I was recently in
Roswell for an update on some of the investigations from a few years ago. It
was an opportunity to gather additional information, check out some sites, and
verify or answer a couple of questions. I hadn’t been to Roswell in several
years, so, of course, I made a trip to the International UFO Museum and Research
Center. The changes there have been extraordinary.
The International UFO Museum and Research Center. |
The original concept
was a creation of several people including Walter Haut, Glenn Dennis and Max Littell,
with input from Don Schmitt and me. It began with few exhibits and gradually
grew into a somewhat impressive place, complete with some science fiction
aspects, a major library of UFO books and other materials. It has also become
something of a commercial enterprise, which, of course, it not necessarily a
bad thing. That aspect has brought in donations that have allowed for the
expansion and improvement of the Museum.
From the left, Don Schmitt, Walter Haut and Max Littell. |
The displays are of
professional, or maybe I should say, museum quality. A great deal of effort went
into the creation of those displays. Some of them are scientifically oriented
and others find their home in science fiction. There is a huge statue of Gort,
the robot from the original The Day the Earth Stood Still. In contrast,
there is a display of a dead alien in a hospital or morgue setting from the
ShowTime original movie Roswell. It could be argued that the display is
based on eyewitness testimony.
Gort from The Day the Earth Stood Still. |
The alien from the movie Roswell.
There is an enclosed
“spaceship bridge” that is very impressive that takes you on a visit to the
cosmos but there is also a UFO landing scene that isn’t quite as impressive. It
has been there for years and it does, periodically, emit smoke and loud noise.
One section covers some
of the more notable UFO cases including abductions. I wish they had done more
with the Hickson-Parker abduction. As I noted in an earlier post, Calvin Parker
had died recently.
If I have one
complaint, it is simply a small display about MJ-12. Most of the UFO community
accepts the theory that the MJ-12 documents are a hoax. One of the first
recipients of those documents, including the Eisenhower Briefing Document and
the Truman Memo, had said that he had been thinking about creating some
documents to further his research. That comment, among other evidence, suggests
that MJ-12 is a hoax. I hope the Museum puts up a qualification about the
documents suggesting their dubious nature.
Just one of the many new displays in the Museum. |
And, of course, there
is a gift shop filled with almost everything Roswell you can think of. And
again, when was the last time you went to a museum that didn’t have some sort
of gift shop. This is not a bad thing.
All in all, the Museum
is now quite impressive. While it is not as large as the Smithsonian or some of
the Museums of Natural History around the country, it is as professional done
as those. I don’t suppose I have to say this, but if you find yourself in
Roswell, a trip the museum is worth your time.
3 comments:
Agreed Kevin.
Hi Kevin
Thank you for the post...
Have they updated anything on the "Ramey memo research" which I saw during our visit in 2012?
Also would be interested to know current ticket prices and what attendance numbers were like over thanksgiving weekend 2023?
Best wishes
Nitram
Well folks, the NASA team has just concluded that UFOs/UAPs are not ET at all (at least not most of them). And those so-called whistleblowers are just wagging their tongues like the so-called Roswell witnesses did a while ago. However, there is still hope for ET, because we have Mr. David Grusch around wagging his tongue minus any evidence!
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