Truth behind what happened outside Roswell in 1947 |
Unless you’ve been living on another planet, you’ve probably heard something about UFOs, aliens and Roswell at least once in your lifetime. The year was 1947, some 21 years before I entered this earth and would not hear about Roswell for a good 10 more years or so.
The facts
In years since I knew something happened, there was some kind of crash, on a farm Northwest of Roswell. A rancher by the name of "Mac" Brazel stumbled upon the wreckage and was worried about having it on his property because his sheep would not cross past it.
He gathered samples and took them into town to the sheriff. His story in the beginning was that he didn’t know what the material was and took it into town, wondering if it might be the wreckage of a flying saucer.
The sheriff phoned the local 509th bomber group and was routed to military intelligence officer Jesse Marcel Sr. who went out to the sheriff’s office to review the strange material. Marcel wanted to see where it came from and Brazel led him out to the spot where the wreckage was on his property.
Marcel took more samples of the material in his car. He stopped home and after swearing them to secrecy, showed his wife and his son what was discovered. He told his son — according to his son, Jesse Marcel Jr. — that it wasn’t anything he’d ever seen before. They touched the material which was like aluminum foil, only lighter and without one side being paper-like. They handled it carefully, not wanting to damage it.
Marcel took the material back to the base and after showing his superior, General Ramsey, the general checked around with other military bases to see if it might be part of an experiment, a sensational press release was made that was retracted later. What was described as debris from a flying saucer was quickly amended to a misunderstanding: it was just a weather balloon.
This is where the story twists, depending on who or what you want — or are willing — to believe.
Common sense and Hollywood
It’s important to note that neither Marcel or son has ever claimed to have seen any aliens. They both only claimed to have seen material they hadn’t ever seen before. I was unclear on this until I read Marcel Jr.’s book, The Roswell Legacy, pictured above. This is the only book I’ve ever read on the subject, but I believe almost everything happened as Marcel’s son described.
The book isn’t laid out in story format. Instead it’s told in first person with little narrative and mostly descriptions of what Marcel’s son had witnessed firsthand and/or been told by his father of what really happened in 1947. It isn’t filled with a bunch of grandiose hypothesis about what might have happened, as I’ve seen to be the case with the Roswell incident over the years. It’s a mere 174 pages, including appendix.
The book also goes into a little bit of who his father was, his military credentials and what happened to him after Roswell. There was a TV movie in 1994 called Roswell starring Martin Sheen which takes some poetic license with the story, but remains somewhat faithful to what Marcel Jr. says really happened to him.
There are other stories portrayed in that TV movie which get much more difficult to believe — like there was a second crash site Marcel didn’t see that had the aliens, one of which was still alive. Don’t get derailed there though yet, let’s stay with Marcel who only said he saw material not of this world, later rebuffed by the government to be common material he should have been able to identify.
Marcel Jr. a surgeon has also been a career military man like his father and the only reasons he claims (and I believe) he wrote this story were:
- to keep a promise to his father over getting the truth out about what really happened in 1947
- to defend his father’s honor that was besmirched over mis-indentifying the Roswell crash debris as something other worldly instead of a weather balloon.
Marcel Jr. has served in Iraq as recently as 2005. He a credible source to me.
Marcel being part of the elite 509th bomber group, the unit behind the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki should have been able to easily identify the wreckage if it came from some known material. That only makes sense. Especially if it was a weather balloon, which was the government’s official story shortly after the first report put out by the 509th.
A weather balloon. They’ve stuck by that story for the most part. Amending it later after reopening the investigation to a mogul balloon.
In the book, Marcel Jr. provides a scan of his father’s diploma from radar school dated September 8, 1945. He also lists his various military awards and despite his alleged gaffe identifying the debris, he was later promoted to lieutenant colonel in the reserves.
This doesn’t sound like the type of guy who would go out to a local ranch, bring back some material, show his boss the general the material, and then be part of putting out a press release that said it could be from a "flying saucer."
I did some internet fact checking to see if a copy of the original press release could be found online. Wikipedia, in fact, has a scan of the story in the Roswell Daily Record dated Tuesday July 8, 1943
Source: Wikipedia
So was there really a UFO crash in 1947 or not?
At least for this post I’m going to steer away from the hard to believe claims about seeing actual aliens at the second site, that one of them might have been kept alive for five years. Or that the government actually had an exchange program called Project Serpo from 1965-1978 where military personnel visited the planet Zeta Reticuli (and later allegedly died from "excess radiation"). You can visit YouTube, type in "Roswell" as the query and be treated to a bunch of clearly fake alien autopsy videos or use your favorite search engine for any of these terms to learn more if so inclined.
(But hey, if you want a good laugh then check out Dan Aykroyd Unplugged on UFOs — lol! Don’t you dig it when people try to be serious and it’s funny instead?)
Mea culpa: I wrote back in August 2006 that I believe aliens have visited earth and that the U.S government has proof of it. I’m not sure if this first happening was Roswell in 1947 and the book being reviewed here doesn’t try to answer that (and if it does, then it fails to be very compelling in that regard). What it does try to answer was if there was a crash of something not from earth. If you can’t go as far as me and believe in E.T then at least see if you can go as far as believing something crashed here not of this earth.
I am ready to believe the wreckage Marcel and his son touched wasn’t from earth. There are simply too many holes in the government’s response to believe otherwise. Weather balloon? Come on.
Where it came from, I don’t know, but if we knew it came from somewhere on earth what would be the harm in the government declassifying this information 60+ years later? Since the declassification hasn’t happened, one of the following possibilities must be true (pick your poison):
- the government knows where it came from and doesn’t want to tell us
- the government does not know where it came from and doesn’t want to admit this to us
- the government knows where it came from on earth, and doesn’t want to tell us
- the government does not know where it came from on earth and doesn’t want to admit this to us (yeah, similar to #2)
I was glad to be able to solve the lingering riddle in my mind about what happened in 1947 just outside Roswell. For that reason I give this book the highest Hmm Reviews grade possible. The book doesn’t get all "tinfoil-hat" to use the author’s own description of the fringe UFO crowd — and don’t worry readers, I’m not joining that crowd either. In fact, until the last chapter it doesn’t get too far afield of what the author and his father witnessed. That type of non-fiction works great for me.
In the last chapter the author explains why he thinks we’re not alone in the universe. I agree with much of his thinking there too. We can’t be alone and it’s arrogant to think we are. The universe is much too big and there are too many parts we know absolutely nothing about.
He thinks the aliens that have contacted us have been benign and that they might have some Star Trek like prime directive. That would make some sense as to why we don’t see aliens everywhere but they might have been in contact with the government.
The Russians have acknowledged crashed debris as being not of this earth while the U.S government has done so to date. I think before my death, assuming living out a ripe old age, I’ll see this happen.
I think it’s well past time for the government to declassify the material in 1947 that’s sitting on a base somewhere, waiting for further critical study and research. Why not?
Conspiracy theorist or realist
Now if I’m to be labeled conspiracy theorist for believing the government has botched up the Roswell cover-up, so be it. I put this one with the JFK assassination as far as believing the government lied to us. I’d also add in the more recent Bush administration lying about the whole weapons of mass destructions.
I think it’s harder to believe that the government has never lied to us, don’t you?
Conspiracy theorist or realist? I’ll take the latter. If you are looking for a story about what really happened in 1947 in Roswell, run, don’t walk, to the bookstore and get The Roswell Legacy. It feels about as close to the truth as we can get until the government declassifies what they are secreting away from us for our own [snicker] protection. Grade: A+
Did this post make you go hmm?
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(2 votes, average: 3.5 out of 5)
I go for “the government knows where it came from on earth, and doesn’t want to tell us ” because I believe that Roswell was probably about some sort of military experimentation.
I don’t buy into the alien story, though I think it likely we are not alone in this galaxy, but firmly believe that the US is protecting their own secrets rather than extraterrestrial ones.
Comment by Lee — November 23, 2008 @ 9:56 am PST
Roswell is a fun place for a brief visit - if you happen to be in thee middle of nowhere with an afternoon to kill. My home city Odessa is just a smidge over 4 hours away - in what I lovingly refer to as the “armpit of Texas.” We have some great friends in Roswell and, up until this year, Roswell has been the site for an annual national Volkswagen New Beetle car show. So for several years, we made the trek (rimshot!) to Roswell in my wife’s NB ‘vert a.k.a Caliente.
Anyway, Roswell has a very fun attitude about the whole thing, decorating their lampposts downtown with globes that look like alien heads and having a an awesome McDonald’s that looks like a landed flying saucer. There are dozens of knick-knack shops lining the downtown area that offer every imaginable sort of alien memorabilia. The Harley shop has an awesome t-shirt with a leather-clad alien trying to outrun the mothership on a hog. And there’s the UFO museum that really works hard to make a mountain out of a supposed molehill. And therein lies the rub…
You don’t wanna kid around with the locals about the UFO crash! Most of them fully believe that the whole thing is quite legitimate and don’t at all care for being mocked, even in a friendly manner. They’re light-hearted about the whole alien theme but just the same, they’re also surprisingly serious about it.
Comment by Rob O. — November 29, 2008 @ 8:32 pm PST
I used to work as a tour guide running trips across country, and Roswell (like Hollywood) was one of those places that foreigners were all about… until they got there.
The UFO museum is a total waste of time, too (they should just read this post, instead!). Folks are better driving straight on to Carlsbad Caverns.
Thanks for the info.
Comment by adam — December 16, 2008 @ 9:15 am PST
My uncle Charles Scott was supposed to be on the U.S.S. Dorchester when it was sunk off the coast of Greenland. He had been over to Greenland before on the Dorchester. The ship left without him the second time and was sunk by Nazi Submarine off the coast of Greenland. Why he was not on it was that he was sent to Roswell. My uncle was a marksman supreme in all manner of firearms for the Army which was in charge of the cleanup. Scotty as they called him was a sniper and a Staff Sargent. He told me he picked up the pieces of the weather balloon that dropped there. He would not say anything further about this and only told me just the year before his death. When I pressed gently for more information he said very gruffly that it was “only a weather balloon.” I never thought it was Aliens but I have thought it was the bomb balloons that the Japanese sent over and the wrecked one complete with Japanese pilots. Yes I believe the so called 10 yr old size alien was a Japanese. I think they had tried to guide the balloons as they received no word of hits. It could even have been done in the years hence by others and thus the reason for secrecy of the mission. Simple but still too bizarre a story. I did read even today that the people called to pick up the debris were the Army and they were “hand picked” . I find that my uncle missed the boat and was assigned there for clean up. He said “they lost me.” Why did they need a sniper. The story is as told me. Nothing grand or embellishing but truly odd.
Comment by S. Rea Scott — February 12, 2009 @ 8:35 pm PST
THE TRUTH ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED OUTSIDE ROSWELL, CONTINUATION OF CHARLES SCOTT STORY. There is much about the Alien autopsy said. The Japanese sent people which were small even for then 1945 up in the balloons. They were to guide them and it was a suicide mission. The balloons went up above 25,000 ft. The human body in what was an unpressurized environment cannot tolerate that altitude. It will implode. There was mention of a green viscous blood like substance in the Alien body which of course would have been the bile and other bodily fluids exploded within the body. Mention was made also of organs being not in the right places. The same applies here they , the organs would have been misplaced during this incident. It is all very commonly explained and our childish fears have saved the country from further escapades to break into our safety in that time . We had to do something this was simple and worked but so did the balloons the Japanese sent. We must beware of the simplicity of things that can be used for great harm.
Comment by S. Rea Scott — March 22, 2009 @ 12:14 pm PST
I have been following the reports that have tried to “Close” the Roswell incident, and which have not been covered so far on this thread.
Back in the mid-90’s, the Clinton administration attempted to open Roswell to congressional hearings. The Air Force instead “volunteered” to do a full investigation. This resulted in a report called “Roswell Report: Case Closed” which can be purchased at Amazon but can also be downloaded for free at: http://contrails.iit.edu/History/Roswell/index.html
This report focuses on anthropomorphic dummy tests from high altitudes and of other tests involving high-altitude balloon classified projects.
Apparently the final report Public Release was mishandled by the Air Force and it resulted in case “Not Closed” suspicions lasting to this day…
Lux
Comment by Luxley — May 31, 2009 @ 6:43 am PST
But I thought he confessed on his death bed that he did see Aliens. I watched the movie, never read the book. I think it was a cover up, why would army come and say it’s a UFO then deny it. Come on, I think we all know the difference between a weather baloon and some outer space flying saucer. And wouldn’t a flying saucer be 10 times the size of a weather baloon, too fishy to me!
Comment by Steve — September 3, 2009 @ 2:14 am PST