Michigan "swamp gas" UFO reports
The Michigan "swamp gas" UFO reports were two mass sightings of unidentified flying objects during the nights of March 20 and 21, 1966, in Michigan, United States. The first occurred around marshland near Dexter, while the second mass-sighting took place near the campus arboretum of Hillsdale College, about 50 miles away.[2][3] The sightings took place amid a wave (or 'flap') of UFO reports throughout southern Michigan. After the reports were attributed to swamp gas by Air Force civilian investigator J. Allen Hynek, the explanation was widely derided. US congressman Gerald Ford called for a formal Congressional investigation into the sightings.[4]
March 1966 UFO flap
[edit]Initial reports
[edit]For nearly three hours, beginning around 3:50 a.m. on March 14,[5][better source needed] Washtenaw County residents, sheriffs and police reported witnessing lights in the sky moving at high speeds over Lima Township.[6] Calls were received from Monroe, Livingston, Ypsilanti, Dexter, and Sylvania. Washtenaw County Sheriff Deputies Buford Bushroe and John Foster reported seeing the lights. Personnel at Selfridge Air Force Base confirmed the sightings but did not pick up the objects on radar.[7][8][9]
From 3 to 7 A.M. on March 16, Washtenaw county Sheriff's Deputy David Fitzpatrick and his partner Neul K. Schneider saw two lights in the skies over Milan. Using a miniature camera on a tripod, Fitzpatrick captured two photographs of the lights.[10]
Dexter mass sighting
[edit]On March 20, 1966, Frank Mannor, his wife, and teenage son Ronald were home at their farmhouse northwest of Dexter, watching television.[11] Around 8:30 p.m., alerted by the noise of their six farmdogs, Mannor reported seeing a red "falling star" to the north which then hovered above a nearby marshy area while emitting light.[11] Mannors phoned law enforcement. Deputy Sheriff Stanley McFadden and his partner David Fitzpatrick entered the swamp on foot to investigate.[12] Mannors and his son reported getting within 500 yd (460 m) of the object, describing the object as football shaped with a 'waffled' or 'quilted' steel texture.[13] They reported the object had blinking lights and antennae.[12] Manor and son reported the object disappeared and reappeared in a different part of the swamp.[13] With a sound "like a rifle bullet richoceting off an object", the UFO took off and flew away.
Dexter patrolman Robert Hunawil[14] reported the object flew over his squad car as he was en route to the farm.[12] Dexter Chief of Police Robert Taylor and patrolman N.G. Lee were also witnesses at the farm.[15] Twelve members of law enforcement reported witnessing a UFO.[12] Between Mannors, his family, neighbors and police, some 60 people were reportedly witnesses.[12]
Hillsdale mass sighting
[edit]Around 9 p.m. on March 21, some 87 residents of the MacIntyre Residence Hall at Hillsdale College saw flashing lights hovering over the Arboretum.[16] They called William Van Horn, Hillsdale County civil defense director, who investigated and observed the lights through binoculars.[17] From the second floor, the group watched the lights for over three hours, taking notes at the time. Hillsdale police officers Harold Hess and Jerry Wise observed the object and reported radio damage after the event.[18] Three squad cars were dispatched to investigate, but the light was not visible from the road.[19][20]
Continued reports
[edit]On March 22 residents of Dexter and Hillsdale continued to report flying objects, strange sounds, and unexplained lights. On March 23 a teen from Monroe claimed to have taken photos of a UFO.[21][better source needed]
On 6:15PM on March 24, Robert Nichols and his wife phoned Holland police to report an object flew across a highway at a height of 200 ft (61 m). They estimated it was half the size of an automobile.[10] On the night of March 24, personnel in the Washtenaw County Sheriff's department again reported witnessing lights.[22]
On March 29, sightings were reported over Macomb and Oakland counties, as well as Bad Axe, Flint and Ann Arbor. Sightings were reported by Richard Sober, an off-duty sheriff's deputy, and Police Chief Ford Wallace of Linden.[21][better source needed][23]
National attention
[edit]On March 21, papers nationwide reported on the Dexter sightings.[12][24][25] Wire services carried a drawing by a police officer of the reported object.[26] Papers covered a variety of speculations, including one from and unnamed self-described 'expert' in California who believed "the UFO was filling up on swamp water to recharge its batteries".[27]
On March 24, papers covered a "devils gas" theory, attributing it to Maurice G. Moore, director of the Longway Planetarium.[28] The university dormitory full of witnesses that took contemporaneous notes of their observations were profiled.[29] On March 25, it was reported that a US House subcomittee might look into UFOs.[30]
Hynek press conference
[edit]External videos | |
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Footage of the Hynek press conference |
Michigan congressman Weston Vivian requested assistance from the Air Force. On March 22, papers announced that Air Force UFO expert J. Allen Hynek was being dispatched to nearby Selfridge Air Force Base to investigate the Dexter and Hillsdale sightings.[31] Sheriff of Washtenaw County Douglas Harvey recalled driving Hynek to the Mannor's farm where they witnessed circular marks in the vegetation at the supposedly landing site.[32]
On March 25, an Air Force public information officer announced Hynek would appear at a press conference scheduled for that day at the Detroit Press Club.[33] At the conference, attended by sixty members of the press, Hynek credited "marsh gas" as causing the Dexter and Hillsdale sightings.[34][35][36][15]
Hynek dismissed the Fitzpatrick photograph as being of the moon and Venus. At the press conference, a reporter handed Hynek a magazine showing George Adamski's flying saucer; Hynek opined it looked like a chicken breeder.
Historian Curtis Peebles described the conference as 'a critical event in the history of the flying saucer myth'. Hynek's explanations were met with skepticism, derision, and "near-universal hostility".[37][38] Hynek mentioned a prank at the college by young men using flares; civil defense director Will Van Horn denounced the mention of flares.[17][38]
Reactions
[edit]The Air Force denied reports that it had scrambled jets to chase a UFO.[39] On March 28, Hynek's swamp gas theory prompted then-Michigan Congressman (and future president) Gerald R. Ford to call for a thorough Congressional investigation of "the rash of reported sightings of unidentified flying objects in southern Michigan".[40][41][42] Ford issued a second release on April 3.[43]
On March 29, papers speculated on a psychological explanation.[44]
External videos | |
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UFO: Friend, Foe, or Fantasy? (May 10, 1966) Walter Cronkite reporting on the Michigan sightings | |
Hynek on Merv Griffin (July 13, 1966) |
Life Magazine covered the case in its April issue and in May, CBS Reports with Walter Cronkite covered the Michigan sightings.[11][45]
Congressional hearing
[edit]On April 6, Hynek testified before the House Armed Services Committee alongside Air Force Secretary Harold Brown and Bluebook chief Major Hector Quintanilla.[37] Reading a statement 'certainly not dictated by the Air Force', Hynek broke with organization and suggested some aspects of UFOs merited serious study.[37] On July 13, Hynek appeared on the Merv Griffin show.[46][better source needed]
In 1966, Congress heard testimony from James Ferguson that the sightings were under investigation by the Aerial Phenomena Branch of the Foreign Technology Division at Wright Field.[47]
Aftermath and legacy
[edit]Multiple journalistic organizations listed the UFO sightings as a top-ten story for 1966 in Michigan.[48][49]
Alan Hynek, the Air Force UFO expert who popularized the swamp gas hypothesis later argued the topic merited serious study. In 1968 testimony before a House committee, Hynek recalled "I do not feel that I can be labeled a flying saucer 'believer'-my swamp gas record in the Michigan UFO melee should suffice to quash any such ideas".[50] Hynek recalled in his 1972 book: "Swamp gas became a household word and a standard humorous synonym for UFOs. UFOs, swamp gas, and I were lampooned in the press and were the subjects of many a delightful cartoon (of which I have quite a collection)."[51][52][53]
In 1977, Hynek served as a consultant to the Steven Spielberg UFO blockbuster Close Encounters of the Third Kind. The film features a police chase of UFOs along the border of Indiana-Ohio which is dismissed at an Air Force press conference. Hynak had a cameo in the completed film.
In 1984, Hynek recalled the incident in an interview with Omni.[54]
The phrase swamp gas became increasingly associated with skepticism of government conclusions. In 1969, the term swamp gas was used derisively to express doubt about Project Bluebook.[55]
John A. Keel described the sightings as beginning "The Great Wave of March 1966".[56] Frank Manor's death in 1983 saw the publication of retrospectivs about the sightings.[13] 1990 saw the creation of Swamp Gas Visits the United States of America, an educational computer game about an alien named "Swamp Gas".
In 2006 , Douglas Harvey the former sheriff recalled "Dr. Hynek was sent in from the U.S. government. He came into my office. We went out to the site where supposedly this object came down on the ground. Dr. Hynek in the car said, 'There is something. We just can't put our finger on it. We've been investigating this for quite a while.'" Once back at the office, Hynek requested privacy for a phone call; "He was on the phone for quite a while, which I found very enlightening. He came out and I said, 'Well, Dr. Hynek. What do you think?' He said, 'It's swamp gas.' He tells me one minute he has no idea what it is. And then he makes one phone call to Washington and comes out and gives a statement that it's swamp gas. Very strange."[57][better source needed]
In the 1994 The X-Files episode "E.B.E.", debunker Dana Scully suggests a UFO sighting may have been caused by swamp gas.[58] The 1997 film Men in Black featured an agent dismissing a UFO sighting by explaining that "swamp gas from a weather balloon was trapped in a thermal pocket and refracted the light from Venus", combining the initial mainstream explanations given for the Dexter sightings, the Roswell Incident, the 1952 Washington D.C. UFO incident, and the Mantell UFO incident.[59][60] In 1998, the sighting was one covered by Popular Mechanics.[61] Im 2001, author Patrick Huyghe titled his memoir Swamp Gas Times.[62] The 1966 incident was featured in the 2006 book Weird Michigan.[63] In 2015, the Hillsdale campus newspaper interviewed one of the police officers who had witnessed the UFO.[18] In 2016, the 50th anniversary of the sightings was commemorated by regional media.[3] In 2019, a TV series loosely inspired by Hynek's life dramatized a public rejection of his swamp gas hypothesis.[64]
Lara Zielin, editorial director of University of Michigan's Bentley Historical Library later described. "the sightings were so widespread and the witnesses were so credible that law enforcement and senators and governors and faculty researchers would all become involved trying to figure out what in the world was going on."[32]
External links
[edit]- Mini-documentary on Michigan "swamp gas" UFOs by Bentley Historical Library of the University of Michigan
- "The UFO That Wasn't Swamp Gas" episode of Skeptoid podcast
References
[edit]- ^ "Drawing of UFO Sighted at Mannor Farm in 1966 | Ann Arbor District Library". aadl.org.
- ^ "Flying Saucers and Swamp Gas | Bentley Historical Library".
- ^ a b "UFO or swamp gas? MI's "close encounter" 50 years later". WKAR Public Media. March 21, 2016.
- ^ Peebles, Watch the Skies "Swamp Gas" p.203-207
- ^ "1966 - Michigan Sheriff Confirms UFO, Tracked on Radar". www.ufocasebook.com.
- ^ Haddad, Ken (March 14, 2024). "'I'll believe this to the day I die': The Michigan UFO craze of 1966". WDIV.
- ^ "UFOs Sighted In Lower State Areas". The Evening News. March 14, 1966. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "UFOs Cause Stir in State". The Flint Journal. March 14, 1966. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Wshtenaw Gets Flood of UFOs Calls". The Grand Rapids Press. March 14, 1966. p. 13 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "See Saucer Near Holland". The Herald-Press. March 25, 1966. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c UFO: Friend, Foe, or Fantasy? (May 10, 1966)
- ^ a b c d e f "UFO Mystery Nears Ann Arbor: Many Sightings, Claim 'Landing'". Petoskey News-Review. March 21, 1966. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c "Dexter man's passing recalls UFO sighting". aadl.org. February 17, 1983.
- ^ or 'Honeywell'
- ^ a b "Flying Saucers Bite Dust". The Wichita Eagle. 26 March 1966. p. 2.
- ^ "88 'See' UFO in Michigan: Sky Object Again Spotted, U.S. Rushes Expert to Site". The Evening News. March 22, 1966. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "Alien Invasion". Hillsdale County Historical Society.
- ^ a b Butler, Jack (March 19, 2015). "UFO: In 1966, Hillsdale had its own close encounter".
- ^ "UFO Spotted in Michigan Second Straight Night". Lebanon Daily News. March 22, 1966. p. 24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "tate". The Times Herald. March 22, 1966. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "The Great Michigan UFO Chase of 1966 - UFO Casebook Files". www.ufocasebook.com.
- ^ "LIghts (Saucers?) Visit Ann Arbor". Detroit Free Press. March 25, 1966. p. 3 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Reports of Odd Sights Continue". The Free Lance–Star. March 29, 1966. Retrieved October 21, 2024 – via Google News Archive.
- ^ "Policeman, 5 Others See UFO Formation". Orlando Evening Star. March 21, 1966. p. 3 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "40 See UFO Land In Michigan Swamp". The Wichita Beacon. March 21, 1966. p. 3 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "40 persons report seing UFO last night in Mich". Redlands Daily Facts. March 21, 1966. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Washenaw Farmer Tells of Sighting Sky Object". The Times Herald. March 22, 1966. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Glow in Burton Twp Possibly 'Devils Gas'". The Flint Journal. March 24, 1966. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "AF Official Is Probing Michigan UFO Sightings". The Daily Times. March 24, 1966. p. 13 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "House Panel May Investigate UFOs". The Bangor Daily News. March 25, 1966. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "CD Director Watches Object for 3 Hours, Air Force Aide to Investigate Mich. UFOs". The Town Talk. March 22, 1966. p. 5 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "1966 UFO Sightings in Dexter, Michigan - A Mini-Documentary". February 17, 2022 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Expert May Reveal All About UFOs Today". The Times Herald. March 25, 1966. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Air Force 'Shoots Down' UFOs -- Blames Marsh Gas, Moon, Venus". The Sacramento Bee. March 25, 1966. p. 10 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Air Force Asserts UFO Sightings are Marsh Gas". The Modesto Bee. March 25, 1966. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ Lewis-Kraus, Gideon (April 30, 2021). "How the Pentagon Started Taking U.F.O.s Seriously". The New Yorker – via www.newyorker.com.
- ^ a b c Peebles, p.171
- ^ a b "Expert's Opinion Fails to Impress UFO Sighters". The Times Herald. March 26, 1966. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Sightings of UFOs Continue". aadl.org.
- ^ "UFOs Over Michigan Baffle Multiple Eyewitnesses (VIDEO)". HuffPost.com. January 15, 2013. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
- ^ "Ann Arbor vs. the flying saucers". Michigan Today. April 13, 2014. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
- ^ "Congressman Asks UFO Probe". The Saginaw News. March 22, 1966. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Ford Press Releases - UFO, 1966" (PDF). 1966.
- ^ "Experts Find Flaws In Saucer Sightings". Detroit Free Press. March 29, 1966. p. 3 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "UFO Mystery Explored". Journal and Courier. July 30, 1966. p. 45 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Project Blue Book - Dr. Hynek on Merv Griffin". June 1, 2014 – via YouTube.
- ^ Appropriations, United States Congress House Committee on (October 10, 1966). "Hearings, Reports and Prints of the House Committee on Appropriations". U.S. Government Printing Office – via Google Books.
- ^ "Can You Guess Top '66 Stories?". Detroit Free Press. December 25, 1966. p. 4C – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Politics Heads List of State's Top News Stories of 1966". Ironwood Daily Globe (AP story). December 30, 1966. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Astronautics, United States Congress House Science and (October 10, 1968). "Symposium on Unidentified Flying Objects, Hearings...90-2, July 29, 1968" – via Google Books.
Even as a scientist, however, I am permitted a scientific hunch, and that hunch has told me for some time, despite the tremendous muddiness of the scientific waters in this area, the continued reporting from various parts of the world of unidentified flying objects, reports frequently made by people of high repute who would stand nothing whatever to gain from making such reports, that there is scientific paydirt in the UFO phenomenon-possibly extremely valuable paydirt-and that therefore a scientific effort on a much larger scale than any heretofore should be mounted for a frontal attack on this problem. In saying this I do not feel that I can be labeled a flying saucer 'believer' -- my swamp gas record in the Michigan UFO melee should suffice to quash any such ideas -- but I do feel that even though this may be an area of scientific quicksand, signals continue to point to a mystery that needs to be solved. Can we afford to overlook something that might be of great potential value to the Nation?"
- ^ "The UFO That Wasn't Swamp Gas". Skeptoid.
- ^ "The UFO experience : A scientific inquiry". 1972.
- ^ "Somebody Up There Sees Us". The Indianapolis Star. June 11, 1972. p. 213 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Omni". Omni Publications International. October 10, 1984 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Swamp Gas". The Cincinnati Post. December 24, 1969. p. 7 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ Keel, John A. (October 13, 2002). The Complete Guide to Mysterious Beings. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-7653-4586-8 – via Google Books.
- ^ "'UFO' Mystery Still Haunts Some (Michigan 1966)-UFO Casebook Files". www.ufocasebook.com.
- ^ https://books.google.com/books?id=6B7[dead link ]
- ^ Sidky, Homayun (November 30, 2019). Religion, Supernaturalism, the Paranormal and Pseudoscience: An Anthropological Critique. Anthem Press. ISBN 978-1-78527-163-2 – via Google Books.
- ^ Donovan, Barna William (January 10, 2014). Conspiracy Films: A Tour of Dark Places in the American Conscious. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-8615-1 – via Google Books.
- ^ Magazines, Hearst (July 10, 1998). "Popular Mechanics". Hearst Magazines – via Google Books.
- ^ Huyghe, Patrick (June 1, 2001). Swamp Gas Times: My Two Decades on the UFO Beat. Cosimo, Inc. ISBN 978-1-931044-27-1 – via Google Books.
- ^ Godfrey, Linda S. (October 10, 2006). Weird Michigan: Your Travel Guide to Michigan's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. ISBN 978-1-4027-3907-1 – via Google Books.
- ^ Rojas, Alejandro (February 21, 2019). "Project Blue Book Episode 7 Review: The Scoutmaster". Den of Geek.