From the Canadian Department of National Defense Archives,
File: HQ 940-5 ( Project Second Story) comes the
following report submitted to Air Force Headquarters from
Edmonton, Alberta, on 6 August 1952:
Flying Saucer Sighting Reports
1. The following flying saucer sighting reports have been received at this GHQ.
2. Two disc-like objects were sighted at 2200 hrs P.S.T. on 19 July
over Stewart Lake (64:20N 125:15W) by the pilot of a Waco aircraft and one member of the survey party. One object of similar design sighted at 12:25 hrs P.S. 10 July approximately fifty miles N.W. of Wrigley, N.W.T. by the pilot of the Waco aircraft which sighted other two objects on 19 July. All objects were travelling North at great speed.
3. An oval shaped, silver colored object with projecting tail was
sighted at 1355 hrs M.S.T. 5 Aug over the Hudson Bay Co. post at
Hay Lakes (58'40N 118'40W) by..., Hudson Bay Co. employee, at
approximately one thousand feet The object maneuvered horizontally, vertically, spiralled and also hovered directly over the post. There was definitely no motor sound, and the object was estimated as larger than a Lancaster, with speed beyond estimate. This report was verified by Mr..., Manager of the Hudson Bay Co. post at Hay Lakes, who observed it at approximately six thousand feet South East of the post....
This report from the Hudson Bay Company employees indicates a possible lead. The Manitoba Provincial Archives contains the Hudson Bay Company records. For well over 200 years the company maintained posts all over Canada. The post managers kept journals in which they recorded meteorological observations, significant events and the day's business. Several UFO researchers suggested that these journals also may contain reports of aerial phenomena. I checked two rolls of microfilm which cover eight posts for different periods from 1864 to 1902. There were no reports of meteors, ball lightning or UFOs in this sample. However, it is suggested that more modern records should be checked.
Australian Associated Press - July 29, 1952
Saucers Circle U.S. City At 100 m.p.h.
NEW YORK: Mysterious objects were reported to have flown over
Washington early today. The civil aeronautics traffic control
centre says its radar picked them up over a five-hour period.
An official said the objects travelled at about 100 to 120
m.p.h. in a 10 miles' arc around the capital.
This placed them in the same area in which other strange
things were seen last Saturday and the Saturday before.
Last Saturday a jet pilot reported sighting "steady white
lights," but said that his 600 m.p.h. aircraft had been unable to
close in on them.
The civil aeronautics officer said that radar at the control
centre had picked up strange "blips" on the screen at intervals
between 1.30am and 6.00am today.
Sometimes, he said, the radar had charted as many
as eight or 12 of the objects at the same time.
No jet fighters were sent up to investigate the latest mystery.
The Air Defence Command said this had been
because "we were too busy with other things, and besides those things were
not hurting anybody."
Last night an Air Force spokesman said that because
of the menace of a possible enemy, fighter aircraft had been placed on a
24-hour alert to investigate any unusual aerial objects.
The American public is demanding why it took two
hours to get the interceptor planes in the air last Saturday after radar
observers had reported the mysterious "objects" over Washington.
Even the staid New York Times joins in "caning" the Air Force.
"Why did the pilots of the jet planes fail to catch up with the
objects over Washington? Unless these questions are answered in
simple language belief in visitors from outer space will be
strengthened in those who cannot distinguish between speculation
and scientific reasoning," the paper says.
In Albuquerque, New Mexico, Dr. Lincoln La Paz,
director of the Institute of Meteoritics at the University of New Mexico, said--
"These discs are not mirages. Radar proves that.
"Furthermore any suggestion that these come
from the depth of space is fantastic. Their origin is earth.
"The question is, 'Where on earth?'"
Australian Associated Press - July 30, 1952
"No Danger From Saucers," says U.S. Air Force
WASHINGTON: The United States was confident that there was no
danger from flying saucers or other mystery aerial objects, the US
Air Force announced yesterday.
The director of Air Force Intelligence (Maj-Gen. John Samford) told correspondents, "Six years' analysis of mysterious object
sightings has revealed no pattern that shows anything remotely
consistent with any menace to the United States."
The general said his personal opinion was that the unexplained "blips" of light appearing on radarscopes at Washington National
Airport were the result of temperature inversion.
Radar showed the air over Washington was full of flying objects yesterday, but an airliner directed to one of the sightings could
not find anything.
Air Force officials raised the possibility that devices
dropped from planes to jam radar may have floated from the Canadian border,
where air exercises were in progress.
"Hold Fire"
Mr. Robert Farnsworth, president of the U.S. Rocket Society,
yesterday appealed to American armed forces to hold their fire
when they saw the mystery objects.
In telegrams to President Truman, the Secretary of
Defence, and the Secretary of the Army, he said -- "I respectfully suggest that no
offensive action be taken against the objects.
"Should they be extraterrestrial, such action might
result in the gravest consequences, as well as possibly alienating us from
beings of far superior powers."
A salesman told police at Enid (Oklahoma) that his car
had been almost swept from the road last night by a huge flying saucer which
had swooped low at high speed.
Mr. Sid Eubanks said that the object, which he described
as a "yellow-green, then yellow-brown streak about 400 feet long," had
dived low over the road, turned round and then disappeared in
seconds.
In Jersey City, a volunteer air defense observer,
Mr. August Roberts, handed to the police what he claimed to be a photograph
of a flying saucer over New York.
The photograph, which was printed in some New York papers, showed a bright, nearly cylindrical object, moving across the
night.
AIR FORCE TIMES -
August 2, 1952
F-94s Called Out To Chase
Saucers Over Washington
By Rita Nelson
WASHINGTON. -- The status
of the flying saucer following radar sightings over
Washington and a Pentagon "saucer" conference
this week is just where it was previously -- all up
in the air.
Comments of high-ranking Air Force
intelligence and "saucer project" officers
are on the intangible side, as befits talk about
phenomena on which the Air Force says no scientifically
useful observations have been made.
In an effort to settle one rumor
which declares that the "limitless" power which
would be required for saucer propulsion could be obtained
from a nuclear power plant generating electricity, The
TIMES stated the theory to Maj. Gen. John A. Samford,
Air Force director of intelligence.
"That's a pretty strong idea,
but wait until it gets a little further along," he
replied. Quizzed as to his meaning, he said that the idea
is "mentally implausible."
Washington has had a flurry of
sightings of unidentified objects. Around midnight on
July 19 the Air Route Traffic Control Center (CAA) at
Washington National Airport sighted from seven to 10
unidentified aerial objects. The radar operators said that
eight were picked up in the vicinity of Andrews AFB, Md.,
moving at from 100 to 120 mph.
The control center notified the
Air Force and also asked planes in the air if they could
see anything.
Capt. S.C. Pierman, piloting
Capital Airlines Flight 807, southbound from National
Airport, soon reported seeing seven objects between
Washington and Martinsburg, W. Va. He said they changed
pace, sometimes moving at tremendous speed, at other
times hanging almost motionless. He described them
as "like falling stars without tails", and
added:
"In all my years of flying
I've seen a lot of falling or shooting stars, but these
were much faster. They couldn't have been aircraft.
They were moving too fast for that. They were about the
same size as the brighter stars, and were much higher
than our 6000 ft altitude."
Another airliner, Capital National
airlines flight 610, also reported seeing a light and
following it from Herndon, Va., to within four miles
of Washington.
The Air Force did not send up
interceptor planes that night because its own radar had
not picked up the images and because the round-the-clock
observer operation had not sent out warnings, officers
said.
The night of July 26 at 9:08
unidentified objects were picked up by radar at National
Airport. At various times four to 12 in number, the objects
were seen on the radar screen until 3 a.m. Radar at
Andrews AFB showed the objects from around 8:30 until
midnight, and located them at approximately seven miles
south of the base.
At 11:25 p.m., two F-94s from
the Air Defense Command at New Castle AFB, Del., took
off to investigate. One of the F-94 pilots saw four
lights near Andrews, but he could not overtake them and
they disappeared in two or three minutes. He also saw
a steady white light 10 miles east of Mount Vernon but
it faded quickly.
At 1:40 a.m., two more F-94s
took off and patrolled the area until 2:20 a.m., but
they saw nothing suspicious.
TIME Magazine - August 4, 1952
SCIENCE:
Blips on the Scopes
Air traffic was light at Washington Airport one
midnight last week, and the radar scope of the Civil Aeronautics Authority was almost clear. At 12:40 a.m. a group of bright blips showed. The operator estimated that they were about 15 miles southwest of Washington. Then the blips disappeared abruptly and reappeared a few seconds later over northeast Washington. The operator called his boss, Senior
Controller Harry Barnes, 39, a graduate of the Buffalo Technical Institute who
has worked for the CAA as an electronics expert since 1941. The operator
told Barnes: "Here are some flying saucers for you."
Barnes laughed at first, but the blips kept popping up all over the scope. They sometimes hovered, sometimes flew slowly and sometimes incredibly fast. Technicians checked the radar; it was in good working order.
Over the White House. Barnes
began to worry when he saw the blips apparently flying over the White House
and other prohibited areas. He called the airport control tower. Sure enough, its radar showed the strange blips too. When the
towermen measured the speed of a fast blip, they found that it had flown for
eight miles at 7,200 m.p.h.
Now the blips on Barnes's scope were moving
towards Andrews Air Force Base about ten miles to the east. Barnes called the Andrews tower. Nothing strange showed on its radar, but
both towermen and an enlisted man on the field saw a single, round, orange
light drifting in the southern sky. That was enough for Barnes. He called the Air Defense Command and reported an unidentified object was over
the Washington area. Then he told an airline pilot, C.S. Pierman of
Capital Airlines, who was about to take off for Pittsburgh, to watch
for mysterious objects. Pierman climbed to 6,000 ft. and headed
northwest. Barnes & Co. saw a group of strange blips cluster around
the blip made by Pierman's plane and Pierman spotted a white light
"like a falling star." It sped away, and its blip disappeared from
Barnes's scope.
Air Force to the Rescue. Over
from a Delaware base came a flight of radar-equipped F-94 jet fighters. Before they reached Washington, all the blips vanished. The jets saw nothing at all. But when the jets departed the blips reappeared, playing
all over the scope. Barnes said: "like a bunch of kids." He called
all airliners flying near Washington, asked their pilots to report any strange
objects. One pilot saw a white light, moving fast. But during all
this uproar, other radars near Washington (e.g. Quantico and Fort
Meade) saw nothing unusual.
All the rest of the week, a few strange blips appeared
now & then. Then on Saturday night they broke out all over,
criss-crossing the capital as they had the week before. This time,
the radar at Andrews was seeing the things too. One blip hung over Bolling Field, across the Potomac from the airport, but observers at Bolling saw nothing in the sky. Some airline pilots saw mysterious lights; others saw
nothing.
The Saucer Flies Again. Down from Delaware roared another flight of night fighters. This time the blips did
not vanish. They stayed on the ground scopes while the jets screamed among them. But only one pilot saw a light, another saw a doubtful blip
on his scope. It vanished before he could shoot.
What were the mysterious blips? The Air Force, unless it was trying to conceal some mysterious gadget of its own (e.g. a radar
countermeasure), was as baffled as everyone else. As might be
expected the phantom invasion touched off a whole new rash of
flying-saucer stories. But if the men from Mars were really overhead,
the oddest part of the whole story was the fact that among all the
conflicting reports, no radar outside of a ten-mile radius in
Washington reported seeing anything unusual at any time.
Australian Associated Press - August 24, 1952
Had "his hair singed by flying saucer"
NEW YORK: The US Air Force revealed last night that it had received
a report from the only man in the world to claim he had his hair
singed by a flying saucer.
The story, told by Mr. S.J.D. Desvergers, a scout-master,
"was receiving further study from a scientific viewpoint," an Air
Force intelligence officer said.
Desvergers, an ex-Marine said he was riding in a car on Tuesday night with three Scouts on the edge of Florida Everglades when he
saw flashing lights.
He walked through the brush, leaving the Scouts in
the car and telling them to call the police if he were not back in 10 minutes.
He saw an object "large enough for six or eight men
to stand in."
"It was about 10 feet high in the centre, about 30 feet in
diameter and shaped like a half rubber ball, tapering down to a three-foot thickness on the side," he added.
"There was a phosphorescent effect around the side."
"I believe I was under and near it for about three minutes."
"It was only 10 feet from the ground. It made a hissing sound like a tyre going down."
Desvergers said "they" (apparently meaning those in the object) shot a ball of fire at him that seemed to "float slowly at his
face."
The hair on his arm was singed and three holes about one-eighth of an inch in diameter were burned in his scout cap.
He then "blacked out." When he awoke he had no sense of feeling.
"Even now I have a tingling as when your foot loses circulation and goes to sleep," he said.
By the time he came to, Deputy Sheriff Mott Partin, summoned by the three Scouts had arrived.
Partin said Desvergers "looked like a wild man" when he came out of the brush.
Mr. Partin added that when he went into the woods, the grass "seemed to be scorched or blistered" in a small clearing.
No trace of the object has been found.
Desvergers claimed "the people in the object were
as afraid of me as I was of them."
He "and high-ranking officers from Washington," whom
he refused to identify, were substantially in agreement on what the
object was, he said.
"I know what it is, and it's of vital importance," he told a
reporter. "But it's better for me not to go any further for the
public good, because it might cause panic."
Montreal, Canada STAR - 28 August, 1952
'Saucer' Reported In Ontario Field.
Windsor, Ont., Aug. 28--(C.P.)--Gabriel Durocher said he
saw a luminous disc-shaped object 30 feet in diameter in a field
south of here early today.
'It was sort of blue all over and glowed
like phosphorus.'
He ran to within 30 feet of the object
and 'started yelling at it,' he said.
'Then I saw these sparks come out of one
part of the sides. They were blue and yellow and red. The
saucer started spinning and there was [a] sort of blue mist
formed under it and went straight up and away.'
The Windsor Daily Star received
four telephone calls from residents who said they spied
"something" hovering over the area where Gabriel said he saw
his 'object.'"
Strasburg, VA . Northern Virginia
Daily - Sept. 15, 1952
Flying Saucers Are Guided Missiles,
Says Top Physicists, Military Experts
They're real....they're Red.....and they're American too!
This remarkable analysis, which sheds the first
real light on the true nature of the so-called "flying
saucers," is the joint work of three People
Today editors who interviewed America's top physicists and
military and civilian experts on ultrasonic flight. Their
conclusions, which appear in the current issue of People
Today, came independently.
Flying saucers are guided missiles, both
American and Soviet. The inescapable conclusion from world-wide
reports is that the Red saucers are launched from Atomgrad No. 3, a
heavily-guarded missile center in a barren waste near the Finnish
border. Swedish authorities have detected their passage as they
hurtled across Scandinavia in a direct line for this hemisphere.
Other Red launching sites are in Siberia.
The Soviet missiles are crewless, between 50 and
75 ft. in length, about 14 ft. deep. Rockets provide their
main power source but they also carry auxiliary motors, possibly
jets. Ovoid in shape, they reach altitudes of 80-100,000 ft.,
attain speeds in excess of 2,500 mph.
Loaded with cameras and electronic observation
devices, the missiles seem to have but one mission at present -- to
reconnoiter U.S. atomic and military installations. They
could as easily carry atomic warheads.
The Soviet missiles are remote-controlled.
Red submarines, posted strategically in a chain across the Atlantic,
are equipped with electronic monitor boards to guide the missiles
through each sub's "control area." Thus, a missile
originally launched on a course that would place it over Washington,
D.C., may be diverted by a sub off Nova Scotia (where unidentified
subs have been reported) to a course aimed at the Brookhaven
Laboratories on Long Island, close to Manhattan.
The Red saucers need not return to base to
deliver their reconnaissance data. Their findings, including
aerial photos, automatically beamed to a sub or other secret
station, are reproduced and delivered to intelligence headquarters
in Moscow. To prevent its falling into non-Red hands, each
missile carries a high-explosive destructor charge which can blow it
to bits the instant a button on the sub is pushed.
The Soviet long-range snorkel submarine program
for guided missile work was reported by Allied intelligence as far
back as '48. These subs, developments of the Germany type XXVI,
which had a 1,160 ton displacement, can cruise under water at the
phenomenal speed of 24 knots and remain submerged indefinitely.
For 36 months the U. S. has been working
frantically to keep ahead of Russia in the guided missile field.
Dr. Karl Compton, one of the nation's great scientists, has
envisioned huge, crewless missiles screaming through the ionosphere
6,000 mph. Said Dr. Compton in 1949: "...the picture of
smashing a vital electronic development on the outskirts of Moscow
from a launching pad somewhere in the United States in not pure
fantasy."
Today, U.S. rockets are being launched from the
Joint-Services proving grounds on Cape Canaveral in Florida.
These rockets carry electronic devices, can carry atomic warheads.
Should one go out of control, a scientist at the base bits the
"destructor button" on his control board and an explosive charge in
the rocket blows it up. Military authorities will admit that
flights of as long as 500 miles have been made by these guided
missiles over the Caribbean. Reports of saucers and other
mysterious "objects" sighted in this area frequently refer to these
missiles. Our officials aren't worried about these
reports. They are jolted, however, by the 400-odd
"unexplained" saucers and fireballs which have
crisscrossed our skies, appearing in their biggest concentrations
over vital atomic and defense centers.
"Of course flying saucers are real,"
declared a regular U.S. Air Force officer stationed in New Mexico.
"They are not mass delusions. Don't be sucked in by
denials in publicity used to cover up AF investigations. Flying
saucers are regularly seen over Los Alamos."
During WW II, U.S. pilots in Europe and in the
Pacific reported glowing globes, mostly green, which followed their
planes at fixed distances, made no hostile moves. They just
"seemed to watch," pilots reported. Intelligence
took it seriously.
In 1945 following detailed reports by B-29 crew
flying missions over Honshu, the 21st Bomber Command's intelligence
officers decided that the fireballs were remote-controlled guided
missiles. Recently, fireballs have been seen over Korea,
Alaska and the southwest U.S. The Pentagon is particularly
disturbed because they resemble American developments which were
considered exclusive and top secret.
Attempts to pass the fireballs off as meteors
were spiked by Dr. Lincoln LaPaz, head of the Institute of
Meteorics at the University of New Mexico. "I have never seen a
natural meteor with the characteristics of the yellow-green
fireballs," he told People Today.
"Meteors blow up with a loud explosion. These disintegrate
with complete absence of sound. Sightings here and in
Scandinavia lead me to believe that fireballs and the so-called
saucers may be guided missiles -- some possibly ours, some possibly
Russian. In any case, they are Earth-born.
"It is possible that the yellow-green
fireball is not the missile itself but the remaining part of a
missile in the final phase of self-destruction. It does not
explode -- it simply evaporates in a flash of light."
Said Dr. LaPaz: "Compare the saucers with
the atomic bomb. If someone had asked a Manhattan Project
official for an explanation of the brilliant mushroom of light at
Alamogordo, he would have received a blank stare and been told that
no such thing ever happened."
Lawrence, Mass. EAGLE - Sept. 20,
1952
"Flying Saucer" Seen Over City
Two Young Men Make Startling Discovering (sic)---
Notify Air Force
A "Flying Saucer," the aerial
phenomena which has authorities baffled in their attempt to
determine its identity and makeup, was observed by two youths in the
Concord street area shortly before 1:30 a. m. today.
The young men, Raymond Sharkey, 20 Birchwood
road, Methuen, and Robert Sullivan, 61 Arlington street, hurriedly
advised authorities at the Westover Air Force Base in Chicopee of
their observation.
Sullivan said that the "saucer," which
he described as elliptical in shape, made no noise in its flight
which appeared to be sideways. "In fact," he said,
"it looked like a little white cloud and was flying at a
terrific rate of speed.
"It was flying very high and we were able
to observe it for about ten seconds before it disappeared from our
view over one of the tall buildings. It was heading north.
"We just can't believe it. I was skeptical
once, and thought it was a reflection people saw but I've changed my
mind now," Sullivan declared.
Albany, N.Y. KNICKERBOCKER NEWS -
Sept. 20, 1952
'Mainbrace' Has File On 'Flying Saucers'
Topcliffe, England --(AP)--
"Operation Mainbrace" headquarters here opened a new
signal file today:
"Flying saucer sightings and
movements."
The Air Ministry said it was investigating a
report of a silver-colored circular object moving through the sky
about 15,000 feet up at a speed faster than a shooting star.
During the brief glimpse -- between 15 and 30
seconds -- the object was reported to have switched its course and
then seemed to descend.
West Palm Beach, FLA. PALM BEACH TIMES -
Sept. 22, 1952
Scientists See Flying "Object" In Everglades
An object which became too animated to be the
harvest moon it at first was believed to be became the focal point
of several Everglades Experiment Station officials and their wives
early today.
When sighted by one of the women about 4:20 am
in the southeast sky, it was at first thought to be a "very bright
harvest moon."
However, this person realized quickly that it
was too bright, and also much out of place in the sky at that time
of morning to be a "harvest moon."
It was about this time the viewer realized it
was a round object, with blinking lights around its lower part.
Although there was a ground haze in the area,
the person reported the lights flashed red, green and amber,
blinking alternately.
The sphere moved up and down and from side to
side, remaining in the southeast throughout, and being watched about
25 minutes before disappearing in the same direction.
A few minutes after its disappearance, it
reappeared again, but not as near, one observer saying it
"looked four or five times larger than a star."
However, at the (sic) distance, the lights,
still blinking alternately appeared red, green and white, the amber
missing and the white an addition.
It moved from side to side, also up and down,
staying in its southeast position about 15 minutes before finally
disappearing for good.
Five persons in all witnessed the "flying
object," the others being called by the first to observe it,
but none was informed of what was seen in the sky.
The group is well known at the Station, located
on Six Mile Rd., three miles from Belle Glade. None wished use
of his name.
Arlington, VA. DAILY -
Sept. 22, 1952
'Bright Objects' Are Reported
Over Fairfax
Mysterious objects in Fairfax skies were
observed for three hours last night by Fairfax police officers and a
woman near Centreville.
"It beats anything I ever saw," said
Pvt. Julian Burke. "l don't know what they were.
It wasn't my imagination because other officers saw them and we were
all dead sober."
The "flying saucers" were reported by
Mrs. F.L. Hazelwood, who lives on Route 645, about one mile South
of Centreville. Pvt. Burke, investigating the report, said he
watched the objects from Mrs. Hazelwood's house for an hour.
He said he saw four at one time. He
described them as round, orange-colored objects, about as big as a
three-gallon bucket. He said it was very foggy and the objects
appeared to be darting in and out of clouds.
He said when he first arrived at the Centreville
home the objects were closest and appeared to be about 2,000 feet
away. In his description, the officer said the balls would appear
first as a small light and then get big as they seemed to get
closer. They disappeared in the same way, he said.
When the objects would disappear from sight, he
said, they still made a white light for a while like a car light
shining through the fog, except that they were "very
bright."
He said Sgt. John Wahl also came out to
investigate after he radioed back his observations. Burke said
he and Wahl watched the objects together for about 20 minutes.
They returned to the police station about 2 a.m.
There, he said, they saw another similar object. This
time it also was watched by Pvt. Marvin Harrel, desk officer on
duty at the time, and two other officers on the night shift, Pvts.
Dunn and Lloyd.
Meanwhile, police had notified the control tower
at National Airport of the objects shortly after 1 a.m. The
tower reported that they could not pick up anything on the radar
scopes, nor could they see anything. A Civil Aeronautics
spokesman said an American Airline flight passed over Springfield in
Fairfax County about the time the "saucers" were reported
but the plane couldn't make the type light described.
The Naval Observatory in Washington this morning
said it had no reports of any unusual lights in the sky last night.
A spokesman said a meteor would l probablly be an orange color but
that meteors can be seen only for a few seconds and wouldn't act
like those described by police.
Burke said the object seen at the police station
disappeared in the direction of Washington. After the last one had
disappeared police reported the objects to the Department of Defense
on instructions from the airport control tower.
Mrs. Hazelwood says the saucer had a strange
smell that made her husband think something was cooking in the
backyard.
Washington, D.C. STAR -
Sept. 22, 1952
Fairfax County Has Visitation
From Mysterious Balls of Fire
Police Corroborate Resident's Report
Of Strange Objects in Night Skies
Mysterious balls of fire "bright enough to light the
ground" were viewed over Fairfax and Centreville, Va., early
today.
Four Fairfax County policemen sighted the
objects when they went to investigate a report of a resident of
(sic) near Centreville that she had seen strange lights in the sky.
Police Pvt. Julian Burke described the sight
this way:
"They came out of the clouds like
headlights, then brightened up all at one time."
There appeared to be three or four bright
objects, he said, "going in and out of the clouds."
With him were Sergt. John Wahl and Pvts.
Richard Lloyd and Douglas. They had gone to investigate
"several big balls of fire" reported by Mrs. F. L.
Hazelwood of Route 645, about a mile south of Centreville.
The objects were visible for more than three
hours, the policeman said. They were viewed between 12:50 a m.
and 4 a.m.
Pvt. Burke said over the Centreville area the
objects seemed fairly close to the earth and "bright enough to light
the ground." Later, when the policemen returned to
Fairfax, the objects appeared to be directly above the police
station and high in the air.
Officials in the control tower at Washington
National Airport, apprised of the report, scanned the skies and
their radar screen. They said they saw nothing. An
airplane was in the area at the time, they said. But, they added,
this was for a short time only.
Andrews Air Force Base officials reported no
unusual "blips", on the radar screen there.
Fort Belvoir, where Army physicists have created
glowing rings in bell jars, said no experiments were being conducted
early today. The engineer post also ruled out the searchlight
possibility, asserting that its lights had not been in use since
Friday night.
The Fairfax County police said that when the
objects last were sighted about 4 a.m. they appeared to be headed
toward the District.
The first of numerous calls to police was made
by Mrs. Hazelwood, who complained her yard was filled with bright
lights and a vile odor.
Mrs. Hazelwood's daughter Marie told Fairfax
officers the odor made her mother ill and was bad enough to make her
father get up and go out to see if anything nearby was burning.
Saranac Lake, N.Y. ADIRONDACK ENTERPRISE -
Sept. 27, 1952
No Comment Issued On Reported 'Saucer'
CAPE DRUM (AP)-- The Air Force has no comment on an unidentified
flying object that reportedly paid a half-hour visit to the
Northern New York camp.
Military authorities said yesterday that the
object hovered over the base last Monday night. The information
at first had been classified as confidential.
Eight soldiers said the object was about 200
feet across and trailed red-orange sparks. It circled rapidly
and sometimes hovered, they reported.
Buffalo, N.Y. Courier-Express -
Sept. 27, 1952
Jet Plane Scares Off Flying Objects
Poughkeepsie, Sept 26 (AP) -- Civil Defense observers today reported
seeing six colorful flying objects that disappeared when a jet plane
arrived on the scene to investigate.
Mrs. Arthur D. Benson, supervisor of ground
observers at Dover Plains, said ten ground observers saw the objects
in the sky the night of September 11th near the Connecticut border.
She described the objects as "flashing on
and off" -- a greenish color with red flash.
She said she called the civil defense
information filter center at White Plains, which advised her to hold
the line open to give a running report while a jet plane was sent to
investigate.
Mrs. Benson said when the plane appeared the
objects changed to a bluish color and disappeared.
Gloversville, N.Y. HERALD -
Sept. 27, 1952
'STRANGE OBJECT' IN SKIES TAKES HALF-HOUR PEEK AT
CAMP DRUM INSTALLATION
CAMP DRUM (AP) -- Who or what took an uninterrupted 30-minute
peek at this Northern New York Military installation from the
heavens?
Military authorities said yesterday an
unidentified object zoomed through a half hour of weird aerial
gyrations over this base last Monday.
The incident was classified as confidential
military information until yesterday.
The object was described by camp officials as 20
feet in diameter with an exhaust tail of reddist (sic) orange
sparks.
Eight soldiers who saw the object reported it sounded like the
whine of a generator or rotating disks. Griffis Air Base at
Rome was notified of the incident immediately, officials stated.
The observers said the object hovered, circling
rapidly, and occasionally stopped completely.
Noticed at Midnight
It was noticed by a soldier firing boilers about
midnight. He notified the others who all claimed they saw it
in a starless sky. A duty officer was among the witnesses.
Air Force officers from Griffis Base questioned
the men about characteristics of the object the next day.
The Air Force would not comment.
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