Top 10 Mass Sightings of UFOs
By: Patrick J. Kiger
It’s one thing for skeptics to dismiss a sighting of a
UFO by a single individual, who might possibly be mistaken, delusional or
simply a teller of tall tales. It’s more difficult, however, to disregard
sightings in public places and a large number of witnesses. Here are 10
of the most prominent documented mass UFO sightings in U.S. history.
1. June 1, 1853: Luminous Objects Hover Over Tennessee
College Campus. As
the sun rose over the campus of Burritt College, numerous students—who
apparently were early risers in those days, too—were startled to see two
luminous objects in the sky. According to professor A.C. Carnes, who reported
the incident in a letter to Scientific American, the first had the appearance
of a small new moon, while the other resembled a large star. The small object
then vanished, while the bigger one changed shape, first into a globe and then
into an elongated shape parallel with the horizon. The smaller light then
became visible again, and increased rapidly in size, while the other object
shrank. The two objects continued fluctuating in a similar fashion for the next
30 minutes. “The students have asked for an explanation, but neither the
President nor Professors are satisfied as to the character of the lights,”
wrote Carnes. While he himself speculated that the occurrence might have been
caused somehow by atmospheric moisture, the incident remains a mystery.
2. April 17, 1897: Purported UFO crash in Texas. At about 6 a.m. that morning, according to contemporaneous
Dallas Morning News account, citizens of the small town of Aurora were awakened
by the appearance of what the writer referred to as an “airship.” The craft
reportedly malfunctioned and stalled, and crashed into a windmill on the
property of a local judge, scattering debris over several acres. “The pilot of
the ship is supposed to have been the only one aboard and, while his remains
were badly disfigured, enough of the original has been picked up to show that
he was not an inhabitant of this world,” according to the Morning News
account. Skeptics long have dismissed the account as a hoax. But in
1973, a United Press International reporter located a 91-year-old resident,
Mary Evans, who recalled her parents visiting the crash site, and telling her
that the body of the UFO pilot had been buried in the town cemetery.
3. February 25, 1942: The Battle of Los Angeles. In the early morning hours, radar operators spotted an
unidentified object 120 miles west of Los Angeles and watched anxiously as it zoomed
to within a few miles of the southern California coast and then inexplicably
vanished from their screens. Sometime after that, an artillery officer along
the coast reported what he described as 25 aircraft flying at 25,000 feet, and
a few minutes later, other observers saw a balloon-like object carrying what
appeared to be flares over nearby Santa Monica. Then, anti-aircraft batteries
spotted what witnesses later described as swarms of objects flying at various
altitudes, at speeds of up to 200 miles per hour. Fearing that the city
was under attack by the Japanese, they fired 1,400 rounds of ammunition at the
bogeys. But apparently, none of them hit anything, because no wreckage
subsequently was found. Officials initially ascribed the incident to a combination
of a false alarm and mass hysteria. But UFOlogists have speculated over the
years that the gunners might have been shooting at extraterrestrial spacecraft.
4. January 7, 1948: Saucer Appears Over Kentucky. Early in the afternoon, dozens of residents of
the Madisonville, KY area telephoned police to report that they had seen what a
news account later described as “a circular object hovering overhead and giving
off a brilliant glow.” State police then alerted Air Force officials at Goodman
Field, an air base at Fort Knox. 15 minutes later, the airfield’s tower
crew spotted the UFO as well, and used the radio to ask a squadron of P-51
fighters already aloft to investigate. Squadron leader Capt. Thomas Mantell,
Jr. an expert pilot who had won the Distinguished Flying Cross for bravery
during World War II, responded that he had spotted the UFO and was in
pursuit. “I’m closing in now to take a good look,” Mantell reported in
his last radio transmission at 3:15 p.m. “The thing looks metallic, and is tremendous
in size.” Three minutes later, Mantell crashed and was killed. The official
conclusion was that he had run out of oxygen, but UFOlogists have long doubted
that explanation.
5. November 2, 1957: Fiery Object Seen Over Texas. At about 11 p.m. that evening in the town of
Levelland, TX, police received 15 frantic phone calls from local residents
about a mysterious object in the sky. In an Associated Press account, one
of the witnesses, a 30-year-old farm worker and Korean War veteran,
described the object as a “flash of light” flying overhead with a rush of wind,
and said that it had apparently caused the lights and engine of his truck to go
dead. Other witnesses described the craft as blue-green and egg-shaped, and
said that it abruptly morphed into a fireball before rising straight up and
disappearing.
6. Dec. 9, 1965: The Kecksburg Incident. Numerous residents of the small Pennsylvania
village about 40 miles from Pittsburgh saw an object that some witnesses
described as streaking green fire across the sky before it crashed in a local
field, just before 6 p.m. that evening. Local resident Bill Bulebush, who
was working on his car when he saw the object, described it as acorn-shaped and
about twice the size of a Volkswagen Beetle. He said that it glided slowing
before making a U-turn and going down. A local fireman, James Romansky, later
described the downed craft as having hieroglyphic-like writing around its
bottom ring. He only got to examine the craft for about 15 minutes, before
government and military officials arrived and ordered everyone from the scene,
and posted armed guards around the perimeter. Subsequently, there was
speculation that the object may have been a Soviet satellite, but UFO
researcher Clifford Stone, who spoke years later to former Soviet officials,
said they insisted that the object had not been one of theirs. After
investigative journalist Leslie Keen filed a Freedom of Information Act suit,
NASA revealed in 2009 that documentation on the case was missing.
7. March 24, 1983: V-Shaped Lights in the Hudson
Valley. The suburban
area, about an hour’s drive north of New York City, was the scene of more than
5,000 UFO sightings from 1982 through 1986, perhaps one of the biggest clusters
of incidents in history. One night, March 24, stands out because of the sheer
volume—more than 300 residents called a local UFO organization’s hotline that
night, reporting that they had seen large v-shaped array of lights that moved
slowly and almost silently through the sky. Some witnesses got close enough to
say that the craft was big enough to be a “flying city.” Hunt Middleton,
a local resident who had just stepped off a bus from New York City at 7:30
p.m., described a row of six or seven extremely bright lights. “They were all
blinking on and off, and were red, blue, green and white. I knew it was not any
type of conventional aircraft because the lights were stationary. It was just
hovering there in the sky.” Middleton said that he watched the object for five
minutes, before going inside his house to get his family to come out and see
it. By then, it was gone.
8. March 13, 1997: The Phoenix Lights. On that evening, thousands of people in Nevada and
Arizona reportedly saw what many described as an immense, V-shaped object
outlined by seven lights. Others, however, reported seeing orbs and triangles
in the sky as well. Police departments in Phoenix, Tempe, Glendale and other
Arizona cities were jammed with calls from residents. One witness, a man
in his thirties named Dana Valentine, said that he and his father both watched
as the lights passed 500 feet directly above them. "We could see the
outline of a mass behind the lights, but you couldn't actually see the mass," Valentine says.
"It was more like a gray distortion of the night sky, wavy. I don't know
exactly what it was, but I know it's not a technology the public has heard of
before." The military later claimed that National Guard pilots had
released diversionary flares while on a training run, but not everyone accepted
that explanation.
9. July 14, 2001: UFO on the New Jersey Turnpike. Multiple witnesses, including a local off-duty
police officer, watched in wonder as an array of yellow lights flew in
formation in suburban New Jersey near New York City late in the evening of July
14, 2001 into the early morning of the following day. A short time later, at
around 12:30 a.m., another witness, Carteret police Lt. Dan Tarrant, reportedly
received a call at home from his 19-year-old daughter, who was out with friends
and had seen strange lights in the sky. Tarrant told the Record and ABC News
that he then stepped outside to take a look. As Tarrant subsequently told
ABC News, what he saw was astounding: “16 golden-orange colored lights,
several in a V-type formation. Others were scattered around the
V." Tarrant told the Record, a local newspaper, that the
mysterious lights flashed across the sky for about 10 minutes, then faded
one-by-one into darkness.
10. January 8, 2008: The Stephensville Lights. In the evening, about out 40 local residents,
including a local amateur civilian pilot and a police officer, witnessed a UFO
that hovered over the farming community for about five minutes before streaking
away into the night sky. Police officer Lee Roy Gaitan told National Public
Radio that he was walking to his car when he saw a luminous object that
reminded him of pictures of erupting volcanos, suspended 3,000 feet in the air.
Another witness estimated that the UFO was a half-mile wide, a mile long, and”
bigger than a Wal-Mart.”
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