Contact
A half century later, witnesses insist little greenor maybe brownmen
crashed in New Mexico BY CARLTON STOWERS
April 2003 - Anne Robbins, 84, says her late husband, Ernest Robert
Robbins, saw a UFO that crashed near Roswell, and he never fibbed. Well,
were not going to argue with her.
The headline in the Roswell Daily Record announcing the saucer crash
couldnt bump a movie photo off page 1. People were much harder
to impress in those days.
It was a snow-covered December in 1995 when President Bill Clinton,
visiting Northern Ireland in support of the country's new and fragile
peace process, spoke to a large gathering that had arrived for a Christmas
tree lighting ceremony. The president opted to dismiss politics and
keep the mood of his speech light. At one point, he drew laughter as
he referred to a letter he'd recently received from a 13-year-old boy
in Belfast.
"Ryan," the president said, "in case you're out there,
here is your answer: No. As far as I know, no spaceship crashed at Roswell,
New Mexico, in 1947. And if the Air Force recovered any extraterrestrial
bodies, they did not tell me."
Such is the widespread and ongoing fascination attached to a legendary
event that many believe actually took place on the late J.B. Foster's
sheep ranch more than a half-century ago. What has transpired since
that Independence Day weekend when a "flying saucer" was allegedly
recovered by military personnel from Roswell Army Air Field has fueled
a debate that continues 56 years later. Is it possible that such an
unearthly event really occurred? The question has spawned an industry
of books--well more than 100 at last count--and documentary films, inspired
popular television shows and sci-fi movies, a prospering museum business
in Roswell and insistence by many researchers that an ongoing government
cover-up of the historic discovery puts Watergate to shame.
Perhaps Clinton should have visited with Midland's Anne Robbins before
giving his answer. The widow of a career military man stationed in Roswell
at the time, she might have changed his mind. She would probably have
shared the description of the saucer that her husband, Technical Sergeant
Ernest Robert Robbins, told her he helped recover long ago and the three
small "men"--one dead, one near death and another very much
alive--found outside the spaceship.
But we're getting ahead of the story.
Was the arid Lincoln County region actually visited by inhabitants of
another world? If so, why has the government refused to admit it? And
could it be true, as some now claim, that many modern-day technical
advancements--from lasers to fiber optics, integrated circuit chips
to Velcro--have evolved from scientific examination and reverse engineering
studies of a now hidden spacecraft?
As
the story goes, William "Mac" Brazel, who leased the Foster
Ranch at the time, was on horseback herding sheep when he happened onto
a large field of strewn debris unlike anything he'd ever seen. He would
later tell neighbors Floyd and Loretta Proctor it was clearly something
that had fallen from the sky; perhaps the cause of the too-loud-to-be-thunder
boom he'd heard during the previous night's rainstorm.
Brazel allegedly showed the Proctors some of the pieces he'd collected,
metallic but thin as tinfoil. They watched in amazement as he wrinkled
one, laid it on a table and saw it immediately smooth to its original
shape. And there were the pieces of stick-like material, no heavier
than balsa wood, bendable but impossible to break or cut with a knife.
On some were what he later compared to Indian petroglyphs, series of
strange symbols and pastel-colored drawings.
The neighbors, aware of the flying-saucer mania then sweeping the nation,
suggested he tell authorities. Thus, two days later, on the morning
of July 7, 1947, Brazel made the 60-mile drive to Roswell and told Chaves
County Sheriff George Wilcox of his discovery, showing him several pieces
of the strange debris he had collected. Wilcox phoned Major Jesse Marcel
at the nearby air base and suggested he might want to speak with the
48-year-old rancher.
After examining the material and hearing Brazel's description of the
size of the debris field--three-quarters of a mile long and 200 to 300
feet wide, with a lengthy "gouge" in the ground at its north
end--Marcel arranged to meet Brazel at the ranch.
Thereafter the story becomes a blur that historians are still attempting
to sort out. According to evidence gathered by numerous researchers--both
scientists and laymen collectively calling themselves UFOlogists--a
small, elite group of military personnel was assigned to guard the area,
collect the debris and take it to the base. There, orders had already
been received from Brigadier General Roger Ramey, commanding officer
of the 8th Air Force, that everything recovered was to be flown immediately
to what would later become Carswell Air Force Base in Fort Worth.
Still, the story might never have created a worldwide frenzy had the
base public information officer, Lieutenant Walter Haut, not issued
a startling press release that appeared beneath a banner headline in
the next day's edition of the Roswell Daily Record: "RAAF Captures
Flying Saucer On Ranch in Roswell Region."
Haut's press release, ordered by Colonel William Blanchard, the base
commanding officer, made it clear that something more than pieces of
scattered debris had been found. "The intelligence office of the
509th Bombardment group at Roswell Army Air Field announced at noon
today that the field has come into possession of a flying saucer,"
it read. The release went on to explain that "Major Marcel and
a detail from his department went to the ranch and discovered the disc."
Soon, calls were coming to Haut from news agencies throughout the world.
Now 80 and co-founder of the International UFO Museum and Research Center
in Roswell, Haut says, "After meeting with Colonel Blanchard in
his office and getting the information for the press release, I wrote
it and went to town around five that afternoon to deliver it to the
radio and newspaper people.
"That done, I went on home and was having dinner when people from
all over the world started calling. Finally, about midnight, my wife,
who was getting a little unhappy with the flood of calls, just took
the phone off the hook and told me we were going to bed."
Then, just as quickly as the excitement had developed, it came to a
crashing end with a Fort Worth news conference called by General Ramey
the following day. Despite claims by Marcel to investigators years later
that the amount of debris loaded onto the B-29 that was flown from Roswell
to Fort Worth "was enormous," half filling the huge plane,
reporters and photographers who gathered in the general's office were
shown only tattered remnants of a weather balloon and given a smiling
apology for all the unwarranted excitement. In attendance was Major
Marcel, admitting he had been mistaken.
The official version of the Roswell incident thus became that a military
weather balloon launched to detect wind velocity and direction at high
altitudes had come crashing down on Foster Ranch. End of story. The
headline in the next day's Roswell paper was as definitive but not nearly
as exciting as the one published the day before: "Gen. Ramey Empties
Roswell Saucer." In a more innocent and patriotic time, with World
War II still fresh in the public's mind and trust in the government
blindly indisputable, the explanation was good enough. For most. For
a time.
Anne
Robbins, who until now has never spoken publicly on the matter, says
what her late husband saw 56 years ago was hardly a downed weather balloon.
Seated in a meeting room at the newly opened Odessa Meteor Crater Museum,
the 84-year-old Robbins clearly recalls a July night when her husband
received a call to report to the base. She would not see or hear from
him for 18 hours. And when she did, he told her bits and pieces of a
bizarre story that has puzzled her for a lifetime.
"We had been to a dinner party at the NCO [non-commissioned officers]
club on the base," she says, "and didn't get home until 10:30
or 11. We'd already gone to bed but weren't yet asleep when everything
outside lit up like it was daylight. It was like that for what seemed
like several minutes, and we both assumed that it was probably helicopters
from the base with searchlights on."
Soon thereafter, the phone call came to their home and her husband told
her he had to report to the base.
"I just assumed that there had been a plane crash somewhere nearby,"
she says. "But I couldn't figure why my husband, a sheet-metal
man who repaired planes, was called in."
She was even more puzzled when he returned home the following evening,
his uniform wrinkled and damp. "I asked him what had happened to
him, why he was so wet, and he told me he'd had to go through the decontamination
tank at the base. I asked, 'In your clothes?' and he said, 'They were
what I was wearing when I was out there.'"
Still assuming that he'd been called to the site of a plane crash, she
quizzed him further. "He told me, 'Well, I guess you might as well
know; it's going to be in the papers. A UFO crashed outside of Roswell.'"
Her response? "I told him he was crazy."
"No," Sergeant Robbins replied, "I'm not." Then
he showered and went to bed.
"I don't remember him being particularly shocked or very emotional
about it," she says. "In fact, he seemed cool as a cucumber.
He just made it clear to me that he wasn't going to talk about it."
The following morning she continued to press for details. "I asked
him again if it was really true and he said, yes, it was." When
she asked what the UFO looked like, he explained that "if you took
two saucers and put them together, that's what it looked like."
On the top layer, he told her, there were oblong-shaped windows all
the way around the craft. And, no, he said, he had not looked inside
the crashed ship.
"I asked him if there was anybody on it. He said, 'I can tell you
this much: There were three people. One was dead and two were still
alive. I can't tell you anything more.'"
It was not until several days later that Sergeant Robbins finally agreed
to drive his wife out to the crash site. By then, all debris had been
cleared away and neither a spaceship nor signs of military personnel
was evident. "He didn't say much of anything until we got to a
place where there was this big burned spot, a perfect circle so black
that it was shiny. No normal fire could have made something like that."
It was, she says, as if the sand had been melted and turned into a sheet
of black glass.
"This," Sergeant Robbins said, "is where I was for 18
hours."
"On the drive home," she says, "I asked him what happened
to the spaceship, what happened to the people who were on it. Her husband's
reply: "I can't tell you that; don't ask me any more."
It was the last time her husband spoke of "the Roswell incident"
until long after he'd retired from the service. Until his death of a
heart attack two years ago, he never told his wife who was with him
that night or what role he had played.
Following his retirement from the Air Force in 1961, they moved to Saginaw,
near Fort Worth, and he worked first for General Dynamics, then LTV,
as an aircraft repairman.
"It was years later, when our kids were in high school, that our
son Ronald was working on some kind of report on unidentified flying
objects and asked his father to tell him about what happened back in
Roswell. He didn't say much, basically just what he'd told me years
earlier," she says.
"But you know how kids are. Ronald kept asking questions, like
what the men found at the crash looked like. Finally, Papa [as she referred
to her husband throughout their 57-year marriage] got a pencil and drew
this pear-shaped head with large black eyes. Their skin, he said, was
brown and they had no nose, no mouth.
"When Ronald asked him what their bodies looked like, all he would
say was, 'Son, you don't want to know about that.'"
The Robbins' son, now living in Arizona, could not be reached by the
Dallas Observer. "He wouldn't talk to you about it, anyway,"
his mother insists. Neither of her children, in fact, has ever spoken
publicly of their father's alleged involvement in the Roswell incident.
"Barbara, my daughter, tells me, 'Daddy's dead, don't bring it
up.'"
"All I remember," says Barbara Wattlington, "was Dad
saying he was stationed in Roswell and that a UFO crashed there."
The last time Anne Robbins remembers any conversation about the matter
was a few years before her husband's death in January 2000, when they
sat in their Saginaw living room one evening, watching television. A
show whose title she can't recall was on, re-creating the Roswell event
and posing the question of whether it was an ageless hoax or the well-hidden
truth. "I asked him, 'Was it a hoax?' and all he said was, 'It's
the truth. It did land.'
"I asked him, 'Well, if it did, where is it?' He again said he
couldn't tell me that."
Her husband, she says, was never one to embellish or lie; neither prankster
nor teller of tall tales. "He was a good, Christian man. He loved
the military and his country and never spoke bad about either."
No, she says, he would never have made up such a story. Nor, if ordered
not to, would he have ever talked of matters he was told to keep secret.
"That's just the way he was," she says. "On the day he
died, the last thing he told me was that he wanted me to promise to
fly the flag in front of our house until I drew my last breath."
Though she insists she has never researched the numerous theories of
the Roswell crash presented in the countless books or documentaries,
she does admit that she has lingering questions she hopes will one day
be answered. "That UFO they found didn't just fly away," she
says. "So where is it? And what happened to the people on it? I
still say the Air Force knows what happened. Someday, I hope, we might
find out the truth."
Two years ago she did get an answer to one question that had long bothered
her. "I could never figure out why an airplane repairman would
be called out in the middle of the night to participate in the investigation
of a crashed UFO," she says. Only after filing her husband's death
certificate with military officials in Washington, D.C., did she learn
that he had intelligence clearance during his Roswell tenure.
Still, if Anne Robbins had embarked on a thorough study of the massive
collection of research done on the fabled Roswell crash, she would not
find her husband's name among any of the "witnesses" who have
come forward over the years. Yet the sketchy details he gave her generally
mesh with most of the reconstructed stories found in the ever-growing
volume of literature devoted to the crash investigation.
It
was not until 1978, three decades after the brief flurry of interest
in the crashed UFO-turned-weather balloon, that Jesse Marcel, the intelligence
officer who had been at the center of the original event, came forward
with a story far different from the one told attendees of the Carswell
news conference.
The material flown from Roswell to Fort Worth was never actually shown
to the media, he confided to nuclear physicist-turned-UFO investigator
Stanton Friedman. It was, instead, quietly delivered to a research laboratory
at Wright-Patterson Army Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio.
Marcel's revised recollections of the 1947 event, along with those of
others who had finally chosen to speak out, ultimately appeared in the
1980 book The Roswell Incident co-authored by William Moore and Charles
Berlitz, setting off a renewed appetite for information. Soon it came
in a virtual flood of eyewitness reports and recollections of family
members who, like Anne Robbins, began revealing secrets they had long
been told to keep. The Roswell story exploded into the best-known alleged
UFO encounter in history.
According to the story now told by researchers, ranging from the serious
to those writing for the supermarket tabloids, things far more bizarre
had already occurred before Mac Brazel discovered the debris field.
Those who have written about the event in the years since suggest a
fascinating sequence of events that occurred in the early days of that
July:
For several nights, Roswell residents had reportedly seen a strange
flying object in the night sky. Though no one would know about it for
30 years, two Franciscan Catholic nuns, working at the local St. Mary's
Hospital, even made notations in their diaries that at some time after
11 p.m. on July 4, 1947, they had seen a large flash in the night sky,
assuming that it was a plane in distress.
What Roswell AAF radar operator Frank Kaufmann said he saw was even
more remarkable. On that same evening he was tracking the strange movement
of a mysterious object flying at an incredible rate of speed. Suddenly
it began losing altitude and the blip on the radar screen enlarged into
a large starburst pattern that suggested an explosion had occurred.
It was estimated that the event had occurred somewhere within a 100-mile
range northwest of the base and a search team was immediately dispatched.
Jim Ragsdale would later tell of seeing what occurred at much closer
range. He and his girlfriend, on a rock-hunting trip, were parked at
a secluded campsite on what was known as Boy Scout Mountain, when they
saw a flash, then heard a thundering explosion. Within seconds, Ragsdale
would later tell researchers, the UFO skipped along the desert not far
away, then came to rest at the base of a nearby bluff. Grabbing flashlights,
he and his girlfriend made their way to the crash site where he says
a saucer-shaped vehicle had come to rest. Not only did he eventually
tell of seeing the crashed UFO but the bodies of several "childlike"
passengers. After picking up a few pieces of debris from the wreckage,
the young couple decided to return to their pickup and wait until daylight
for a better look.
When they did return, Ragsdale later wrote in a sworn affidavit, they
saw a military convoy arriving and briefly hid to watch before deciding
to leave (taking with them pieces of the debris he says they later showed
to numerous people in a nearby bar). Had they remained, the story goes,
they would have eventually seen the UFO hoisted by crane onto the bed
of a flatbed truck and the bodies placed in another military vehicle
that was ordered to quickly return to the Roswell base hospital.
The actual crash site, then, had been swept clear by military personnel
hours before Mac Brazel rode up on the debris field several miles away.
Later, researchers would assume that the craft had apparently first
hit on the Foster Ranch, sliding along for a distance, then had briefly
managed to become airborne again before crashing.
If the material found in such books as The Truth About the UFO Crash
at Roswell, Crash at Corona, Beyond Roswell, and Alien Contact: Top
Secret UFO Files Revealed is to be believed, the interplanetary visit
was, in many respects, a pretty poorly kept secret from the get-go.
The only problem is, it was years before folks would talk about it.
Yet, before their deaths, numerous people or their descendants recounted
anecdotes of involvement in and observations made during the strange
event.
For instance, long after his father's death in 1986, Dr. Jesse Marcel
Jr., 66, still tells of Major Marcel stopping by the house on an early
July morning in 1947 to show him and his mother pieces of the crash
debris that he had collected. Eleven years old at the time, Dr. Marcel
recalled his father bringing pieces of the downed "flying disc"
from his car and spreading them on the kitchen floor. He recalled handling
the aluminum foil-like material and seeing the unusual symbols on what
he said looked like pieces of black plastic.
Now living in Helena, Montana, Dr. Marcel says the most remarkable memory
he has of the pieces his father showed him was of the geometric-like
symbols on some of them. "I've always referred to them as I-beams,"
he says, "though I have no idea what they really were.
"My father was very excited about what they had found," Dr.
Marcel says, "and since our house was on the way to the base, he
just decided to stop by and show it to us. Then he took it on out to
the base."
Major Marcel's excitement, however, was quickly muted. "The next
day," his son remembers, "he sat down with my mother and me
and told us we were never to talk about what he'd shown us. He said,
'Don't think about it. It didn't happen.'"
Today, Dr. Marcel remains convinced that the material his father showed
him came from another world.
Then there is the story that the late Sergeant Melvin Brown waited until
1970 to tell his daughters. Retired and living in England, he said that
he had been at the crash site in '47 and was assigned to guard the alien
bodies as they were being transported back to the base. Though sworn
to secrecy, he finally told of being ordered to ride in an "ice-filled
truck" that was to take the bodies to a hangar. On the trip, Brown
told his daughter Beverly Bean, he had lifted a tarp and seen "two,
possibly three bodies."
And there were others who would eventually tell of seeing the alien
bodies, including Roswell AAF radar operator Kaufmann, who would later
claim to have been among those ordered to the crash site where, he later
told researchers Don Schmitt and Kevin Randle, authors of UFO Crash
at Roswell, he saw five small aliens, all clearly dead.
Oliver "Pappy" Henderson, a World War II pilot assigned to
the Roswell Army Air Field at the time, allegedly told friend Dr. John
Kromschroeder during a fishing trip in 1978 that he had flown much of
the debris--and the bodies of what he only described as "those
little guys"--to Wright-Patterson aboard a C-47. Shortly before
his death in 1986, Henderson also told the story to his wife.
In his book, The Day After Roswell, retired Colonel Philip Corso is
far more graphic as he writes of a night a sentry urged him to enter
an off-limits Wright-Patterson building where more than 30 crates of
Henderson's cargo had been stacked against a wall, draped by large tarps.
When the sentry pointed to a particular crate he'd already looked in--in
clear violation of orders he'd been given --Corso opened it and shined
a flashlight on its contents.
"My stomach rolled right up into my throat, and I almost became
sick," he writes. "[Inside] was a coffin, but not like any
coffin I'd ever seen before. The contents, enclosed in a thick glass
container, were submerged in a thick light blue liquid...
"At first I thought it was a dead child they were shipping somewhere.
But it was no child. It was a 4-foot human-shaped figure with arms,
bizarre-looking four-fingered hands--I didn't see a thumb--thin legs
and feet and an oversized incandescent light bulb-shaped head...the
eyesockets were oversized and almond-shaped..."
Perhaps the most provocative story came not from a member of the military
but, instead, a Roswell mortician named Glenn Dennis. Twenty-two at
the time and director of the local Ballard Funeral Home, he told of
receiving a telephone call from the base on the afternoon of July 5,
1947, asking if he could provide several "small," hermetically
sealed caskets. Thirty minutes later, he would eventually recall to
numerous researchers and journalists, he answered a second call, this
time with a series of questions about the techniques of embalming and
preserving dead bodies and if such processes would alter the chemical
contents of blood and tissue. Finally, he reported, he was asked what
happened to body tissue after it had been exposed to the elements.
Curious, Dennis says he asked if there was something he could help with
and was told the questions were only "for future reference."
Later that day, Dennis recalled, he had driven an injured airman to
the base infirmary. While there, he noticed an unusual amount of activity
at the base hospital. Encountering a nurse named Naomi Selff in the
hallway, she was clearly surprised to see him and warned that "he
wasn't supposed to be there and had better leave immediately."
Minutes later, his story went, he was escorted by two military police
all the way back to the funeral home.
It was not until the following day that he learned what had been happening.
He phoned nurse Selff and they agreed to meet for lunch. Obviously distraught,
she told him of seeing three small bodies, two of which were badly mutilated,
and of being ordered by attending military doctors to take notes while
they conducted their examinations. The stench of the corpses, she allegedly
told him, had been almost more than she could stand. Before he returned
her to her barrack, Dennis recalled, she drew sketches of the aliens
on a prescription pad and gave them to him with a warning that he should
"show them to no one."
That, the mortician says, was the last time he ever saw her. After numerous
unsuccessful attempts to reach her by phone, he learned several days
later that she had suddenly been reassigned to duty in England. Shortly
thereafter, he was told that she had died there in a plane crash.
Co-founder of the Roswell museum with Haut, Dennis is currently in poor
health and was unable to speak with the Observer about his well-chronicled
story.
But for every true believer there are skeptics, researchers who have
picked away at the colorful, unimaginable stories in search of their
flaws. And they have found many. Among the debunkers is Kal K. Korff,
author of The Roswell UFO Crash: What They Don't Want You to Know. He
not only questions why so many waited so long to come forward with the
stories but points out that many of them are, like that of Anne Robbins,
hand-me-down tales allegedly kept secret until the firsthand witnesses
were dead.
Korff's questions are valid: Why have some of the reported witness accounts
described the downed UFO as "saucer-shaped" while others remember
it being "triangular-shaped with small wings?" While most
who claimed to have seen the bodies recall there being three, others
say they saw as many as five. Some say all were dead, others that one
or more was still alive. Descriptions of the color of the small bodies
range from gray to brown. How could mortician Haut have "lost"
something as important as the drawings he says his nurse friend made
and gave to him? And if, in fact, so many civilians collected pieces
of the strange-looking debris, why has not a single piece of it ever
surfaced?
It was not until 1994 that an Air Force investigation into the aging
Roswell affair resulted in an announcement that the material found on
the Foster Ranch was, in fact, a crashed high-altitude test balloon
that would eventually be able to monitor Soviet nuclear testing. Actually
a chain of radar-equipped balloons, it had been launched on July 4,
1947, and was tracked to within 17 miles of the Foster Ranch before
disappearing.
When the explanation failed to satisfy many "believers," the
Air Force released yet another report in '97, this one titled The Roswell
Report--Case Closed, in which it attempted to answer the lingering question
of the "bodies" allegedly seen at the crash site. What the
so-called witnesses had seen, according to the report, were nothing
more than crash-test dummies that were part of a military experiment
in parachute and ejector seat designs.
That, too, failed to satisfy those determined that the governmental
cover-up continued. Such tests, several military researchers argued,
had not even begun until the mid-'50s.
"The reason the interest in the Roswell case remains and, in fact,
seems to grow," says Mark Rodeghier, scientific director of the
Chicago-based Center for UFO Studies, "is the fact the government
has never given a reasonable explanation of what occurred that summer
of 1947."
Thus it continues, an unexplained event that has turned into an industry.
What happened or didn't happen 56 years ago has lured 1.3 million to
the International UFO Museum and Research Center since it opened in
1992. A guided tour of the desolate "crash site" is now available.
Then, there was the long-lost film of the "autopsy" of one
of the Roswell aliens that was shown on television worldwide before
being discounted as fake, and a stream of new books and articles that
continues to flow. Clearly, the public loves the mystery. According
to a recent poll, a large percentage of the U.S. population continues
to believe something unworldly occurred that July on the Foster Ranch.
Walter Haut, one of the few major figures in the long-ago story still
living, is among them. "I'm sure," he says, "that over
the years much of the story has been exaggerated. But, yes, I believe
that something happened out there in 1947." And he's not speaking
of a weather balloon crash. http://www.dallasobserver.com/issues/2003-04-03/feature.html/2/index.html
- carlton.stowers@dallasobserver.com
Roswell
Daily Record for July 8, 1947
RAAF Captures Flying Saucer On Ranch in Roswell Region
No Details of Flying Disk Are Revealed
Roswell Hardware Man and Wife Report Disk Seen
The
intelligence office of the 509th Bombardment group at Roswell Army Air
Field announced at noon today, that the field has come into possession
of a flying saucer.
According to information released by the department, over authority
of Maj. J. A. Marcel, intelligence officer, the disk was recovered on
a ranch in the Roswell vicinity, after an unidentified rancher had notified
Sheriff Geo. Wilcox, here, that he had found the instrument on his premises.
Major Marcel and a detail from his department went to the ranch and
recovered the disk, it was stated.
After the intelligence officer here had inspected the instrument it
was flown to higher headquarters.
The intelligence office stated that no details of the saucer's construction
or its appearance had been revealed.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Wilmot apparently were the only persons in Roswell
who saw what they thought was a flying disk.
They were sitting on their porch at 105 South Penn. last Wednesday night
at about ten o'clock when a large glowing object zoomed out of the sky
from the southeast, going in a northwesterly direction at a high rate
of speed.
Wilmot called Mrs. Wilmot's attention to it and both ran down into the
yard to watch. It was in sight less then a minute, perhaps 40 or 50
seconds, Wilmot estimated.
Wilmot said that it appeared to him to be about 1,500 feet high and
going fast. He estimated between 400 and 500 miles per hour.
In appearance it looked oval in shape like two inverted saucers, faced
mouth to mouth, or like two old type washbowls placed, together in the
same fashion. The entire body glowed as though light were showing through
from inside, though not like it would inside, though not like it would
be if a light were merely underneath.
From where he stood Wilmot said that the object looked to be about 5
feet in size, and making allowance for the distance it was from town
he figured that it must have been 15 to 20 feet in diameter, though
this was just a guess.
Wilmot said that he heard no sound but that Mrs. Wilmot said she heard
a swishing sound for a very short time.
The object came into view from the southeast and disappeared over the
treetops in the general vicinity of six mile hill.
Wilmot, who is one of the most respected and reliable citizens in town,
kept the story to himself hoping that someone else would come out and
tell about having seen one, but finally today decided that he would
go ahead and tell about it. The announcement that the RAAF was in possession
of one came only a few minutes after he decided to release the details
of what he had seen.
Roswell Daily Record for July 9, 1947
Gen. Ramey Empties Roswell Saucer
Ramey Says Excitement is Not Justified
General Ramey Says Disk is Weather Balloon
Fort
Worth, Texas, July 9 (AP) An examination by the army revealed last night
that mysterious objects found on a lonely New Mexico ranch was a harmless
high-altitude weather balloon - not a grounded flying disk.Excitement
was high until Brig. Gen. Roger M. Ramey, commander of the Eighth air
forces with headquarters here cleared up the mystery.
The bundle of tinfoil, broken wood beams and rubber remnants of a balloon
were sent here yesterday by army air transport in the wake of reports
that it was a flying disk.
But the general said the objects were the crushed remains of a ray wind
target used to determine the direction and velocity of winds at high
altitudes.
Warrant Officer Irving Newton, forecaster at the army air forces weather
station here said, "we use them because they go much higher than
the eye can see."
The weather balloon was found several days ago near the center of New
Mexico by Rancher W. W. Brazel. He said he didn't think much about it
until he went into Corona, N. M., last Saturday and heard the flying
disk reports.
He returned to his ranch, 85 miles northwest of Roswell, and recovered
the wreckage of the balloon, which he had placed under some brush.
Then Brazel hurried back to Roswell, where he reported his find to the
sheriff's office.
The sheriff called the Roswell air field and Maj. Jesse A. Marcel, 509th
bomb group intelligence officer was assigned to the case.
Col. William H. Blanchard, commanding officer of the bomb group, reported
the find to General Ramey and the object was flown immediately to the
army air field here.
Ramey went on the air here last night to announce the New Mexico discovery
was not a flying disk.
Newton said that when rigged up, the instrument "looks like a six-pointed
star, is sivery in appearance and rises in the air like a kite."
In Roswell, the discovery set off a flurry of excitement.
Sheriff George Wicox's telephone lines were jammed. Three calls came
from England, one of them from The London Daily Mail, he said.
A public relations officer here said the balloon was in his office "and
it'll probably stay right there."
Newton, who made the examination, said some 80 weather stations in the
U. S. were using that type of balloon and that it could have come from
any of them.
He said he had sent up identical balloons during the invasion of Okinawa
to determine ballistics information for heavy guns.
Roswell
Daily Record for July 9, 1947
Harassed Rancher Who Located 'Saucer' Sorry He Told About
It
W.
W. Brazel, 48, Lincoln county rancher living 30 miles south of Corona,
today told his story of finding what the army at first described as
a flying disk, but the publicity which attended his find caused him
to add that if he ever found anything else short of a bomb, he sure
wasn't going to say anything about it.
Brazel was brought here late yesterday by W. E. Whitmore, of radio station
KGFL, had his picture taken and gave an interview to the Record and
Jason Kellahin, sent here from the Albuquerque bureau of the Associated
Press to cover the story. The picture he posed for was sent out over
AP telephoto wire sending machine specially set up in the Record office
by R. D. Adair, AP wire chief sent here from Albuquerque for the sole
purpose of getting out his picture and that of sheriff George Wilcox,
to whom Brazel originally gave the information of his find.
Brazel related that on June 14 he and an 8-year old son, Vernon, were
about 7 or 8 miles from the ranch house of the J. B. Foster ranch, which
he operates, when they came upon a large area of bright wreckage made
up on rubber strips, tinfoil, a rather tough paper and sticks.
At the time Brazel was in a hurry to get his round made and he did not
pay much attention to it. But he did remark about what he had seen and
on July 4 he, his wife, Vernon and a daughter, Betty, age 14, went back
to the spot and gathered up quite a bit of the debris.
The next day he first heard about the flying disks, and he wondered
if what he had found might be the remnants of one of these.
Monday he came to town to sell some wool and while here he went to see
sheriff George Wilcox and "whispered kinda confidential like"
that he might have found a flying disk.
Wilcox got in touch with the Roswell Army Air Field and Maj. Jesse A.
Marcel and a man in plain clothes accompanied him home, where they picked
up the rest of the pieces of the "disk" and went to his home
to try to reconstruct it.
According to Brazel they simply could not reconstruct it at all. They
tried to make a kite out of it, but could not do that and could not
find any way to put it back together so that it could fit.
Then Major Marcel brought it to Roswell and that was the last he heard
of it until the story broke that he had found a flying disk.
Brazel said that he did not see it fall from the sky and did not see
it before it was torn up, so he did not know the size or shape it might
have been, but he thought it might have been about as large as a table
top. The balloon which held it up, if that was how it worked, must have
been about 12 feet long, he felt, measuring the distance by the size
of the room in which he sat. The rubber was smoky gray in color and
scattered over an area about 200 yards in diameter.
When the debris was gathered up the tinfoil, paper, tape, and sticks
made a bundle about three feet long and 7 or 8 inches thick, while the
rubber made a bundle about 18 or 20 inches long and about 8 inches thick.
In all, he estimated, the entire lot would have weighed maybe five pounds.
There was no sign of any metal in the area which might have been used
for an engine and no sign of any propellers of any kind, although at
least one paper fin had been glued onto some of the tinfoil.
There were no words to be found anywhere on the instrument, although
there were letters on some of the parts. Considerable scotch tape and
some tape with flowers printed upon it had been used in the construction.
No strings or wire were to be found but there were some eyelets in the
paper to indicate that some sort of attachment may have been used.
Brazel said that he had previously found two weather observation balloons
on the ranch, but that what he found this time did not in any way resemble
either of these.
"I am sure that what I found was not any weather observation balloon,"
he said. "But if I find anything else besides a bomb they are going
to have a hard time getting me to say anything about it."
Air Force Says Dummies Used in Parachute Tests Were Mistaken
For Aliens
By ROBERT BURNS Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON
(AP). The Air Force today offered what it hopes is the final word on
claims by UFO buffs that alien bodies were recovered at a crash site
in New Mexico in 1947: The ''bodies'' were not aliens but dummies used
in parachute tests.
The explanation, on the eve of the 50th anniversary of the incident,
is offered in enormous detail in a 231-page report the Air Force released
today. It is meant to close the book on longstanding rumors that the
Air Force recovered a flying saucer and extraterrestrial bodies near
Roswell, N.M., in July 1947, and then covered it up.
Skeptics immediately pointed out a discrepancy. The parachute tests
occurred years after the Roswell incident. The Air Force theorized that
those who saw the dummies were confused over the dates.
''I have no other explanation'' for how recollections of ''bodies''
could be associated with the debris recovered at Roswell a decade earlier,
said Air Force Col. John Haynes, who presented the report at a Pentagon
news conference.
''We're not going to revisit it,'' he said.
Deon Crosby, director of the International UFO Museum and Research Center
in Roswell, said the report raises more questions than it answers. She
said pictures of the Air Force dummies look like mannequins, and if
that's what they were ''what does it say about the people in the military
who can't tell the difference between mannequins and bodies?''
The title of the report tells it all: ''The Roswell Report, Case Closed.''
The Air Force in 1994 issued a report on the Roswell incident that said
the ''spacecraft'' that supposedly crashed in the New Mexico desert
was an Air Force balloon used in a top-secret program, Project Mogul,
intended to monitor the atmosphere for evidence of Soviet nuclear tests.
The Air Force called that report its final response to the Roswell rumors.
But later the Air Force came upon evidence it believed would explain
the additional rumors that space aliens were recovered at the crash
site and were covered up. So today's report was put together to provide
what Air Force Secretary Sheila Widnall called a ''complete and open
explanation.''
The possibility of a government conspiracy to cover up an actual UFO
sighting was ridiculed today by retired Air Force Col. Richard Weaver,
who wrote the 1994 report.
''I don't think the government is capable of putting together a decent
conspiracy,'' Weaver said on NBC's ''Today'' show. ''We have a hard
time keeping a secret, let alone putting together a decent conspiracy.''
Asked if he thought the new report will put the matter to rest, Weaver
said, ''No, I doubt it. This has become a religion to many people. It's
almost a cult. Certainly an unbelievable financial opportunity for many
folks. So I think this is going to endure.''
Although the Air Force's explanation of a mix-up of parachute dummies
for space aliens seems reasonable, there is one aspect that troubles
some UFO researchers: The tests with the dummies came about a decade
after the 1947 Roswell incident.
Did those who claimed to have seen the ''aliens'' mix up their dates
that badly?
''I think this is a real stretch,'' said Karl Pflock, a UFO researcher
in New Mexico who said he does not believe the Roswell incident involved
alien spacecraft.
In its report today, the Air Force offered little elaboration on the
theory of the mix-ups in dates other than speculation that events in
the 1940s and 1950s ''have been consolidated'' in the minds of some
who claim to have been witnesses.
''It appears that UFO proponents have failed to establish the accurate
dates for these 'alien' observations in some instances by more
than a decade and then erroneously linked them'' to the actual recovery
of Project Mogul debris, the report said.
The life-size dummies were used in high-altitude parachute drops from
1954 to 1959 as part of Air Force projects code-named High Dive and
Excelsior. The object was to devise a way to return a pilot or astronaut
to earth by parachute if forced to escape at extremely high altitudes.
The dummies were transported to altitudes up to 98,000 feet by balloons
and then released. Balloons dropped 67 dummies throughout New Mexico
in the 1954-59 period. The majority of them landed outside the confines
of military bases in eastern New Mexico, near Roswell, according to
the Air Force report.
The dummies had a skeleton of aluminum or steel, skin of latex or plastic,
a cast aluminum skull, and an instrument cavity in the torso and head.
The Air Force said the existence of such dummies was not widely known
outside of scientific circles and ''easily could have been mistaken
for something they were not.'' Today such dummies are widely used in
auto crash tests.