In contrast to those prosaic events, in January 1961 sightings popped up across several states (Texas to Nebraska) that covered several days. Passing though the southwest town of Roosevelt, Oklahoma on his way home with his wife, a television programmer from Wichita Falls, Texas observed ‘objects.’ The summary sheet for the January 14-15, 1961 sighting classed the objects as meteors. Inside the witnesses, however, described them much differently. The three objects had been shaped like footballs with smashed centers. The sighting was one of many from that month.
In Eastern
Kansas (Location identified as 3855 N – 9540 E) January 20, 1961 came a
military witness report. Viewed for all of 10-12 seconds with course of SW-NE
this one was quickly labeled a Meteor and probably one of the impressive Bolide
variety. It was noted the descriptions used keywords “burn out” and
“explode”. The investigators had checked
the sighting against satellite reentries and had found none. A similar report
from 9 January 1961, Altus AFB, Altus, Oklahoma shared the information that
UFO’s had been reported in the area of Shepherd Field, Wichita Falls, Texas on
January 9,10,11,14,15. Two key witnesses had been Major Warren R. Aiken and
Major Donald P. Taylor. These events had been classed with the phrase “cause
and identity remain unknown). The Shepherd Field cluster was significant
because of several witnesses, including staff of a local television station,
the KFDX-TV station programmer on his way home who sees objects in Roosevelt, a
local woman whose account of a cigar shaped object (similar to the squashed in
football shape of another witness) was discredited for some reason, and the
military witnesses.
In August
of 1961 the strangeness continued with a sighting by two civilians, students
from Drake University, of an object in Kansas City, Kansas. The object was
circular, one-half a football field in length, and lighted around the edge with
whitish yellow lights. They were too nervous to note color of the object, it
had a high tail running vertically from center to end and what looked like sled
like running boards. There was no sound. They were in a car stopped
underneath the object and could not see around the object. It was first
sighted from three blocks away and they estimated it to be 50 feet off the
ground. It was stationary for some 3-5 minutes.
Comments
from the summary coversheet included a note that no weather inversions, wind,
or clouds reported as weather was clear and dry. This sighting was classed as
“unknown…Description…would indicate a possible balloon except for altitude of
50 feet off ground and sudden rising. Completeness of description and details
given by the two observers gives little information upon which to class object
into known categories and explain sighting.”
Inside the report the witnesses had stated that the object moved up and
sharply away toward the east. The object, although color escaped them, looked
metallic and had depth to it. (1961-8-829915-Kansas City, KS 12 August 1961,
PBB)
[Note:
Project Blue Book records indicate that in July of 1962 reports came in from Hutchinson
and Wichita of objects or object seen.
In the skies north of Sherman, Texas July 2 Blue Book noted a report of
a sighting. The file contained computer printouts, very faded, and the entire
file was hard to read and seemed incomplete. July 3, a witness in Hutchinson,
Kansas reported seeing something ….the file
noted the object showed up and was also recorded as an Echo at 1124 pm
North of Wichita. There was a notation of
it being “Echo I”. Remember this was an
early satellite merged with balloon technology and Echo 1 went up in August of
1960 and was used until 1964 before being replaced by Echo II until 1968. [See
https://www.nasa.gov/centers/langley/about/project-echo.html. Circular orbit at
1,000 miles and the ‘sateloon’ was used in early triangulation. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Echo-satellite
Britannica indicated. “The satellite remained in orbit for almost eight years
and was visible as a rapidly moving “star” in the evening skies.” This might explain high altitude fast moving
objects but only those.]
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