This
week, I spoke with Stan Gordon about his investigation into the Kecksburg UFO
crash/retrieval. Gordon began his investigation while still a teenager who
lived in the area. Since the crash on December 5, 1965, Gordon has worked to
learn what happened that night. You can listen the interview here:
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/47417537
Stan Gordon
This
interview was an outgrowth of that I had with Robert Young several weeks ago.
Gordon and Young are at opposite ends of the spectrum with Young sure that it
involved no alien spacecraft and Gordon saying that such a crash is a
possibility. You can listen to Young’s interview here:
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/46854217
Although
I had asked for a quick synopsis of the events, Gordon started in a slightly
different direction. He spoke about some of the things that Young had said
before delving into the sighting itself. Frankly, his description, using the
term fireball, seemed to reinforce Young’s opinion. I was surprised that he
didn’t use a different term.
We
discussed who had seen what, but it became clear that the information was
gathered years after the event, which, given Gordon’s age in 1965, isn’t all
that surprising. What I wanted to know more about was the military presence in
Kecksburg on December 5, and if he had talked to any of the soldiers who would
have been part of that.
I
also was surprised to hear that there were many reporters in the area, but
their stories the next day didn’t seem to reflect the scenarios that have been
developed since. Gordon mentioned that they had been on the wrong side of the
woods to see what the military was doing. I thought that the reporters would have been circulating through the
area attempting to learn as much as they could, rather than standing around on
the wrong side of the woods.
Mock up of the Kecksburg UFO. |
We
did discuss some of the witnesses who had seen the acorn-shaped object that was
pulled from the woods. I had thought, but didn’t say, that there were no
reports of an alien crew. Gordon had mentioned that one man had described the
object looking as if it had been made by pouring the metal into a mold so that
there were no lines, seams or rivets. As if it was a solid object.
Next
week, we head back to Roswell and talk about the possibility that Albert
Einstein had been called into the investigation. The guest will be Dr. Peter
Strassberg, whose book, When Einstein Visited Roswell will be the topic, though
as Dr. Strassberg said, the book also examines a number of topics that would be
consistent with interstellar travel.
3 comments:
b”h
Hello Kevin,
Re: Shirley Wright
Would you ever consider doing a blog post on “low-lights” of ufology. Thorough, but not exhaustive, certainly not vindictive. For the sake of so many poor people who struggle to enter the subject of UFOs.
You’ve covered so many different people who’ve knowingly “embellished” personal accomplishments or testimony about UFOs, but they are strung out over the years. For example, Imbrogno, Corso, Willingham, Bill Moore, Glenn Dennis, Kaufmann, Marcel Sr., Korff, Clifford Stone, Robert Dean, Bob Lazar, Billy Meier-Michael Horn, and such like people. And didn’t Don Schmidt fallaciously claim a PhD way back when? Tony Bragalia vociferously attacked anyone who questioned the then yet-unpublished Not Roswell Slides, but then “saved the day” after the placard was deblurred, telling everyone that he’d found the location of the mummified child’s display.
There’s so much mind-numbing peripheral clutter about Roswell. Plains of San Augustin. Aztec NM crash. Del Rio. MJ 12. Alien autopsy. Not Roswell Slides. And so much more.
My thinking is that the Shirley Wright episode must also be weighed in the light of so many people who’ve wanted to be heroes in the UFO saga. I think Wright might very well have been a bright student who got the opportunity to meet Einstein, perhaps during a several month summer program with other students. The rest of her Roswell story seems impossible to me.
But if Dr. Wright literally was mugged a half-dozen times, and if any were violent enough for a head injury, much less psychological trauma, then, who knows, after recovery she might have been telling the truth the best she knew. If I’m not mistaken, The X-Files had just begun to be broadcast not long before Wright’s taped interview that was posted by TB, and Robert Stack’s Unsolved Mysteries had been on since 1987 – with a show on the Roswell crash that evidently aired Sept. 20th, 1989.
Best wishes.
This interview with Stan Gordon re: the Kecksburg PA UFO event of December 1965 counters the earlier interview with Mr. Young to a degree. At least a number of the important witnesses are referenced.
But this interview also serves to reinforce my ongoing belief that the Kecksburg UFO crash event truly deserves its own full-length book. Kevin, your analyses in CRASH: When UFOS Fell From the Sky and A History of UFO Crashes are wonderful as far as they go.
But Stan Gordon (or if not Stan, someone ... ?) needs to write a definitive book on Kecksburg, because as Stan says there is so much evidentiary material to consider and reflect upon in order to give this extraordinary UFO event its due.
Hi Kevin (and maybe Stan if he's reading this),
That was some good radio.
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