The Nash-Fortenberry Sighting (aircraft
encounter with formation of UFOs)
Date: July 14,
1952
Location: Virginia, United States
Location: Virginia, United States
A Pan American World Airways DC-4 was on a routine
flight from New York to Miami. The crew included Captain Koepke, First Officer
William B. Nash and Second Officer William H. Fortenberry. Suddenly, they
noticed six bright objects in echelon formation streaking toward them at
tremendous speed. They had the fiery aspect of hot coals, but of much greater
glow.
Reported actions of Chesapeake Bay discs. (credit:
NICAP / Richard Hall, 1964)
Revisiting One of the Classics: The 1952
Nash/Fortenberry Sighting
On the evening of July 14,1952, a Pan American World Airways DC-4 was on a routine flight, ferrying from New York to Miami with ten passengers and a crew of three, including, Captain F. V. Koepke, First Officer William B. Nash and Second Officer William H. Fortenberry.
The sun had set an hour before though the coastline was still visible, and the night was clear and almost entirely dark. With the aircraft set on automatic pilot, while cruising at 8000 feet over the Chesapeake Bay approaching Norfolk, Virginia, they were due to over fly the VRF radio range station in six minutes and make a position report. In the mean time, since this was Fortenberry’s first run on this course, Nash, in the left pilot’s seat, was orientating Fortenberry by pointing out landmarks and the distant lights of the cities along the route.
Nash had just pointed out the city of Newport News and Cumberland, ahead and to the right of the plane, when unexpectedly a red-orange brilliance appeared near the ground, beyond and slightly east of Newport News. The brilliance seemed to have appeared all of a sudden and both pilots witnessed the startling appearance at practically the same moment. In the excitement someone blurted out, “What the hell is that?”
Captain Nash later described their initial observations…
“Almost immediately we perceived that it consisted of six bright objects streaking toward us at tremendous speed, and obviously well below us. They had the fiery aspect of hot coals, but of much greater glow, perhaps twenty times more brilliant than any of the scattered ground lights over which they passed or the city lights to the right. Their shape was clearly outlined and evidently circular; the edges were well defined, not phosphorescent or fuzzy in the least and the red-orange color was uniform over the upper surface of each craft.”
On the evening of July 14,1952, a Pan American World Airways DC-4 was on a routine flight, ferrying from New York to Miami with ten passengers and a crew of three, including, Captain F. V. Koepke, First Officer William B. Nash and Second Officer William H. Fortenberry.
The sun had set an hour before though the coastline was still visible, and the night was clear and almost entirely dark. With the aircraft set on automatic pilot, while cruising at 8000 feet over the Chesapeake Bay approaching Norfolk, Virginia, they were due to over fly the VRF radio range station in six minutes and make a position report. In the mean time, since this was Fortenberry’s first run on this course, Nash, in the left pilot’s seat, was orientating Fortenberry by pointing out landmarks and the distant lights of the cities along the route.
Nash had just pointed out the city of Newport News and Cumberland, ahead and to the right of the plane, when unexpectedly a red-orange brilliance appeared near the ground, beyond and slightly east of Newport News. The brilliance seemed to have appeared all of a sudden and both pilots witnessed the startling appearance at practically the same moment. In the excitement someone blurted out, “What the hell is that?”
Captain Nash later described their initial observations…
“Almost immediately we perceived that it consisted of six bright objects streaking toward us at tremendous speed, and obviously well below us. They had the fiery aspect of hot coals, but of much greater glow, perhaps twenty times more brilliant than any of the scattered ground lights over which they passed or the city lights to the right. Their shape was clearly outlined and evidently circular; the edges were well defined, not phosphorescent or fuzzy in the least and the red-orange color was uniform over the upper surface of each craft.”
“Within the few seconds that it took the six objects to come half the distance
from where we had first seen them, we could observe that they were holding a
narrow echelon formation, a stepped-up line tilted slightly to our right with
the leader at the lowest point, and each following craft slightly higher. At
about the halfway point, the leader appeared to attempt a sudden slowing. We
received this impression because the second and third wavered slightly and
seemed almost to overrun the leader, so that for a brief moment during the
remainder of their approach the positions of these three varied. It looked very
much as if an element of "human" or "intelligence" error
had been introduced, in so far as the following two did not react soon enough
when the leader began to slow down and so almost overran him.”
What occurred next utterly astonished the pilots. The procession shot forward
like a stream of tracer bullets, out over the Chesapeake Bay to within a
half-mile of the plane. Realizing that the line was going to pass under the
nose of the plane and to the right of the copilot, Nash quickly unfastened his
seat belt so that he could move to the window on that side. During this
interval, Nash briefly lost sight of the objects, though Fortenberry kept them
in view below the plane and both would later recollect…
“All together, they flipped on edge, the sides to the left going up and the
glowing surface facing right. Though the bottom surfaces did not become clearly
visible, we had the impression that they were unlighted. The exposed edges,
also unlighted, appeared to be about 15 feet thick, and the top surface, at
least, seemed flat. In shape and proportion, they were much like coins. While
all were in the edgewise position, the last five slid over and past the leader
so that the echelon was now tail-foremost, so to speak, the top or last craft
now being nearest to our position.”
This shift had taken only a brief second and was completed by the time Nash
reached the window. Both pilots then observed the discs flip back from on-edge
to the flat position and the entire line dart off to the West in a direction
that formed a sharp angle with their initial course, holding the new formation.
The pilots had noticed that the objects seemed to dim slightly just prior to
the abrupt angular turn and had brightened considerably after making it.
Attempting to describe the objects extreme actions, Nash proposed, “The only
descriptive comparison we can offer is a ball ricocheting off a wall.”
An instant later, two more identical objects darted out past the right wing,
from behind and under the airplane at the same altitude as the others and
quickly fell in behind the receding procession. They observed that these two seemed
to glow considerably brighter than the others, as though applying power to
catch up. As they stared after them dumbfounded, suddenly the lights of all of
the objects blinked out, only to reappear a moment later, maintaining low
altitude out across the blackness of the bay, until about 10 miles beyond
Newport News when they began climbing in a graceful arc that carried them well
above the plane’s altitude. Sweeping upward they randomly blinked out and
finally vanished in the dark night sky. Describing the disappearance of the
objects some years later, Nash wrote,
“As they climbed, they oscillated up and down behind one another in a irregular
fashion, as though they were extremely sensitive to control. In doing this,
they went vertically past one another, bobbing up and down, (just as the front
three went horizontally past one another, as the initial six approached us.
This appeared to be an intelligence error, ‘lousing up the formation’)—they
disappeared by blinking out in a mixed-up fashion, in no particular order.”
Their bewildered initial reaction is best affirmed in the words of Nash…
“We stared after them, dumbfounded and probably open-mouthed. We looked around
at the sky, half expecting something else to appear, though nothing did. There
were flying saucers, and we had seen them. What we had witnessed was so
stunning and incredible that we could readily believe that if either of us had
seen it alone, he would have hesitated to report it. But here we were, face to
face. We couldn't both be mistaken about such a striking spectacle.”
The time was 8:12 Eastern Standard Time. As the reality of their experience
dawned on them the first question which came to mind was whether anybody else
onboard had seen the spectacle. Fortenberry went through the small forward
passenger compartment, where the captain was intent on paper work. In the main
cabin a cautious inquiry whether anyone had seen anything unusual produced no
results.
Back in the cockpit, the pilots radioed Norfolk and gave their position according
to schedule, and upon receiving confirmation added a second message to be
forwarded to the military: "Two pilots of this flight observed eight
unidentified objects vicinity Langley Field; estimate speed in excess of 1,000
mph; altitude estimated 2,000 feet." At this point, Captain Koepke came
forward and took over control of the DC-4 while Nash and Fortenberry went to
work reconstructing the sighting.
With a Dalton Mark 7 computer they determined the objects' angle of approach
and the same for the angle of departure. The difference between the two was
about 30 degrees; therefore, the objects had made a 150-degree change of course
almost instantaneously.
They were able to accurately determine their position visually and by reference
to their position to the VHF range at Norfolk. The objects first appeared
beyond and to the east of Newport News and came toward the DC-4 in a straight
line, changed direction beneath the plane and departed in a straight line to
the West once again passing a suburban edge of Newport News and seemed to
travel out over a dark area before they began to climb steeply into the night
sky. They determined that Newport News was 25 miles away and added the
additional 10 and 30 miles that they estimated the objects had traveled in each
direction, arriving at a total distance of 90 miles. To be conservative they
decided to use 50 miles, since they had seen them travel at least that
distance. Determining the time duration of the sighting was not so
straightforward. Wanting to be accurate, they reenacted the exact sequence of
events seven times, and using the panel stopwatch clocks determined that the
time period did not exceed 12 seconds each time. Again, to be conservative they
adopted 15 seconds in the final computation, which meant that the objects were
flying at the rate of 200 miles per minute, or 12,000 miles per hour!
They estimated that the objects were slightly more than a mile below the plane,
or about 2000 feet above ground level, and by mentally comparing their
appearance with the wingspread of a DC-3 at that distance, judged the size to
be approximately 100 feet diameter and 15 feet thick. Determinations of
distance, size and speed are always open to question by the fact that the
objects observed were unidentified phenomena. However, this particular incident
was especially unique in the sense that the pilots observed the objects between
the ground and the plane. Most sightings occur against an empty sky without any
standard of comparison to known objects or distance, but in this case the
planes altitude of 8000 feet established a finite distance for reference. Nash
later qualified his ability to estimate the altitude of the objects in a letter
to astrophysicist, Dr. Donald H. Menzel.
“We both had flown many thousands of hours at either 7000 or 8000 feet, because
these altitudes were high enough to avoid most turbulence but not so high as to
starve us for oxygen. Hence, a sort-of “instinct-judgment” about the height of
objects gradually developed. If after 10,000 hours of flying at the same
altitude a pilot cannot judge if something (even an unfamiliar something) is
halfway between his plane and the ground, and split that in half again, he best
quit. Our judgment, after seeing these things travel nearly a hundred miles,
and observing them both from a distance and almost directly beneath us, was
that they were holding 2000 feet for most of the observed time.”
Further, both Nash and Fortenberry had served in the Navy during the war in
which Nash flew patrol bombers for the Naval Air Transport Service patrolling
between the African and South American coastlines in search of German
submarines. Fortenberry served in the U.S. Navy Air experimental wing for two
years and was well aware of aeronautical developments for the time. In naval
training, both pilots had received intensive instruction in aircraft
identification and had learned to identify every ship in the German Navy.
While Nash and Fortenberry were still discussing the matter, the lights of a
northbound airliner came into view on a course about 1,000 feet above.
Ordinarily the head-on approach of two airliners at 500 mph seems fairly rapid.
But in this instance, compared to the streaking speed of the discs, the
oncoming plane seemed to be standing still. If any normal happening could have
increased the effect of the night's experience, it was just such a commonplace
event.
They landed at Miami International Airport shortly after midnight. Upon
entering the operations office, they found a copy of the message they had transmitted
to the military through Norfolk, with an addition: "Advise crew five jets
were in area at the time." This didn't exactly apply since the things they
had seen were eight in number, and they were dead sure they were not jets.
At 7 A.M. Air Force investigators telephoned and an appointment was set for an
interview later that morning. USAF Wing Intelligence officer Major John H.
Sharpe and four officers from the 7th District Office of Special Investigations
met Nash and Fortenberry at the airport. In separate rooms, the pilots were
questioned for one hour and forty-five minutes and following that, for a
half-hour together. The pilots were duly impressed by the skill and
thoroughness of their interrogators. Questions had been prepared in advance and
posed individually to the two pilots in order to evaluate their recall. Map
overlays were compared and they had a complete weather report for the area,
which coincided with the previous night’s flight plan. It stated; 3/8 Cirrus
clouds about 20,000 feet. No inversion and a sharply clear night, probably
unstable air. Visibility was unusually good. Following the interview, the
investigators advised the pilots that they had already received seven
additional reports from persons who had witnessed similar incidents within 30
minutes, in the same area. The best was from a Lt. Commander and his wife who
described a formation of red discs traveling at high-speed and making immediate
directional changes without a turning radius. Being told that their particular
experience was by no means unique surprised the pilots.
None of these reports appear in the official Blue Book files, though three
reports requested by ATIC in August describe multiple objects cavorting over
Washington D.C. at 9:00 A.M., the morning of the sighting. Fortunately, NICAP
retained copies of some of the confirmatory reports for the evening of July 14,
which were published in the Norfolk newspapers. Although none of the reported
sightings appear to describe the identical maneuvers that the pilots witnessed,
a couple are sufficiently similar to be taken as reasonable substantiations.
For example, one witness stated that,
“She and a friend were sitting on a bench in Stockley Gardens when they saw
what appeared to be flying saucers ‘circling overhead and then going north.’
She said they saw seven or eight altogether ‘the first three white and the
others were yellow and red.’”
In a letter to the editor of the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, the naval officer
from the cruiser Roanoke, apparently mentioned to Nash and Fortenberry during
the OSI investigation, reported that he had sighted eight red lights in the
direction of Point Comfort that proceeded in a straight line and then
disappeared. He saw the objects at about 8:55 P.M. Eastern Daylight-Saving
Time, approximately 15 minutes before the pilot’s sighting, as he was driving
towards the Naval base for a 9:00 P.M. appointment.
Especially interesting is that as a result of the press coverage of the Pan
American pilots sighting the following day, Paul R. Hill, an aerodynamicist at
the NASA-Langley facility, decided to watch the sky for UFOs on the evening of
July 16. Expecting “conformance to pattern” he parked at the waterfront a
little before 8:00 P.M. and soon observed two amber-colored objects approach
from the South and turn West taking them directly overhead. At this point, the
objects curiously appeared to be alternatively jumping forward of each other
slightly. Then after passing zenith, they made an astounding maneuver. They
began to revolve around a common center, and after a few revolutions, switched to
the vertical plane! Within a few more seconds two more similar objects joined
the first two before all four headed south. Hill later wrote,
“Up to that point I had been just a fascinated spectator. Now they had
convinced me. At that moment, I realized that here were visitors from another
world. There is a lot of truth in the old saying, ‘It’s different when it
happens to you.’ It was within my line of business to know that no Earthcraft
could remotely approach those maneuvers.”
This sighting prompted Paul Hill to a life-long study collecting and analyzing
sightings’ reports for physical properties and propulsion possibilities in an
attempt to make technological sense of the unconventional objects. The study
was eventually published posthumously, under the title, Unconventional Flying
Objects: A Scientific Analysis (Hampton Roads, 1995), in which Hill presents
his thesis that UFOs “obey, not defy, the laws of physics.”
At the time of these sightings flying saucers had been big news for many weeks
and the staff of nine at Project Blue Book were swamped with sighting reports,
far more than they could properly deal with. By mid-July they were getting
about twenty reports a day and frantic calls from intelligence officers at
every Air Force base in the U.S. The reports they were getting were good ones
and could not be easily explained. In fact, the unexplained sightings were
running at about 40 percent. All this was leading inexorably to the following
weekend when UFOs were picked up by radar at Washington National Airport in
restricted air space over the nation’s capitol, and would become one of the
most highly publicized sightings of UFO history. For those reasons, the
Nash/Fortenberry sighting received a less than adequate investigation. Project
Blue Book quickly determined that the five jets flying out of Langley, AFB
could not have possibly been responsible for the sighting, and the case was
dropped and filed as an “Unknown.”
It was not until 1962 that the case would be reexamined by the Director of the
Harvard College Observatory, astrophysicist Donald H. Menzel, and published in
his book, The World of Flying Saucers: A Scientific Examination of a Major Myth
of the Space Age (Doubleday, 1963). At the time, Professor Charles A. Maney, a
physicist at Defiance College, had been engaged in a rather lengthy
correspondence with Menzel, and when the Nash/Fortenberry sighting came up,
Maney forwarded copies of the correspondence to Nash, then an advisor to NICAP.
This led to a series of lengthy correspondences over a six-month period between
Nash and Menzel providing considerable insight into the process by which Menzel
arrived at his eventual solution to the inexplicable sighting.
Based on the meager data contained in the official report, Menzel assumed that the
sighting could be reasonably explained as a reflection in the cockpit windows,
especially considering the nearly instantaneous reversal, which seems to defy
the laws of physics pertaining to inertia. In support of this explanation he
underscored the apparent failure of the crew and Air Force investigators to
make any tests for possible reflections, and generally called into question the
credibility of the pilots. In a fairly scathing letter, Nash remonstrated
Menzel on this critical point:
“Dr. Menzel, regardless of your figures the western horizon was not quite
bright, and regarding your “reflection theory,” in the first place the objects
were between us and the West. In the second place, they would have had to be
damned persistent, consistent and impossible reflections to have manifested in
three cockpit windows in exactly the same way. We first observed them through
the front window. As they approached and I moved across the cockpit, I kept my
eyes on the objects and saw them through the curved window of the windshield,
and we both finished our observations looking through the right side window.
That is why there is no evidence (as you complain to Dr. Maney) that the pilots
considered that what they saw was a reflection; and you state that we were too
excited by what we saw to make the most elementary scientific tests. Again,
Doctor, pilots do not excite easily or they would not be airline
pilots—please—a little respect for us?”
Dr. Menzel’s next line of inquiry concerned whether the reflection could have
been caused by an illumination within the cockpit, or possibly a “hostess
taking a drag of a cigarette.” Dr. Maney’s rather sardonic response to this
possibility was, “Quite a long drag, wouldn’t you say?” But, nevertheless, the
pilots weren’t smoking, the cockpit door was closed, there were no hostesses on
the flight and the pilot’s observed the object’s reversal out of the right
window below the plane. This pretty well convinced Menzel that an internal
reflection was unlikely to explain the phenomenon and what Captain Nash had
seen was something outside the plane.
Still, Menzel concluded that Nash’s observations “… are completely consistent
with the theory that the discs were immaterial images made of light.”
Therefore, to explain the sighting he theorized that,
“…a temperature inversion can lead to a sharp concentration of haze, ice
crystals, smoke or other particles in a relatively thin layer. The layer is
often invisible until the plane actually goes through it, when it appears as a
thin, bright, hazy line that disappears a moment later when the plane breaks
through it. Multiple layers of such haze are not unknown, stacked one on top of
the other. Now, a sharply focused searchlight, shining at night through a
series of such hazy layers, will show up as a series of discs. As the
searchlight moves, the discs will appear to spread out, exhibit perspective,
and, as the searchlight turns around, the discs will appear to ricochet.”
The soundness of his theory depended on the prevailing weather conditions.
Since the official weather reports for that evening indicated that there were
no temperature inversions present, Dr. Menzel carefully constructed a scenario
in which inversions (albeit in meteorological parlance, a sub refractive
condition) could have been present though undetectable by the weather service.
“In the summer of 1952 all the eastern states were suffering from a intense
heat wave and drought, and the ground cooled rapidly after sunset, because of
the lack of cloud cover during the day. In a period of heat and drought, the
nightly cooling produces marked inversions favorable to extreme refraction and
reflection. Small in extent, existing only briefly in one place, constantly
changing location, such inversions may not be detectable by radiosonde
observations.”
Dr. Menzel admitted that his solution does not identify the particular beacon
or searchlight responsible for the sightings, though he suggests that, “A light
on the Virginia coast, shining northeast toward the plane, could easily have
been spread out into a series of images like those observed.” Apparently, the
location of the light is assumed to be at the point of the pilot’s initial
sighting of the red-glow, beyond and to the East of Newport News. This begs the
question why experienced pilots could not identify an apparently fixed
high-intensity (red!) light source if it were emanating from a position 25
miles in front and below and directed toward their aircraft. Since the discs
were organized in a stepped-up echelon, with the leading disc at the lowest
point, one would deduce that the source of the light must have been from behind
the aircraft. Had the light source been in front of the aircraft, as Dr. Menzel
postulates, the leading disc would have appeared in the highest position in the
echelon. Further, a searchlight reflecting off a horizontal cloud layer at an
oblique angle to the observer would produce a gradual elongation of the disc as
it moves relative to the observer. Nor does the theory account for the two
discs that darted out from under the plane and conjoined the original six
before disappearing into the night sky. Or the mechanism that would need to be
in effect to make the discs appear to flip vertically on edge, reverse position
in formation while maintaining relative distances, and then flip back to the
horizontal plane (while executing a 150-degree course change at, well, in the
words of investigating officer, Major John Sharpe, “…a speed fantastic to
contemplate.” Incidentally, 90 miles in 12 seconds equals 27,000 mph!)
In his book, Dr. Menzel asserts that his solution offers, “a highly probable
explanation that is consistent with all observations and does not depend on the
presence of an extraterrestrial spacecraft.” I have to agree with the later
part of the statement, but have no doubt that readers will find further
inconsistencies in Dr. Menzel’s impracticable solution.
Some years later, in early 1957, Bill Fortenberry was lost in a Boeing B-377
Stratocruiser crash in the Pacific Ocean, with all onboard. In the early
sixties, Captain Nash transferred to Germany, and for the next 15 years flew
the Berlin corridors before retiring from Pan American. In a recent interview
for the Sign Oral History Project, a still vivacious Captain Nash provided
their concluding supposition…
“Looking at the thing shook us up. We stared at each other, and all of a sudden
there was this realization that our world is not alone in the universe.
Because, nothing could have advanced to that degree of scientific progress
without some of the intermediate steps having become public knowledge, or, at
least known to the people who were flying. Bill had just come out of the Navy
and was fully acquainted with their latest developments. We just knew that they
were not from this planet. I know to this day, that it was nothing from this
planet.”
___________________________________________
References:
Nash, William B. and Fortenberry, William H. “We Flew Above Flying Saucers.”
True Magazine, October 1952: p. 65, 110-112.
Ruppelt, Edward J. Report on Unidentified Flying Objects. Doubleday and
Company, Garden City, NY, 1956.
Menzel, Donald H. The World of Flying Saucers: A Scientific Examination of a
Major Myth of the Space Age. Doubleday and Company, Garden City, NY, 1965.
Hill, Paul R. Unconventional Flying Objects: A Scientific Analysis. Hampton
Roads, Charlottesville, VA, 1995.
USAF Project Blue Book files, National Archives and Records Administration,
Washington D.C.
Personal files of William B. Nash. (Copies of the Nash files with the Sign
Historical Group).
“Rockets, Tracers or Them Devilish Flying Saucers,” Norfolk Virginian-Pilot,
July 17, 1952.
The Witness: “A Precise Report on Flying Saucers—Or Something,” Norfolk
Virginian-Pilot, July 20, 1952, p. 6.
Nash, William B., 2002. Interviewed by Thomas Tulien and Jan Aldrich, January
4, (Sign Oral History Project).
Nash/Fortenberry
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