“images and caption” I am almost completely convinced that the object that crashed near Roswell was composed of materials not common on Earth. —Major General Kenner F. Hertford, USA (Ret., Dec. 1995) It was a cover story, the balloon part of it. that part of it, was in fact the story we were told to give to the public and the news and that was it. The [actual] remnants, whatever happened to them, I have no knowledge. —Brigadier General Thomas J. DuBose, USAF (Ret., Dec. 1992) The [Roswell] craft was extraterrestrial...and at one time may have been at Wright Patterson in an off-limits area. —Brigadier General Harry N. Cordes, USAF (Ret., Dec. 2004) They knew they had something new in their hands. the metal and material was unknown to anyone I talked to. A couple of guys thought it might be Russian, but the overall consensus was that the pieces were from space. —Brigadier General Arthur E. Exon, USAF (Ret., Dec. 2005) I’m sure if there were any answers [about Roswell] they would have told him [President Clinton] while he was in the White House. —General Wesley K. Clark Sr., USA (Ret.) I have been informed by higher officers at the Pentagon that there still exists a Top Secret UFO project. That’s where your Roswell file is. —Brigadier General Richard Mitchell, USA (Ret.)) The stuff I saw, I’ve never seen anyplace else in my life. It was the strangest thing I ever saw. —General William H. Blanchard, USAF (Dec., 1966)
Henderson died in 1987, but not before telling his wife, family, and former crewmates from World War II about it. Henderson's wife, Sappho, and his daughter, Kathryn Groode, have given recorded testimony detailing what “Pappy” told them ...
Enhanced with photos and illustrations, this account tells what intellegence officer Major Jesse Marcel witnessed at Roswell prior to and after the crash of the most controversial UFO in U.S. history, including the physical characteristics ...
In the 1830s and 1840s, low country planters came to Roswell, Georgia, seeking relief from the heat and malaria that plagued Georgia's golden coast.
A UFO expert returns to Roswell, New Mexico, to sift through the evidence and uncover what really happened there in July of 1947 and to reveal what the government and military know about alien encounters. Reprint.
A breathtaking exposé that reads like a thriller, The Day After Roswell is a stunning depiction of just what happened in Roswell, New Mexico all those years ago and how the effects of this mysterious unidentified aircraft crash are still ...
Author Dianna Avena blends Roswell's history with tales of the city's most famous haunts --from the slave quarters of Bulloch Hall to the cracked graves in Founder's Cemetery--to send chills down the spines of locals and visitors alike.
Dr. Watkins was famous for getting one of the accused “Hillside Stranglers,” Kenneth Bianchi, to confess under hypnosis. (During 60 hours of interviews and hypnosis, Bianchi also implicated his cousin, Angelo Buono.10) Next, ...
The sighting of a strange unidentified craft in Roswell, New Mexico, prompts President Truman to assign a zealous Cold War general, Curtis LeMay, to investigate the situation, in a novel based on the 1947 Roswell incident. Reprint.
Using formerly classified records he proves that the U.S. government has absolutely no physical evidence of aliens, shows how critical weather data completely refute key claims of Roswell believers, and explains why the case now rises and ...
Maurice G. Fulton Fulton, right, was the head of the English department at NMMI for more than 20 years. A bio for Fulton at the Historical Society says that he “probably did more original research and historical collecting on areas than ...