UFO PHOTOS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
40
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 24, 2013
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 1, 1956
Content Type: 
PHOTO
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1.pdf11.46 MB
Body: 
Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 116 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 CD :: Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 54.V. Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: dik-RDP79B073?igFA000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 14 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24 : CIAIRDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24 : CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 SPACE, GRAVITY AND THE FLYING SAUCER the Norwich Astronomical Society and the British Astro- nomical Association. Norwich. F. W. Potter In a later article which appeared in the Daily Mail, I I th February 1954, written by J. Stubbs Walker, and headed 'Was it a "Saucer- they saw over Norwich?' Mr Walker tells us . . . 'Now, here is a strange thing about what the Potters saw and what Mr Potter drew. The whole of his description is very much like the much-questioned photographs of a flying saucer supposedly taken at short range by Mr George Adamski and published in his book Flying Saucers Have Landed, except for the vital fact that Mr Potter drew what he saw in his refracting telescope, which reverses the image. 'His flying saucer was not flying the same way up as those of Mr Adamski, and no amount of arguing will make him change his mind. Mr Potter had previously seen a represen- tation of the Adamski saucer and was consequently aware Top dotne did not rotate. Hull shown ur'toy egy: c ligitt rays front aftrturts. Dark?re3 huli intense Mad sky. llery prom;acnt band muck Ii5kte ix. colour. Red 910tu Front hollow at du bottom. Fig. 1 This drawing, reproduced by courtesy of the "Eastern Evening News," was copied by a member of that paper's staff from a sketch made by Mr. F. W. Potter immediately after he had sighted the object he describes. 46 MIRAGE OR FACT that what he saw might be expected to be flyin way At first hearing this description would seem to the i sue, but it so happens that it strengthens t the theory outlined in this book. Is ? here any point in further argument'? Are w that eight people independently of each other places, suffered the same hallucination at the Are re then to convince ourselves that the repo or can we reason that most people who take ai telescopes and astronomy are not the type to hoaxes? Was this a case of misinterpretation of phenomena? Is it not stretching the imagination far fcr us to believe that at least eight people `th saw the same vehicle with the same significant I detal,? When are people going to climb down to senseAttitude, because if they insist on star-gazi it is oing to get very draughty for them when t of th,,, flying saucer is made known. As ,this little book goes to press, it would sec has started to blow already, for information been 7e1eased regarding the Canadian Govern mer towaids flying saucers. They at least consider real enough to spend money on, for they have c saucer-detecting station at Shirleys Bay, ten Ottowa, comprising a laboratory packed with and team of experts engaged upon a twent watcF. Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 47 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Fig. 151? Al alOr &MC/1.'4011r of flying saticer, obtained" hi analysis of the ,,klarnski photographs - Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24 CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Plate 1 Author's impression of the A. V. Roe Project AERODYNAMICS OF THE DISC exhaust pc,rts. Air is drawn in the leading edge intakes and a largt proportion of it is fed to the combustion system in the usull way; the remainder by-passes the engine and mixes with the exhaust, which leaves via guide or central vanes in the exhaust ports. It is said that the aircraft will be capable of speeds up to 1,500 miles per hour. while it is also claimed that 180 degree turns will Ee possible 'without a change of attitude', though what is mel.nt by the latter is not at all clear. Neither i; it clear how the rotating power plant will give gyroscopic ;tability in normal flight, yet fail to pull the air- craft to pi( ces through gyroscopic couples in high speed aerobatic n anoeuvres. In fact it is the ability of the real flying sauce: to execute such acute manoeuvres while rotating about its ads, that helps to put it outside the school of aerodynami s and, for that matter, Newtonian mechanics. It is extremely likely that we are not the only nation interested in theflying disc design. Russia is no doubt doing her share in :the mad race to get there first. Saucers recently skimmed thc rooftops in Belgrade and it was suggested that they were e:Terimental models made by the Yugoslav Air Force. These miniature saucers are said to be forty inches in diameter, to weigh about four pounds, with a top speed of thirty-one miles per hour and to be radio controlled. Doctor W, F. Hilton, Armstrong Whitworth's chief aero- dynamist, when giving a lecture to the British Interplanetary Society at Birmingham (1952-3 session), on the difficulties of bringing a returning space ship down to earth, said: 'That a space ship returning from an interplanetary flight would enter the earth's upper atmosphere at a speed equivalent to a Mach No. )f 35 and would be burned up in a few minutes in those conditions'. One method to overcome this is for the craft to apprpach the earth at an angle, thereby skimming the upper atmosphere. In such a contact it would pick up all the heat it could withstand and then fly off into outer 53 FlorlaccifiPri 2nd Approved For Release 2013/06/24 CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 .4 uthors impression of a sectional view of ( Scout Ship Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 96 FLYING SAUCERS AND COMMON SE 4SE Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 It was in view for nearly four minutes and in that time it travelled from south-west to south-east. Mrs. Potter sup- ported her husband's statements. When interviewed later they both denied that what they had seen wi-s a meteor or a weather-balloon. Mr. Potter is an experienced amateur astronorner and a member of the British Astro- nomical Association and of the Norwich AAronomical Society. Other Norwich residents came forward with statements corroborating Mr. Potter's report that some- thing strange had been seen in the sky on that particular night. Their descriptions, however, were not as detailed as that of Mr. Potter who immediately drew wiat he had seen and submitted it to the editor of the Easiern Evening News. This drawing, with one of Adamski's pf otographs, were reproduced in the paper side by side and the resem- blance is very striking indeed. In fact, the siructure of the two objects would appear to be identical except for the fact that the three "globes" which hang from Adamski's saucer appear to be missing. These "globes" wn-e said by Adamski to be landing-gear and retractable: as Mr. Potter's saucer was seen in flight the absence of these tree appen- dages can, in the circumstances, be taken as further confirmation of George Adamski's story. The only major point of difference is curious. Mr. Potter firmly holds to his opinion that as he was viewing the object through a refracting telescope the image was reversed. Mr. Potter therefore claims that he saw a sauctr like the one photographed by Adamski, though upside-down. When these facts were brought to my attentionl felt that the sceptics would not be able to resist the weight of this evidence. Apart, however, from the Observer, which printed a letter from Mr. Potter and reprocuced his drawing, this sighting was practically ignoreti by the national Press. Some months later, the Daily Mail did refer to the matter at length in a series of articles on flying saucers, but, at the time, the significance of the Norwich sighting was overlooked by the British public. lthough the matter cannot be unknown to the Astronomer Royal and other pundits, they chose to ignore this incident altogether. At the risk of being repetitious, let it be stated npriassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24 : CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 4- - z ' c?????-'., Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 The pictarev bdow show tialICCI\ gf171(liked Nittlihtlity. The UFO (IT hol70111 WfIS" photTophed in 1950 it flew tt'f0 ,10111 ..ye(lIS hirer III FralICC. 30 tl 0 IN FTW ("BS 1.,sieViS11)11 new; nr4n4rant carried tItit, pietuitt, to a siitttrtttittrtl onifiontified flying object ltt,,t night. lit.' Deputy Slittrilf ptitrick, Vtt,lithu th,ttog 7vittortt. cat-nt.c: not pod., with a Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 A Flying Saucer, taken by Juan Coll and Jos?ntonio Baena near Malaga on znd November, 1954, reproduced in the Spanish evening paper Madrid. THE SAUCERS FLY AGAIN 97 once again that the Norwich saucer could not have been a meteor, a balloon, a cobweb, ionised air, a soap bubble oi any of the other conventionalisations which have been trpttecl out over the years. That is, if the evidence of the Potters is to be believed. What if their evidence is not to be believed? That their c1 aracter is good, I can myself testify, for I have personally investigated the matter. Mr. Potter runs a window- chaning business in the city and is well known locally. N ,thing against his character is known, nor has it been as;ailed even by those who are most reluctant to believe in fl)ing saucers. However, let us assume, for the moment, that the Potters fabricated their story. With what motive? AI far as I can discover Mr. Potter has not made a penny out of his sighting. He may, for all I know, have lectured on his experience and I believe he has once or twice been in'7 to broadcast. The rewards must have been trifling. He has, I understand, received a number of letters abusing him, so the notoriety he has achieved has not all been pleasant. Besides, it was not until several months later that hi story was taken up to any great extent. The evidence in favour of Mr. Potter is quite considerable. He refuses to call the object he saw a 'flying saucer" and he and his wie now say somewhat petulantly, "We didn't want to see a lying saucer anyway!" I think it incontestable that the Po :ters believe that they saw what they claim to have seen. Ttere is no evidence whatsoever of any ulterior motive. An alternative possibility has been suggested and should be considered carefully. In fact, two suggestions have been made. One is that because Mr. Potter's brother had, three weeks prior to the 7th October sighting, reported un:dentified lights in the sky, the Potters would, therefore, be on the look-out for something and were, in fact, pre- disposed to see a something in the sky. The other sugges- tion is that as Adamski's photograph had appeared in the papers the week before the Norwich incident, the Potters had been induced to see a similar object. To the unthink- ing this may sound plausible, but do people really behave lik( this in real life? And why pick on the Potters? The Ad imski photograph had, in all conscience, been widely npriacsified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Flying Saucer photographed by Stephen Darbishire oniston, Lancashire, at t a.m., on 15th February, 1954. Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24 : CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 Declassified and Approved For Release 78 FLYING SAUCERS AND COMMON SENSE I timed the Saucer for seventeen minutes while the Lode- star kept to its course. Twice it rose vertically to a final height 0140,000 feet, then it moved east toward the coast at a terrific speed. "There was a large fin-like object attached tc the rear, although it wasn't clearly defined. There was no apparent propelling power when the Sauce: moved. There were definitely no vapour trails." Captain Bicknell immediately after landing at Mom- basa prepared an affidavit, which Merrifield and his seven men and two women passengers signed. One passenger, Captain H. B. Fussell, a Newport, Monmouthshire, sports dealer, who had a pair of power- ful binoculars said: "Through the glasses tie object appeared bullet-shaped. Its colour was whitish-silver with three vertical black bands down the side. For ten minutes it remained stationary, then it suddenly rose vertically by 5,000 feet. "Again it became stationary, and then a minute later it rose again and moved laterally away at a great speed, probably 400 m.p.h." Captain Fussell said that Dr. Urner Liddel's balloon theory did not fit what he saw. "Suppose it was a balloon?how could a balloon both hover motiorless and move at 400 m.p.h. in the same weather conditicns?" he asked. "I emphatically reject the theory. The okect was definitely metallic." A radio officer named Overstreet from the Anerican freighter Robin Mowbray, who was another passenger, said : "I wouldn't swear but through the binoculars I thought I could identify a row of circular windows." Charles J. Vernon, also American, and purse- of the Robin Mowbray, said: "The object must have been immense, two or three times the size of the largest passenger plane." Three separate attempts to photograph the object were made from the plane. Captain Fussell snapped it with his miniature camera. Mr. Overstreet shot 30 feet of colour film with a telescopic lens on his eine camera, and Mr. Vernon also tried to snap it. After landing, Captain Fussell developed his film in the presence of a newspaper reporter and a commercial 2013/06/24 : CIA-RDP79600752A000300130001-1 THE LULL 79 photographer, who certify that the film was not faked or retouched. Three exposures were blank, but the fourth showed a small black object. Mr. Vernon's film showed nothing, and Mr. Over- street's colour-film has not been developed. During the night after the Saucer was reported, two unexplained flashes lit Mombasa. Captain Bicknell was born in Exeter and lived in London before joining East Africa Airways in 1948. Radio Operator Merrifield's parents live at Ellison Gardens, Southall, Middlesex. A week later, on 4th March, 1951, The Sunday Dispatch referred again to this sighting and reproduced a sketch of the mysterious object, as under: The newspaper made the following comments: Flying in a cloudless sky over Mount Kilimanjaro, in Tanganyika, Captain Jack Bicknell, pilot of a passenger plane bound for Mombasa, saw through binoculars "a metallic, bullet-shaped object which must have been more than 200 feet long", The Sunday Dispatch last week gave a detailed report of this Flying Saucer sighting, the most authentic so far recorded. When he brought the plane down, Captain Bicknell drew a sketch of what he had seen. The diagram above was prepared from Captain Bick- nell's sketch and shows the "large object attached to the rear". AnnrrwAri For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79600752A000300130001-1 84 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 FLYING SAUCERS AND COMMON SENSE not very important in itself, perhaps, was the knowing report that appeared in the Sheffield Telegraph of 24th April, 1953, some five months before the Adamski photo- graphs had been made public: BOYS WATCHED "FLYING SAUCER" FOR 25 MINUTES AND ONE COULDN'T SLEEP What was it that three Sheffield youths, Terry Platts, Brian Davies and Allan Green, all aged 16, saw in the evening sky? Allan's father's verdict was: "A reflection from a steel furnace probably." Terry's father looked at his boy's bicycle to see if he had fallen off and cracked his head. Brian's father wasn't so sure. He interviewed the boys separately and then wrote to the Sheffield Telegraph, Yes, a flying saucer! But their description wa:, "like two plates put together". The boys, who all live in Newman Road, Wincobank, are not given to telling fanciful tales, according to their parents. It was Monday evening and they were watching some pheasants in a field from Greasborough Road at about 7.30. They saw what they at first thought was an aeroplane with the sun shining on it?until they naticed there was no sun. It was a dull evening. The boys say the object, over Rawmash way, grailually came nearer. It moved at a fast speed but sometimes would remain stationary for several seconds. On these occasions, a reddish glow coming from behind it would cease. The boys agree the object was always a long way off, but they say they got the impression it was very big. They watched it, they say, for twenty-five minuus. Said Brian's stepfather, Mr. George Moverley , last night: "I'm convinced the boys aren't kidding. My son was too full of it for that. One boy says he couldn't sleep for thinking of it, although his father ridiculed him ," ?rnt-1 nnrM/PCi THE ADAMSKI PHOTOGRAPHS 85 I have seen a letter from Mr. George Moverley, Brian Davies's stepfather who made the comment that the sketch in the Sheffield Telegraph did not actually conform with the boys' description. This was re-drawn as under: It will be seen that in outline it resembles the object that Adamski has photographed. Even stranger events were to happen later when the book had been published, but the cutting and the letter were in my possession before anybody outside my office had seen the Adamski photographs. An extract from Mr. Moverley's letter may prove of interest: In regard to your letter received last Saturday, I am sending cuttings to show the interest caused by my son's and his friends' observation of the "flying saucer". The "saucer" was observed for at least twenty-five minutes in good light and, on close questioning, their accounts coincided on every main point. The news- paper account seems to have formed a wrong impression as to the speed. The point that seemed to strike them was how siow it could fly. It could dive and hang sus- pended in the air! Stop and start at will! What power of propulsion do we know of that could allow an object of such shape to perform so. For most of the time it appeared on edge, but towards the end of the observation it banked and went away, and they were able to observe its circular shape. On moving, it left a long trail of flame ending in black smoke that stopped when the aircraft stopped. While the book was being printed, Mr. J. N. Mansour of Jetex Limited, the firm that makes model aircraft and the fuel for their propulsion, visited George Adamski and For Release 2013/06/24: CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 I \ Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/06/24 CIA-RDP79B00752A000300130001-1 ti 0 T H ATT A 'K make otic wonde- NIL Arnold himself has saiti: whether there by a MV strange connection between these weird and mysterious amphibious spheres and the vast dumps of furn- ace. slag fon rid occan-Iloors. If there is, then ;hew flying discs may dump and jettison metal elsewhere thin in unin- hahited islands! tl'hat \%as the line taken by the U.S. military ;aithorities? A military intelligence ollfter called on Mr. Arno d and took Wa V from him every piece of metal he had from Maury Isl- and. Mr. Arnold had planned to make a cigarette ash-tray from the metal. 'Hie military man took Mr. A:nold to a \inclter'\ works anti pointed out tons of material that, he said, s exactly like the fragments. It, is only smelter s slag that vou foond in Maury Island,- said the officer, staling. Ile did not explain how that could he when Caere is no smelters works in this vet-s sparsely populated ishnd, nor is it used as d ii nip ug-place. Further, no reference was made' to the curious sixteen constituents of this metal frmi Maury Island. If what the olliccr alleged had been true, taen smelt- er's slag must be a 111(i-t amazing alloy, not to say shocking waste of valuable metal on the part of any smeltc- knowing his business. The absurd 'subterfuge' of the officer was a pointer to the official attitude higher up in the U.S. Air Force. Or. April 27, 1919?two years later, when the circumstances would not he so fresh in people's Mind.;?Projcet Saucer's experts adunnistered the knock-out blow: "Chrisman and Dahl, under questioning. t roke and admitted that the fragments were really unutual rock formations lemiKl. on Maury Island, and Mad tip connec- tion with the 'flying discs'. They admitted telling the Chicago 'magazine that the fragments 'could lave been remnants of the discs', in order to increase the :ale value of their story. During the investigation, Dahl's wife con- sistently urged him to admit that the entire :flair was a hoax, and it is i:irried as such in Project Saucer's Ides.'' It is likely that Chrisman and Dahl had been hadl.? 'grilled' by the investigators, and wto-ned that their johs ni the Coast Hying Saucer [-dicta 'graphed ()\ ci 13r