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March 17, 1950 - The Farmington UFO Armada
Farmington Daily Times
Saturday, March 18, 1950,
Vol. 61, No. 194
(front page banner headline)
HUGE 'SAUCER' ARMADA JOLTS FARMINGTON
Crafts Seen By Hundreds
Speed Estimated at 1000 MPH, Altitude 20,000 feet
[]
For the third consecutive day flying saucers have
been reported over Farmington. And on each of the
three days their arrival here was reported between
11 and noon.
Three persons called the Daily Times office to
report seeing strange objects in the air just before
noon.
Persons along Main Street once again could be
seen looking skyward and pointing.
High winds and a dust storm prevented clear
vision.
Fully half of this town's population still is
certain today that it saw space ships or some
strange aircraft -- hundreds of them zooming through
the skies yesterday. Estimates of the number ranged
from & quotes several to more that 500. Whatever
they were, they caused a major sensation in this
community, which lies only 110 air miles northwest
of the huge Los Alamos Atomic installation.
The objects appeared to play tag high in the air.
At times they streaked away at almost unbelievable
speeds. One witness did a triangulation sighting on
one of the objects and estimated its speed at about
1,000 miles an hour, and estimated its size as
approximately twice that of a B-29.
Farmington citizens stood in the streets
yesterday watching the first reported mass "flying
saucer" flight ever sighted. Traffic was slowed to
avoid hitting sky gazers. The office of the
Farmington Daily Times was deluged with calls from
persons who saw the objects.
A Red Leader
Scores described the objects as silvery discs. A
number agreed they saw one that was red in color --
bigger and faster, and apparently the leader.
Clayton J. Boddy, 32, business manager of
Farmington Times and a former Army Engineers captain
in Italy, was one of those who saw the startling
objects.
Boddy was on roadway when all of a sudden I
noticed a few moving objects high in the sky.
"Moments later there appeared what seemed to be
about 500 of them," Boddy continued. He could not
estimate their size or speed, but said they appeared
to be about 15,000 feet high.
Boddy's account was confirmed by Joseph C. and
Francis C. Kelloff, retail grocers from Antonito,
Colo., who were in Farmington to inspect the site of
a proposed new store, and by Bob Foutz and John
Burrell of Farmington. The Kelloffs said the objects
appeared to be flying in formation.
One of the most impressive accounts came from
Harold F. Thatcher, head of the Farmington unit of
the Soil Conservation service. Thatcher made a
triangulation on one of a number of flying craft, He
said if it had been a B-29 it would have been 2,000
feet high and traveling more than 1000 miles per
hour.
Knows Engineering
"I'm not a professional engineer," Thatcher said,
"but I have engineers working under me and I know
how to work out rough triangulation on an object."
Thatcher emphatically denied an earlier report
that the objects could have been small pieces of
cotton fuzz floating in the atmosphere.
"It was not cotton," he said, "I saw several
pieces of cotton fuzz floating around in the air at
the time, but I was not sighting on any cotton."
The "cotton" report was started by State
Patrolman Andy Andrews, who quoted several
Farmington Residents as asserting it was cotton they
saw. The residents denied Andrew's report.
The first reports of flying saucers were noted a
few minutes before 11 a.m. yesterday. For a full
hour thereafter people deluged the Times with
reports of the objects.
A second large scale sighting occurred at 3 p.m.
At that time, Mrs. Wilson Jones, 27, and Mr. Roy
Hicks, 33, housewives reported seeing objects to the
north of Farmington, flying in perfect formation.
Others reported the same sight.
Johnny Eaton, 29, a real estate and insurance
salesman, and Edward Brooks, 24, an employee of the
Perry Smoak garage, were the first to report the
red-colored sky object.
Not Airplanes
Brooks, a B-29 tail gunner during the war, said
he was positive the objects sighted were not
airplanes. "The very maneuvering of the things
couldn't be that of modern aircraft," he said.
John Bloomfield, another employee of Smoak's
garage, said the objects he saw traveled at a speed
that appeared to him to be about 10 times faster
than that of jet planes. In addition, he said the
objects frequently made right-angle turns.
"They appeared to be coming at each other
head-on," he related. "At the last second, one would
veer at right angles upward, the other at right
angles downward. One saucer would pass another and
immediately the one to the rear would zoom into the
lead."
Marlow Webb, another garage employee, said the
objects to the naked eye appeared to be about eight
inches in diameter as seen from the ground. He
described them as about the size of a dinner plate."
"They flew sideways, on edge and at every
conceivable angle," he said. "This is what made it
easy to determine that they were saucer-shaped."
None of the scores of reports told of any vapor
trail or engine noise. Nor did anyone report any
windows or other markings on the craft.
In general Farmington accepted the phenomenon
calmly, although it was reported some women
employees of a laundry became somewhat panicky.
(Source: <http://www.aztecufo.com/farm.htm>http://www.aztecufo.com/farm.htm
, Artwork - James Neff)
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