 |

UFOs and the Media
We Flew Above Flying Saucers
From the TRUE
Report On Flying Saucers, 1967
By William B. Nash and
William H. Fortenberry
How does it feel to see
flying saucers? Like most people, we had never consciously
expected to face that question, but now we have an answer.
When you see "saucers" from the angle and nearness that we
did, and watch them go through the astonishing maneuver that
we witnessed, you feel humbled. Sitting in the complex
cockpit of a fast four-engined airliner, we had the deflated
feeling that we and our modern airplane were so far
outclassed by somebody and something else that it wasn't at
all funny.
On the night of July
14,1952, we were ferrying a Pan American World Airways DC-4
from New York to Miami. There was a crew of three-Captain
Fred Koepke and ourselves-and ten passengers, company
personnel and their families. The night was clear and
visibility unlimited. The only clouds, practically invisible
to us, were reported to be thin cirrus, three-tenths, at
20,000 feet.
Occupying the pilot and
co-pilot seats, we flew at 8,000, cruising on the automatic
pilot over Chesapeake Bay, as we approached Norfolk,
Virginia, which lay about 20 miles in front of us on our
compass course of 200 degrees magnetic-a little west of
south. We were due to overhead the V.R.F. radio range
station at Norfolk in six minutes and make a position report
then. The sun had set an hour before, and though we could
still make out the coast line, the night was almost entirely
dark. The distant lights of the cities stood out plainly,
undimmed by any haze. One of us pointed out to the other the
city of Newport News, which lay forward and to our right.
Suddenly a red brilliance appeared in the air beyond and
somewhat eastward-that is, to our side-of Newport News. We
saw it together at practically the same moment. The remark
of one of us was, 'What the hell is that?" It hadn't grown
gradually into view-it seemed simply to have appeared, all
of a sudden, in place.
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. 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. We judged the
objects' diameter to be a little larger than a DC-3
wingspread would appear to be-about 100 feet-at their
altitude which we estimated at slightly more than a mile
below us, or about 2,000 feet above ground level. When the
procession was almost directly under and slightly in front
of us-the pilot had to rise hurriedly from the left-hand
seat and lean to see them-the objects performed a change of
direction which was completely amazing.
All together, they
flipped on edge, the sides to the left of us 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. Then, without any arc or
swerve at all, they all flipped back together to the flat
altitude and darted off in a direction that formed a sharp
angle with their first course, holding their new formation.
The change of direction was acute and abrupt. The only
descriptive comparison we can offer is a ball ricocheting
off a wall.
Immediately after these
six lined away, two more objects just like them darted out
from behind and under our airplane at the same altitude as
the others. The two newcomers seemed to be joining the first
group on a closing heading. Then suddenly the lights of all
of the objects blinked out, and a moment later blinked on
again with all eight in line speeding westward, north of
Newport News, and climbing in a far, graceful arc that
carried them above our altitude. There they disappeared,
while still in view, by blinking out one by one-not in
sequence, but in a scattered manner. There had seemed to be
some connection between the lights and the speed.
The original six had
dimmed slightly before their angular turn and had brightened
considerably after making it. Also the two others were even
brighter, as though applying power to catch up. 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. The whole thing had occurred very quickly;
"'we agreed on an estimate of 12 seconds. Now for the
question, not too hopeful: had anybody else aboard seen it?
The co-pilot went through the small forward passenger
compartment, where the captain was intent on paper work. In
the main cabin, some of the passengers were dozing. A
cautious inquiry whether anyone had happened to see anything
unusual brought no results.
Back in the cockpit, we
discussed and formulated a quick report. We called the
Norfolk radio as we passed over it, gave our position
according to routine, and upon receiving confirmation of
that message added a second which we requested 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." The
captain came forward and was told of the incident and the
message; he took over while we went to work figuring and
writing notes on what we had seen.
With a Dalton Mark 7
computer, a kind of pivoting calculator, we swung the
azimuth from the longitudinal axis of the airplane to the
saucers' angle of approach toward the nose, as well as we
could remember it, then did the same for their angle of
departure. We found that the difference was only about 30
degrees; therefore they had made a 150-degree change of
course almost instantaneously. The 0 force produced in such
a turn we couldn't begin to figure, of course, even if we
had known how, for it would depend on duration and speed-and
there was where we really ran into something.
By reference to the
chart, we estimated that the saucers' track, from the
locality where we had first seen them to the place where
they had disappeared, covered about 50 miles, and they had
traveled it in 12 seconds. If we were conservative and
allowed 15 seconds, that would mean that the objects were
flying at the rate of 200 miles in each minute, or 12,000
miles per hour! If we were to be even more conservative and
cut our distance estimate right in half, the speed would
still he around 6,000 miles per hour!
Awhile later, while we
were still discussing the matter, the lights of a northbound
four-engined airliner came into view on a course about 1,000
feet above us. If any normal happening could have increased
the effect of our night's experience on us, it was that
commonplace event. Ordinarily the head-on approach of two
airliners-their closing speed would be 500-550 m.p.h.-seems
pretty brisk. This night the oncoming plane seemed to be
standing still, after the streaking speed of the saucers.
We landed at Miami
International Airport shortly after midnight. On entering
the operations office, we found filed, from our New York
dispatcher, a copy of the saucer message we had transmitted
through Norfolk, with an addition: "Advise crew five jets
were in area at the time." That didn't exactly apply; the
things we had seen were eight in number, and we were dead
sure they were no jets. Then we phoned the officer on duty
at the Air Force headquarters on the airport and told him we
had a report to make concerning some strange unidentified
objects. He took our names and addresses and said we would
be contacted by the proper authorities. We were. At 7 a. m.
we were telephoned by Air Force investigators and
appointments were set for an interview later that morning.
For a considerable time both of us were earnestly and
diligently interrogated, separately and together. We were
surprised by being told at the end that our particular
experience wasn't by any means unique.
We have both been flying
for more than ten years, we have had plenty of service drill
on aircraft recognition, and in thousands of hours of flight
time neither of us has ever seen anything even remotely
resembling the strange and unforgettable objects we saw near
Newport News on July 14. Maybe there is some sort of
confirmation in the fact that, following our sighting, the
Washington radar twice picked up unidentified objects, on
July 19 and 26, and that on the second occasion a pursuing
jet flier reported being outdistanced by four disappearing
lights.
What were the saucers we
saw doing there? We have no idea. One of us thought that
their sudden lighting up suggested that they may previously
have been hovering. In any case, whether they saw us and
came to investigate, or happened to move toward our position
and took alarm, or rendezvoused there with the last two, or
had some entirely different purpose, are about equally
undeterminable guesses. Though we don't know what they were,
what they were doing or where they came from, we are certain
in our minds that they were intelligently operated craft
from somewhere other than this planet.
We are sure that no
pilot, able to view them as we did, could conceive of any
earthly aircraft capable of the speed, abrupt change of
direction, and acceleration that we witnessed, or imagine
any airplane metal that could withstand the heat that ought
to have been created by friction in their passage through
the dense atmosphere at 2,000 feet. Whether they were
controlled from within or remotely, we can't say, but it is
impossible to think of human flesh and bone surviving the
jolt of their course reversal.
We have the usual
reasons, too, for not believing that they were secret guided
missiles. It is not logical that our own armed services
would experiment with such devices over large cities and
across airways, and another nation would not risk them here.
Nor could anybody's science have reached such a stage of
development without some of the intermediate steps having
become public knowledge.
One thing we know:
mankind has a lot of lessons to learn . . . from somebody.

A Guide to This Site
What's here and how to get there.
Text version of this site
An easy to read black and white version.

|