| Michael Hall is researching
all aspects of the Project Blue Book days although he has just completed
a book primarily dealing with the very early years of Air Force investigations
into UFOs. That book, Origin of the UFO Phenomenon, documents many
fascinating events long forgotten by today's sound bite generation. It
is one of very few books that approaches the subject from a historical
perspective.
Michael David Hall
has previously authored a biography on Indiana Senator Henry S. Lane.
In The Road To Washington, Rise of an Indiana Politician, Hall
traces the drama that took Lane from the chairmanship of the first national
Republican Convention in 1856 to his influence four years later in securing
Abraham Lincoln with his party's nomination. Dozens of magazine articles
on Indiana history followed that work. Several of those continued Mr.
Hall's research on the former Indiana senator, taking him from a congressional
legislator who worked with Daniel Webster and Henry Clay, to the founder
of the Indiana Republican Party, and then on to a powerful Civil War era
senator.
Hall holds a B.A.
from Illinois College and an M.A. from Western Illinois University in
American History. In 1984 he began a museum career at the Illinois State
Museum and since 1987 has served as Executive Director of the Montgomery
County Historical Society and its Henry S. Lane Historic Home in Crawfordsville,
Indiana.
Currently the author
is working on a new book, A Time To Remember, The UFO Wave of 1952
and a co-authored article with researcher Wendy Connors for the
International UFO Reporter dealing with legendary Project Sign figure,
Alfred Loedding. Soon an expanded version of Origin of the UFO Phenomenon
will be published, titled UFOs, A Century of Sightings: The Truth
Revealed -detailing the subject all the way up to present day.
As he pursues his
research he finds diversion in aviation history as a part time guide at
the United States Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio. Hall also has interest
in the era of the great steam trains, serving as a director at the Linden,
Indiana, Monon-Nickel Plate Railroad Museum and Historical Society. Residing
in Lafayette, Indiana, with his wife Teresa and their collection of five
pampered stray cats, both Mr. and Mrs. Hall developed interests in that
area's rich heritage in transportation history spawned by technological
influences from nearby Purdue University. In fact, Mr. Hall has taken
advantage of his proximity to Purdue to further his studies in history
and plans in the near future to complete his Ph. D. in American History.
Interest in the subject
of UFOs began quite by accident while working at Purdue on a paper analyzing
the effects of American daylight bombing raids on Germany. Mr. Hall then
happened across some obscure UFO accounts filed by allied pilots. Called
foo-fighters in those days, the stories he found fascinated him. As he
came to realize what a huge volume of primary material existed on UFOs
in the nation's archives, Hall knew he had an amazing story to tell.
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