‘UFO’ Review: Outer Space, the Inside Story
On June 24, 1947, a civilian pilot in Washington state spotted nine bright lights apparently moving at incredible speed near Mount Rainier. Interviewed by local reporters, he described the objects as saucer-like. Articles about the Mount Rainier “flying saucers” soon appeared in newspapers across the country. In the coming days more sightings poured in—from Alabama, Nevada, Oregon—and these too made headlines. “Flying ‘Whatsits’ Supplant Weather as No. 1 Topic Anywhere People Meet,” reported the Los Angeles Times.
Then, in early July, a rancher near Roswell, N.M., told authorities he’d found a jumble of crumpled foil and wooden dowels on his land. Army officers from a local airbase investigated, then quickly announced they’d captured a “flying disc.” What a sensation! But almost as quickly, Army higher-ups pooh-poohed that assertion, claiming that the debris was merely scraps from a crashed weather balloon. The attempted debunking didn’t work, and the rest is history—or myth, depending on how deeply one ventures into the maddeningly murky lore of “ufology.”
Copyright ©2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
This article has been archived for your research. The original version from The Wall Street Journal can be found here.