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The Roswell Incident

In the summer of 1947, there were a number of UFO
sightings in the United States.
Sometime during the first week of
July 1947, something crashed near Roswell.
W.W. "Mac"
Brazel, a New
Mexico rancher, saddled up his horse and rode out with the son of
neighbors Floyd and Loretta Proctor, to check on the sheep after a
fierce thunderstorm the night before. As they rode along, Brazel began
to notice unusual pieces of what seemed to be metal debris, scattered
over a large area. Upon further inspection, Brazel saw that a shallow
trench, several hundred feet long, had been gouged into the land.
Brazel was struck by the unusual
properties of the debris, and after dragging a large piece of it to a
shed, he took some of it over to show ,the Proctors. Mrs. Proctor
has recently ( as of June 1997) moved from the ranch into a home
nearer to town, but she remembers Mac showing up with strange material.
The Proctors told Brazel that he
might be holding wreckage from a UFO or a government project, and that
he should report the incident to the sheriff. A day or two later, Mac
drove into Roswell where he reported the incident to Sheriff George
Wilcox, who reported it to Intelligence Officer, Major Jesse Marcel of
the 509 Bomb Group, and for days thereafter, the debris site was closed
while the wreckage was cleared.
On July 8, 1947, a press release
stating that the wreckage of a crashed disk had been recovered was
issued by the Commander of the 509th Bomb Group at Roswell, Col. William
Blanchard.
Hours later the first press release
was rescinded and the second press release stated that the 509th Bomb
Group had mistakenly identified a weather balloon as wreckage of a
flying saucer.
Meanwhile, back in
Roswell, Glenn Dennis, a young mortician working at the Ballard Funeral
Home, received
some curious calls one afternoon from the morgue at the air field. It
seems the Mortuary Officer needed to get a hold of some small
hermetically sealed coffins,and wanted information about how to preserve
bodies that had been exposed to the elements for a few days, without
contaminating the tissue.
Glenn Dennis drove out to the base
hospital later that evening where he saw large pieces of wreckage with
strange engravings on one of the pieces sticking out of the back of a
military ambulance. Upon entering the hospital he started to visit with
a nurse he knew, when suddenly he was threatened by military police and
forced to leave.
The next day, Glenn Dennis met with
the nurse. She told him about the bodies and drew pictures of them on a
prescription pad. Within a few days she was transferred to England, her
whereabouts still unknown.
According to the research of Don
Schmitt and Kevin Randle, in their book, A History of UFO Crashes, from
which the following account of the Roswell Incident , in part, is based,
the military had been watching an unidentified flying object on radar
for four days in southern New Mexico. On the night of July 4, 1947,
radar indicated that the object was down around thirty to forty miles
northwest of Roswell.
Eye witness William
Woody, who lived
east of Roswell, remembered being outside with his father the night of
July 4, 1947, when he saw a brilliant object plunge to the ground. A
couple of days later when Woody and his father tried to locate the area
of the crash, they were stopped by military personnel, who had cordoned
off the area.
Acting on the call from Sheriff
Wilcox, Intelligence Officer, Major Jesse Marcel was sent by Col.
William Blanchard, to investigate Mac Brazel's story.
Marcel and Senior Counter
Intelligence Corps (CIC) agent, Captain Sheridan Cavitt, followed a
rancher off-road to his place. They spent the night there and Marcel
inspected a large piece of debris that Brazel had dragged from the
pasture.
Monday morning, July 7, 1947, Major
Jesse Marcel took his first step onto the debris field. Marcel would
remark later that "something... must have exploded above the ground
and fell." As Brazel, Cavitt and Marcel inspected the field, Marcel
was able to "determine which direction it came from, and which
direction it was heading. It was in the pattern... you could tell where
it started out and where it ended by how it was thinned out..."
According to
Marcel, the debris was
"strewn over a wide area, I guess maybe three-quarters of a mile
long and a few hundred feet wide." Scattered in the debris were
small bits of metal that Marcel held a cigarette lighter to, to see if
it would burn. "I lit the cigarette lighter to some of this stuff
and it didn't burn", he said.
Along with the metal, Marcel
described weightless I-beam-like structures that were 3/8" x
1/4", none of them very long, that would neither bend nor break.
Some of these I-beams had indecipherable characters along the length, in
two colors. Marcel also described metal debris the thickness of tin foil
that was indestructible.
After gathering enough debris to fill
his staff car, Maj. Marcel decided to stop by his home on the way back
to the base so that he could show his family the unusual debris. He'd
never seen anything quite like it. "I didn't know what we were
picking up. I still don't know what it was...it could not have been part
of an aircraft, not part of any kind of weather balloon or experimental
balloon...I've seen rockets... sent up at the White Sands Testing
Grounds. It definitely was not part of an aircraft or missile or rocket."
Under hypnosis conducted by Dr. John
Watkins in May of 1990, Jesse Marcel Jr. remembered being awakened by
his father that night and following him outside to help carry in a large
box filled with debris. Once inside, they emptied the contents of the
debris onto the kitchen floor.
Jesse Jr. described the lead foil and
I-beams. Under hypnosis, he recalled the writing on the I-beams as
"Purple. Strange. Never saw anything like it...Different geometric
shapes, leaves and circles." Under questioning, Jesse Jr. said the
symbols were shiny purple and they were small. There were many separate
figures. This too, under hypnosis: [Marcel Sr. was saying it was a
flying saucer] "I ask him what a flying saucer is. I don't know
what a flying saucer is...It's a ship. [Dad's] excited!"
At 11:00 A.M Walter
Haut, public
relations officer, finished the press release he'd been ordered to write,
and gave copies of the release to the two radio stations and both of the
newspapers. By 2:26 P.M., the story was out on the AP Wire:
"The Army Air Forces here today
announced a flying disk had been found"
As calls began to pour into the base
from all over the world, Lt. Robert Shirkey watched as MPs carried
loaded wreckage onto a C-54 from the First Transport Unit.
To get a better
look, Shirkey stepped
around Col. Blanchard, who was irritated with all of the calls coming
into the base. Blanchard decided to travel out to the debris field and
left instructions that he'd gone on leave.
On the morning of July 8, Marcel
reported what he'd found to Col. Blanchard, showing him pieces of the
wreckage, none of which looked like anything Blanchard had ever seen.
Blanchard then sent Marcel to Carswell [Fort Worth Army Air Field] to
see General Ramey, Commanding Officer of the Eighth Air Force.
Marcel stated years later to Walter
Haut that he'd taken some of the debris into Ramey's office to show him
what had been found. The material was displayed on Ramey's desk for the
general when he returned.
Upon his return, General Ramey wanted
to see the exact location of the debris field, so he and Marcel went to
the map room down the hall - but when they returned, the wreckage that
had been placed on the desk was gone and a weather balloon was spread
out on the floor. Major Charles A. Cashon took the now-famous photo of
Marcel with the weather balloon, in General Ramey's office.
It was then reported that General
Ramey recognized the remains as part of a weather balloon. Brigadier
General Thomas DuBose, the chief of staff of the Eighth Air Force said,
"[It] was a cover story. The whole balloon part of it. That was the
part of the story we were told to give to the public and news and that
was it."
The military tried to convince the
news media from that day forward that the object found near Roswell was
nothing more than a weather balloon.
July 9, as reports went out that the
crashed object was actually a weather balloon, clean-up crews were
busily clearing the debris. Bud Payne, a rancher at Corona, was trying
to round up a stray when he was spotted by military and carried off the
Foster ranch, and Jud Roberts along with Walt Whitmore were turned away
as they approached the debris field.
As the wreckage was brought to the
base, it was crated and stored in a hangar.
Back in town, Walt Whitmore and Lyman
Strickland saw their friend, Mac Brazel, who was being escorted to the
Roswell Daily Record by three military officers. He ignored Whitmore and
Strickland, which was not at all like Mac, and once he got to the
Roswell Daily Record offices, he changed his story. He now claimed to
have found the debris on June 14. Brazel also mentioned that he'd found
weather observation devices on two other occasions, but what he found
this time was no weather balloon.
Later that
afternoon, an officer from
the base retrieved all of the copies of Haut's press release from the
radio stations and newspaper offices.
The Las Vegas Review
Journal, along
with dozens of other newspapers, carried the AP story:
"Reports of flying saucers
whizzing through the sky fell off sharply today as the army and the navy
began a concentrated campaign to stop the rumors."
The story also reported that AAF
Headquarters in Washington had "delivered a blistering rebuke to
officers at Roswell."
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