From: toddb@wrq.com (Todd Biggs)
Subject: History of UFO Crashes
Date: 26 Feb 94 21:23:47 GMT
Organization: Walker Richer & Quinn, Inc., Seattle, WA


Alleged UFO Crashes

The following list of UFO crashes was compiled by the Phoenix Foundation 
from numerous sources within the Gemstone Intelligence Network (GIN), an 
international intelligence organization founded and operated by the Phoenix 
Foundation. For further information on Phoenix Foundation membership or to 
receive the organization's newsletter, please contact: The Phoenix 
Foundation, Research Division, P.O. Box 92008, Nashville, Tennessee 37209.

April 17, 1897 - Aurora, Texas
A mysterious airship is said to have crashed in this town, exploding into 
many small fragments. Reportedly, the occupant was child-size and greenish, 
and the craft contained papers covered with heiroglyphics. The pilot's 
body is supposed to be buried in the local cemetery. Although the case was 
widely regarded as a hoax, new investigation brought to light a peculiar 
alloy that was eventually analyzed by the McDonnell Aircraft Company.

Dec. 22, 1909 - Chicago
Six years after Kitty Hawk, newspapers from New York to Chicago were 
astounded by national reports of a huge airship flying across the nation 
and seen by thousands. It crashed west of Chicago, but was never found. 
The story was front-page news in the nation's major newspapers.

1933 or 1934 - Ubatuba, Brazil
Witnesses on a beach are said to have seen a disc dive and explode, 
showering the area with silvery fragments of highly pure magnesium.

May, 1947 - Spitzbergen, Norway
A report by journalist Dorothy Kilgallen stated that British scientists and 
airmen were excavating the wreckage of a mysterious flying ship. The Swedish 
military acknowledged its extraterrestrial origin and reported 17 bodies were 
found. The story appeared as a tiny blip for only one day in the U.S. news 
media before it was silenced by the military. I personally saw this news story 
years ago.

July 2, 1947 - Roswell, New Mexico
The most famous and thoroughly investigated by journalists, this is the crash 
that launched Majestic-12. It was the first and only time the U.S. government 
publicly admitted it had recovered a crashed flying saucer. Within hours, the 
craft was whisked off to Wright-Patterson AFB and a new cover story emerged, 
claiming it had been only a weather balloon.  In recent years, the officer 
responsible for that cover story has recanted. Three or four humanoid bodies 
were recovered; one was alive for a short time. 

February 13, 1948 - Aztec, New Mexico
Three radar units tracked a falling UFO. Secretary of State George C. Marshall 
requested a search party be dispatched from Camp Hale in Colorado. A helicopter 
team found a crashed 30-foot disc 12 miles northeast of Aztec and recovered 
2-12 badly burned humanoids. The disc is stored in Hangar 18 at 
Wright-Patterson AFB near Dayton, Ohio.

August 1948 - Laredo, Texas
Four officers witnessed the crash of an object and the recovery of bodies 
38 miles south of Laredo, Texas, in Mexico. The information came from an 
NBC affiliate in Chicago, who received it from a source in Army security.

August 19, 1949 - Death Valley, California,
Two prospectors named Mace Garney and Buck Fitzgerald claimed to have watched 
an object crash in the desert. It was a 24-foot disc. The story appeared on 
page 13 of the local Bakersfield newspaper the next day.

Before 1950 - Mexico
Roy L. Dimmick, sales manager for the Apache Powder Company of Los Angeles, 
spoke with a man from Mexico and another from Ecuador who had seen a disc 
crash near Mexico City.

April 1950 - Argentina
Mr. E.C. Bossa found a strange disc and four small dead pilots in a remote 
region of Argentina. He returned with a friend the next day and found only a 
pile of warm ashes. A cigar-shaped object was seen briefly as it flew 
overhead at a high altitude.

1953 - Brady, Montana
Mr. C.M. Tenney, returning from Great Falls to Conrad, saw an oval object 
that followed his car while balls of fire fell all over the road. Later that 
day he was phoned by a colonel from Malmstrom AFB who asked him to come to 
the base at 10 a.m. the next day. He was escorted to a windowless room inside 
a fenced-off compound and asked to sign a statement. While doing so, he says 
he saw two men carrying large laundry bags containing humanoid bodies.

May 21, 1953 - Kingman, Arizona
A USAF veteran claims to have participated in the recovery of a crashed 
aluminum-like disc impacted 20 inches into the earth. It was oval, 32 feet 
wide. Inside were two swivel chairs, an oval cabin and numerous instruments. 
One 4-foot-tall occupant was recovered, dead. It had a dark brown complexion 
and wore a silvery metal suit with no helmet. The witness' affidavit was 
released by respected UFO researcher Ray Fowler in UFO Magazine, April 1976.

Mid-1950s - Birmingham, Alabama
When a disc crashed near Birmingham, the area was cordoned off and humanoid 
bodies were flown to Maxwell AFB, according to a man who claims to have flown 
the helicopter with the bodies to a waiting aircraft.

Spring 1954 - Mattydale, NY
In this suburb of Syracuse, at 3 a.m. on a Sunday, an information specialist 
and his wife saw a 20-foot-wide object being examined on the ground by several 
men who were taking pictures. The next day an officer told them the event was 
a military secret. Later, police denied the whole incident ever took place.

1959 - Frdynia, Poland
An object was reported to have fallen into the harbor. Divers recovered 
pieces of shiny metal, which was examined by the Polytechnic Institute and 
Polish Navy. Some material was reportedly lost. Several days later a small 
humanoid was  found on a nearby beach; its remains were sent to the Soviet 
Union.
 
 March 1960 - New Paltz, NY
 Local law enforcement authorities captured a small humanoid outside his craft 
 while two copilots escaped. The alien was turned over to the CIA and died 28 
 days later.

 January 1967 - Southwest Missouri
 A Mr. Loftin found a 40-inch disc and gave it to the U.S. Testing Company for 
 analysis.

 November 9, 1974 - Carbondale, NJ
 A glowing object fell into a small lake outside town. Three teenagers saw it 
 fall at 7:30 p.m. on a Saturday. They observed a yellow-white glow under the 
 water that shifted to a point 25 feet offshore. The boys were kept in a police 
 car for three hours while a number of vehicles with floodlights and cranes 
 removed a disc-shaped object and put it into a van. The following Monday, 
 a railroad lantern and battery were recovered from the lake and officials 
 called the whole thing a hoax. Hoax? Or cover story?

 May 17, 1974 - Chili, NM
 An Air Force team allegedly removed a 60-foot-wide metallic object from an 
 impact area and moved it to Kirtland AFB.

 May 6, 1978 - Padcaya, Bolivia
 A large luminous object crashed on a 13,000-foot mountain. An expedition of 
 soldiers and scientists was dispatched to the site, but was delayed by bad 
 weather. They found nothing.

 1978 - Soviet Union
 After a collision with a Soviet fighter plane, a disc-shaped object fell into 
 the ocean off Finland, where it was recovered - with humanoid bodies - by a 
 Soviet salvage team.

 Copyright 1992 by the Phoenix Foundation. All rights reserved.

