Ambassador to Italy, said that she
had seen
a UFO
and had
no idea
what it could be.
Halfway around the
world, in Australia, the UFO's
were busy too. At Canberra Airport
the pilot
of an
RAAF Hawker Sea Fury and a
ground radar station teamed up
t"> get enough data to make
an excellent
radar-visual report.
In early 1955
the flap
began to die down about
as rapidly
as it had flared up, but
it had
left its mark—many more believers.
Even the highly respected British
aviation magazine, Aeroplane, had something to say.
One of
the editors
took a good, hard look at
the over-all
UFO picture
and concluded,
"Really, old chaps—I don't know."
Probably the most
unique part of the whole
European Flap was the fact that
the Iron
Curtain countries were having their own private flap. The
first indications came in October
1954, when Rumanian newspapers
blamed the United States for launching a drive to
induce a "flying saucer psychosis"
in their country. The
next month the Hungarian Government
hauled an "expert" up in front of
the microphone
so that
he could explain to the populace
that UFO's don't really exist
because, "all 'flying saucer'
reports originate in the bourgeois
countries, where they are
invented by the capitalist warmongers with a view
to drawing
the people's
attention away from their economic difficulties."
Next the
U.S.S.R. itself took up the
cry along
the same
lines when the voice
of the
Soviet Army, the newspaper Red Star, denounced the
UFO's as, you guessed it, capitalist
propaganda.
In 1955
the UFO's
were still there because the
day before
the all-important
May Day
celebration, a day when the
Soviet radio and TV
are normally
crammed with programs plugging the glory
of Mother
Russia to get the peasants
in the mood for the next
day, a member of the
Soviet Academy of Sciences had to
get on
the air
to calm
the people's
fears. He left out Wall Street
and Dulles
this time—UFO's just don't exist.
It was
interesting to note that during
the whole
Iron Curtain Flap, not one
sighting or complimentary comment about
the UFO's was made
over the radio or in
the newspapers;
yet the flap continued.
The reports
were obviously being passed on by
word of mouth. This fact
seems to negate the theory that if the newspaper
reporters and newscasters would give up the UFO's would
go away.
The people
in Russia
were obviously seeing something.
While the
European Flap was in progress,
the UFO's
weren't entirely neglecting the United States. The
number of reports that were coming
into Project Blue Book were below average, but there
were reports. Many of them
would definitely be classed
as good,
but the
best was a report from
a photo reconnaissance B-29 crew that encountered
a UFO
almost over Dayton.
About 11:00
a.m. on May 24, 1954, an
RB-29 equipped with some new aerial
cameras took off from Wright
Field, one of the two airfields
that make up Wright-Patterson AFB, and headed
toward the Air Force's photographic
test range in Indiana. At exacdy twelve noon they were
at 16,000
feet, flying west, about
15 miles
northwest of Dayton. A major, a
photo officer, was in the
nose seat of the '29.
All of the gun sights and
the bombsight
in the
nose had been taken out, so
it was
like sitting in a large
picture window-except you just can't
get this
kind of a view anyplace
else. The major was enjoying it.
He was
leaning forward, looking down, when he
saw an
extremely bright circular-shaped object under
and a
little behind the airplane. It
was so
bright that it seemed to have
a mirror
finish. He couldn't tell how
far below him it
was but
he was
sure that it wasn't any
higher than 6,000 feet
above the ground, and it
was traveling
fast, faster than the
B-29. It took only about
six seconds
to cross a section of land,
which meant that it was
going about 600 miles an hour.
The major
called the crew and told
them about the UFO, but neither
the pilot
nor the
copilot could see it because
it was now directly under the
B-29. The pilot was just
in the process of telling him
that he was crazy when
one of
the scanners in an
aft blister
called in; he and the
other scanner could also see the
UFO.
Being a photo
ship, the RB-29 had cameras—loaded
cameras—so the logical thing to
do would
be to
take a picture, but during a
UFO sighting
logic sometimes gets shoved into
the background. In this
case, however, it didn't, and
the major reached down, punched the
button on the intervalo-meter, and the big vertical camera in
the aft
section of the airplane clicked off
a photo
before the UFO sped away.
The photo
showed a circular-shaped blob of
light exacdy as the major had
described it to the RB-29
crew. It didn't show any details
of the
UFO because
the UFO
was too
bright; it was completely
overexposed on the negative. The
circular shape wasn't sharp
either; it had fuzzy edges,
but this could have been due
to two
things: its extreme brightness, or the fact that
it was
high, close to the RB-29,
and out
of focus. There was
no way
of telling
exactly how high it was but
if it
were at 6,000 feet, as
the major
estimated, it would have been about
125 feet
in diameter.
Working with people
from the photo lab at
Wright-Patterson, Captain Hardin
from Project Blue Book carried
out one of the most complete
investigations in UFO
history. They checked aircraft flights, rephotographed the area
from high and low altitude to
see if
they could pick up something
on the ground that could have
been reflecting light, and made
a minute ground search
of the
area. They found absolutely nothing that could explain the
round blob of light, and
the incident went down as an
unknown.
Like all
good "Unknown" UFO
reports, there are as many
opinions as to what
the bright
blob of light could have
been as there are
people who've seen the photo.
"Some kind of light phenomenon" is the frequent opinion
of those
who don't believe. They point out
that there is no shadow
of any
kind of a circular
object showing on the ground—no
shadow, nothing "solid." But if you care
to take
the time
you can
show that if the
object, assuming that this is
what it was, was above 4,000 feet the shadow would fall out
of the
picture.
Then all you
get is
a blank look
from the light phenomenon theorists.
With the sighting
from the RB-29 and the
photograph, all of the
other UFO reports that Blue
Book has collected and all of
those that came out of
tbe European Flap,
the big question—the key question—is: What have the last
two years of UFO activity brought
out? Have there been any
important developments?
Some good reports
have come in and the
Air Force
is sitting on them. During 1954
they received some 450 reports,
and once again July
was the
peak month. In the first
half of 1955 they had 189.
But I
can assure
you that
these reports add nothing more as
far as
proof is concerned. The quality
of the reports has improved, but
they still offer nothing more
than the same circumstantial
evidence that we presented to
the panel of scientists
in early
1953. There have been no
reports in which the
speed or altitude of a
UFO has
been measured, there have
been no reliable photographs that show any details of
a UFO,
and there
is no
hardware. There is still no real
proof.
So a public
statement that was made in
1952 still holds true: "The possibility of the
existence of interplanetary craft has never
been denied by the Air
Force, but UFO reports offer absolutely no authentic evidence that
such interplanetary spacecraft do
exist."
But with the
UFO, what is lacking in
proof is always made up for
in opinions.
To get
a qualified
opinion, I wrote to a
friend, Frederick C. Durant.
Mr. Durant,
who is
presently the director of a large
Army Ordnance test station, is
also a past president of the
American Rocket Society and president
of the
International Astronautical Federation. For those who are not
familiar with these organizations, the American Rocket Society is
an organization
established to promote interest and research
in space
flight and lists as its
members practically every prominent
scientist and engineer in the
professional fields allied to
aeronautics. The International
Astronautical Federation
is a
world-wide federation of such societies.
Mr. Durant has
spent many hours studying UFO
reports in the Project Blue Book
files and many more hours
discussing them with scientists the world over—scientists who are doing research and
formulating the plans for space
flight. I asked^him what he'd heard about
the UFO's
during the past several years and
what he thought about them.
This was his reply:
This past
summer at the Annual Congress
of the
IAF at
Innsbruck, as well as
previous Congresses (Zurich, 1953, Stuttgart, 1952, and London, 1951),
none of the delegates representing the rocket
and space
flight societies of all the
countries ~ involved had
strong feelings on the subject
of saucers. Their attitude was essentially
the same
as professional
members of the American Rocket
Society in this country. In
other words, there appear to
be no
confirmed saucer fans in the hierarchy
of the
professional societies.
I continue to
follow the subject of UFO's
primarily because of my being requested
for comment
on the
interplanetary flight aspects. My
personal feelings have not changed
in the past four years, although
I continue
to keep
an objective
oudook.
There are
many other prominent scientists in the world whom I met while I
was chief
of Project
Blue Book who, I'm sure, would
give the same answer—they've not been able to find
any proof,
but they
continue to keep an objective
outlook. There are just
enough big question marks sprinkled
through the reports to
keep their outlook objective.
I know that
there are many other scientists
in the
world who, although they haven't studied
the Air
Force's UFO files, would limit their
comment to a large laugh
followed by an, "It can't be."
But "It
can't be's" are dangerous, if for no other reason
than that history has proved
them so.
Not more than
a hundred
years ago two members of
the French Academy of Sciences were
unseated because they supported the idea
that "stones had fallen from
the sky."
Other distinguished members of
the French
Academy examined the stones, "It
can't be—stones don't fall from
the sky," or words
to that
effect. "These are common rocks
that have been struck by lightning."
Today we know
that the "stones from the
sky" were meteorites.
Not more than
fifty years ago Dr. Simon
Newcomb, a world-famous astronomer
and the
first American since Benjamin Franklin
to be
made an associate of the
Institute of France, the hierarchy of
world science, said, "It can't
be." Then he went
on to
explain that flight without gas
bags would require the discovery of
some new material or a
new force in nature.
And at the
same time Rear Admiral George
W. Melville,
then Chief Engineer for
the U.
S. Navy,
said that attempts to fly heavier-than-air
vehicles was absurd.
Just a little
over ten years ago there
was another
"it can't be." Ex-President
Harry S. Truman recalls in
the first
volume of The Truman Memoirs what Admiral
William D. Leahy, then Chief of
Staff to the President, had to say about
the atomic bomb. "That is the
biggest fool thing we have
ever done," he is
quoted as saying. "The bomb
will never go off, and I
speak as an expert in
explosives."
Personally, I don't
believe that "it can't be."
I wouldn't
class myself as a
"believer," exactly, because
I've seen too many UFO reports
that first appeared to be
unexplainable fall to pieces when they
were thoroughtly investigated. But every
time I begin to get
skeptical I think of the
other reports, the many
reports made by experienced pilots and radar operators, scientists, and other people
who know
what they're looking at. These reports
were thoroughly investigated
and they
are still
unknowns. Of these reports, the
radar-visual sightings are the most
convincing. When a
ground radar picks up a
UFO target
and a
ground observer sees a light where
the radar
target is located, then a
jet interceptor
is scrambled
to intercept
the UFO
and the
pilot also sees the light and
gets a radar lock on
only to have the UFO
almost impudently outdistance him, there is no
simple answer. We have no aircraft
on this
earth that can at will
so handily
outdistance our latest jets.
The Air
Force is still actively engaged
in investigating
UFO reports, although during
the past
six months
there have been definite indications that there is a
movement afoot to get Project Blue
Book to swing back to
the old
Project Grudge philosophy of analyzing UFO
reports—write them all off, regardless. But good UFO reports
cannot be written off with
such answers as fatigued
pilots seeing a balloon or
star; "green" radar operators
with only fifteen years experience watching temperature
inversion caused blips on their
radar-scopes; or "a mild form
of mass
hysteria or war nerves." Using answers like these, or
similar ones, to explain the
UFO reports is an expedient method
of getting
the percentage
of unknowns down to zero, but
it is
no more
valid than turning the hands of
a clock
ahead to make time pass
faster. Twice before the riddle of the
UFO has
been "solved," only
to have the reports increase in
both quantity and quality.
I wouldn't want
to hazard
a guess
as to
what the final outcome of the
UFO investigation
will be, but I am
sure that within a few years
there will be a proven
answer. The earth satellite program, which
was recently announced, research progress
in the
fields of electronics, nuclear physics,
astronomy, and a dozen other
branches of the sciences will
furnish data that will be useful
to the
UFO investigators.
Methods of investigating and analyzing UFO
reports have improved a hundredfold since 1947 and they
are continuing
to be
improved by the diligent
work of Captain Charles Hardin,
the present chief of
Project Blue Book, his staff,
and the
4602nd Air Intelligence Squadron. Slowly but surely
these people are working closer to
the answer—closer
to the
proof.
Maybe the
final proven answer will be
that all of the UFO's that
have been reported are merely
misidentified known objects. Or
maybe the many pilots, radar
specialists, generals, industrialists, scientists, and the man
on the
street who have told me, " wouldn't
have believed it either if
I hadn't seen
it myself,"
knew what they were talking
about. Maybe the earth is being
visited by interplanetary spaceships.
Only time
will telL
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