1947-The Kenneth Arnold Sighting
By Billy Booth
Summary:
There have been UFO sightings ever since
man roamed the Earth. There exist many paintings of centuries past that depict
unusual flying objects in the sky. Folklore of many early peoples are filled
with stories of strange objects flying through the skies. However, most
Ufologists credit pilot Kenneth Arnold's UFO sighting of 1947 as the beginning
of the modern UFO age.
Search
for Missing Plane:
On June 24, 1947, businessman Arnold was
using his plane to help search for a missing aircraft. He was flying over the
Cascade mountains. As he scanned the landscape below him, he would notice some
flashes in his eyes, like reflecting sunlight. He told the Chicago Daily
Tribune, "The first thing I noticed was a series of flashes in my eyes as
if a mirror was reflecting sunlight at me... "
No Tails on Object:
Arnold
soon found the source of the flashes - a series of fast moving objects. He
described them as silvery and shiny. The most startling aspect of the object
was a lack of a tail. The objects appeared to be shaped like a pie plate. This
description almost certainly meant that the objects had a raised top, or cupola
on them. This description very closely fit that of the large UFO photographed
during The Battle of Los Angeles
"I
Must Believe My Eyes.":
The stunned pilot was seeing something
that he had never seen before in his many years of flying. He estimated the
objects' altitude as between 9,500 and 10,000 feet. He began to clock their
flight from Mt. Ranier to Mt. Adams. This information would be used to estimate
the objects' speed at 1,200 mph, an unbelievable speed for the era.
"It seemed impossible," he
said, "but there it is... I must believe my eyes."
The
Term, "Flying Saucer":
Although the term saucer was used in a
1930 UFO report in Texas, it was meant to show the relative size of the object
from arm's length. Arnold told a newspaper reporter that the objects moved
"like a saucer would if you skipped it across the water." Arnold was
indicating how the objects bounced across the atmosphere, not the shape of the
object, Yet, newspaper reporter Bill Bequette's report on the AP news wire used
the term "flying saucer" to describe the objects' shape. A phrase was
coined.
Military Takes Action:
As was the custom of the day, the U.S.
military, though aware of the Arnold report, at first tried to simply ignore
the matter. But, the story broke big across the nation, and the military had to
make some statement on the sighting. On July 7, a meeting was held to determine
how to respond to the report. This conference could also have been prompted by
the [link url=http://ufos.about.com/od/bestufocrashcases/p/roswell.htm] Roswell
Crash which was also making headlines.
Arnold
Called for Interview:
Chief
of the Army Air Force Air Intelligence Requirements Division, General Schulgen
would head the group. Under pressure to give the public some reassurance, the
decision was made to hear from "qualified" reporters of UFO
sightings. In a couple of days, Arnold was called in for an interview. The
results of this interview would earn a place in Project Blue Book.
Place
in History:
Although
there had already occurred several excellent UFO cases before the Arnold
sighting, his account will always have a place in UFO history. Over 800 hundred
reports would make U.S. media by the end of July, 1947 alone, and Arnold's was
one of the most important.
Early UFO Reports
See some of the best known early cases of flying saucers
- The Kenneth Arnold Sighting
- The Roswell Crash
- Gorman Plane - UFO Encounter
- The Mantell Crash
- Chiles-Whitted Encounter
- The Lubbock Lights
- Washington DC Buzzed by UFOs
- Felix Moncla Encounter
- Levelland, Texas Landings
- The Trindade Island Photographs
- The Papua, New Guinea Sightings
- Betty & Barney Hill Abduction
- The Socorro, New Mexico Landing
- The Kecksburg, Pennsylvania Crash
- Encounter at Falcon Lake
- Foo Fighters - UFOs of World War II
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