The Newhouse
Testimony
Filmed interview
Warrant Officer Delbert C. Newhouse
(Courtesy, Wendy Connors)
This interview of Warrant Officer
Delbert C. Newhouse was conducted in 1956, four years after the
original interrogation by the Air Forces's Project Blue Book. The
interview was filmed by Greene-Rouse Productions for inclusion in the
documentary, "Unidentified Flying Objects".
NEWHOUSE:
The exact date of my sighting was July second, nineteen fifty-two, at
eleven A.M., Mountain Standard Time. I was driving on US Highway
thirty-south, with my wife and son, Delbert, and our daughter,
Anne. We were on our way from Washington, D.C., to Portland,
Oregon -- on vacation -- before moving to my new duty station at the
Aviation Supply Depot, Naval Supply Center, Oakland, California.
About seven miles after passing through Tremonton, Utah, Norma, my
wife, noticed a group of objects in the sky, which she could not
identify. I pulled off onto the shoulder of the road and stopped the
car. I got out, looked up and saw the objects. There were about
twelve of them, milling about in a round formation and proceeding in a
general westerly direction. They were like nothing I had ever
seen before, although I've logged some 2,000 hours in the air.
They were identical in appearance.
CAPTAIN:
How would you describe these objects?
NEWHOUSE:
The shape of two saucers -- one inverted over the other. I had no
way of estimating the altitude. They appeared to me to be the
size of B-29s at 10,000 feet.
CAPTAIN:
Did you immediately photograph them?
NEWHOUSE:
I watched the objects for several moments before I got my camera out of
the suitcase. I lost more time getting the film out of a second
suitcase and then loading the camera. When I first saw them they were
nearly overhead, but by the time I got the camera ready they had moved
to a considerably greater distance.
CAPTAIN:
What type of camera was it?
NEWHOUSE:
A Bell and Howell 16 mm. Filmo Auto Loadmaster camera with a three-lens
turret. I selected the three inch lens and set it at f:8. I
focused on infinity. The camera was set at sixteen frames per
second -- I did not think to shoot at a greater rate, although that
would have improved the coverage. I centered the objects in the
view finder and made the first shoot. Then I decided that the
objects would show better if the sky were darker. I stopped the
lens to f:16 and continued photographing. This proved to be an
error, as the film would have been of better quality had I left it at
f:8.
CAPTAIN:
Did these objects remain together as a group at all times?
NEWHOUSE:
No. Toward the end, one of the objects reversed its course and
proceeded away from the rest of the group. I held the camera still and
allowed this single object to pass through the field of view, picking
it up again later in its course.
CAPTAIN:
Did this single object return to the group?
NEWHOUSE:
No. I allowed the single object to pass through the field of view
two or three times and then it disappeared.
CAPTAIN:
In what direction?
NEWHOUSE:
Over the eastern horizon.
CAPTAIN:
What did you do then?
NEWHOUSE:
I turned, swinging the camera just in time to see the rest of the group
disappear over the western horizon.
CAPTAIN:
What was the weather like?
NEWHOUSE:
The day was bright and cloudless.
CAPTAIN:
Good visibility?
NEWHOUSE:
The visibility was excellent.
CAPTAIN:
How does the film you shot compare with what you saw with the naked
eye? You have studied the film?
NEWHOUSE:
Yes. I've studied the film and I'm very disappointed. The
film falls far short of what I saw with the naked eye -- due to the
delay in getting the camera going and to my error in exposure. --
If I had had that camera on the seat beside me, loaded and ready to go,
there wouldn't be any need for questions. The Air Force would
have the answer.
CAPTAIN:
What is your full name, please?
NEWHOUSE:
Delbert Clement Newhouse.
CAPTAIN:
Are you currently on active duty in the Navy?
NEWHOUSE:
Yes, sir, I am.
CAPTAIN:
What is your official Navy rank?
NEWHOUSE:
My title is Chief Photographer. I am a Commissioned Warrant
Officer, United States Navy.
CAPTAIN:
How long have you been in the service?
NEWHOUSE:
Twenty-one years.
CAPTAIN:
Is there anything else you can add to the description of these
objects?
NEWHOUSE:
They were a bright silvery color.
CAPTAIN:
Can you describe any particular details?
NEWHOUSE:
They had a metallic appearance. They seemed to be made of some
kind of polished metal.
(This web page was created by Francis
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