Aliens
have been visiting our planet for more than thousands of years.
However the first incident of a military confrontation with the
extraterrestrials was recorded in 1948 by the United States. The US
military lost its military pilot in the incident and the government
did not know how to react to this unforeseen event. This was one of
the most publicized, controversial and significant incidents of early
UFO sightings, which changed the perception of the people towards the
UFOs.
On
January 7, 1948, at 1:15 PM, the control towers at the
Godman Air Force Base located near Louisville, Kentucky
received a call from Kentucky State Highway Patrol which had
reports from residents of Maysville of sightings of an strange,
unusual aircraft hovering in the sky. The Godman Tower got it
confirmed from Flight Service at Wright-Patterson AFB and found that
there was no experimental flights in the region. They only had a B-29
and an A-26 on photo missions in that area. The Kentuky state police
called again 20 minutes later saying that residents of Owensboro and
Irvington, Kentucky, were reporting a strange craft. They described
that the object was circular 250 to 300 feet in diameter due West
at a good pace. The Godman Tower checked the Flight Service again
but found nothing. The tower operators who were looking for the
reported object finally saw it at 1:45 PM. They called Flight
Operations as soon as they assured themselves that the unidentified
flying object was neither an airplane nor a weather balloon.
At
2:30 PM four F 51 Mustang fighters were approaching the
Air Force Base enroute from Marietta, Georgia to Standiford Field,
Louisville, Kentucky. The tower called the flight leader, Captain
Thomas F. Mantell (in NG 3869 lead ship) and requested to try to
identify the object. One of the four planes was low on fuel and asked
for a permission to go to his base, while Mantell and his remaining
wingmen (Lt. Buford A. Hammond and Lt. Albert W. Clements)
headed towards the object. Clements recalls that Mantell was way
ahead and by the time the they reached 10,000 feet, he was
barely visible. Mantell called the tower at 2:45 PM and said
"I see something above and ahead of me and I'm still
climbing." Clements then called back and asked "What
the hell are we looking for?" Mantel replied that the object
was directly ahead and above of him, moving about half of his speed.
Clements was able to see a small bright appearing object, very
distant to be unable to identify its size, shape and color. The tower
immediately asked Mantell to describe the object. Mantell replied but
nobody remembers exactly what he answered. Saucer historians believe
he said "I've sighted the thing. It looks metallic and it's
tremendous in size.... Now it's starting to climb." Few
seconds later he called "It's above me and I'm gaining on it.
I'm going to 20,000 feet." Mantell mentioned going to 20,000
ft and if they could not go closer to the object would abandon the
chase. Mantell was climbing at combat max rate/speed. Clements was
close to Mantell but Hammond did not had oxygen and had leveled off
to 15,000 feet. He was felling difficulties of hypoxia and by
the time Clements reached 22,000 feet, Hammond was feeling dizzy.
He contacted Clements by radio and considering the perils of anoxia,
they turned back to their base at Standiford Field. They were worried
and trying frantically to call Mantell who went out of their sight.
Their calls went unanswered and Mantell never talked to anyone again.
Lt. Clements then got his plane refueled, and serviced with oxygen
and took off to investigate again. However, he saw nothing.
The
tower lost the sight of the UFO at 3:50 PM, while they got the
news that Mantell had crashed a few minutes later. Several hours
later at 7:20 PM, about a dozen of airfield towers reported
sightings of UFO low on the Southwestern horizon and disappearing
after about twenty minutes, however the Air Force said that it was
planet Venus. Project Sign was the first Air Force research
group assigned to investigate UFO reports. It investigated the
Mantell Crash and in order to provide a quick answer to the incident,
the officials in Project Sign reported that Mantell had unfortunately
been killed trying to reach the planet Venus. The Air Force reported
that once Mantell reached 25,000 feet, he passed out due to lack of
oxygen (hypoxia or anoxia) and lost control of his aircraft. The
Mustang began decending in a spiral picking up speed and completed
two spirals. At 10,000 feet Mantell regained consciousness and tried
to throttle back but the plane broke down at Mach limit, the engine
overheated and the plane dived vertically. It crashed in a farm after
a flat spin 4 miles South of Franklin, Kentuky landing on its belly.
The firemen later pulled Mantell's body from the wreckage. His seat
belt was shredded, and his wristwatch had stopped at 3:18 PM, the
time of his crash. A police officer Joe Walker who took charge at the
scene of the accident learned that the aircraft had exploded in the
mid air before it hit the ground, but, the aircraft did not burn upon
contact with the ground. The wreckage was scattered over an area of
one mile. The mystery UFO chase died with him.
The
Air Force released an official report on the incident one year later.
It reported that the UFO might have been Venus of even a balloon.
Venus was a strong suspect because it was in almost the same spot in
the sky as the UFO. At 3:00 PM, Venus had been Southwest of Godman
and 33 degrees above the southern horizon while at 3:00 PM the tower
operators estimated the UFO to be Southwest of Godman and at an
elevation of about 45 degrees. Allowing for human error in estimating
directions and angles, this was pretty close. However, there was a
big flaw in the theory. On January 7, 1948, the brilliance of planet
Venus was six times that of the surrounding sky. Venus wasn't bright
enough to be seen because it's practically impossible to find a light
only six time as bright as the surrounding sky even in a clear day.
It was clear the Air Force was unsuccessfully trying to cover up
something important, using Venus as a shield.
All
other theories including the Venus theory was rejected. The only
possibility was that either the object was a real UFO or US Navy
Skyhook weather balloon. The Skyhook balloon project was highly
classified at that time and neither Mantell nor the other observers
in the air control tower would have been able to identify the UFO as
a Skyhook balloon because they did not had the information. The
Skyhook balloons were made of reflective aluminum, and were about 100
feet (30 m) in diameter. This is consistent with Mantell's
description of a large metallic object. A large balloon could be
visible for 50 to 60 miles and a Skyhook balloon was visible even at
an altitude of 60,000 feet. Located at Wright Field, the group who
supervise the contracts for all the Skyhook research flights for the
Air Force had no records on flights in 1948 but they did think that
the big balloons were being launched from Clinton County Air Force
Base in southern Ohio at that time. The military have pretty good
records on all the launches but they never could establish a launch
date for that day.
There
were several reported sightings of UFO on the fateful day in the
region including Madisonville and Owensboro when Captian Mantell
died. All the possible theories of US Skyhook balloon was eventually
rejected. The most recent launch of US Skyhook balloon Flight B
launched by General Mills in Minnesota happened to be
at 8:00 AM on January 6, 1948, and it was too far away
on the next day to be noticed by Mantell and his wingmen. The Skyhook
balloon was in Tennessee near Nashville at the time of the UFO
sightings on January 7. Mantells case was covered up and declared as
unsolved, and is still unsolved till today.
Captian
Thomas Francis Mantell Jr. (30 June 1922 – 7 January 1948)
Captian
Thomas Francis Mantell Jr. was born in Franklin, Kentucky. After
graduating from Male High School, in Louisville, he joined the Army
Air Corps on June 16, 1942 and graduated from the Flight School on 30
June 1943. He was assigned to 440th Troop Carrier Group, 96th Troop
Carrier Squadron, 9th Air Force during World War II. He was a
distinguished pilot and was awarded Distinguished Flying Cross
for courageous action during the Normandy landings, and an Air
Medal with three Oak leaf clusters for heroism. After the war,
Mantell returned to Louisville and joined the newly organized
Kentucky Air National Guard as Flight Leader, “C” Flight, 165th
Fighter Squadron on 16 February 1947.
Mantell
had been flying F 51 Mustangs since past seven months. He had about
3,000 flying hours, of which 1,608 hours were pilot-flight time, out
of which 67 hours was in F 51 Mustang. The F 51 Mustang was the one
of the best fighters in US Army during the World War II. With an
excellent range and maneuverability the Mustangs could climb up to
42,000 feet.
Newspapers
reported that Mantell was shot down by a magnetic ray from a flying
saucer. He was the first person ever to die while pursuing an
unidentified flying object. The resulted in major shift towards the
perception to extraterrestrials and UFOs. They started to be
considered as hostile and were no longer perceived harmless.
Flight
Profile of Captian Mantell
Time
CST
|
Miles
From Godman
|
Altitude
(Feet)
|
Climb
Rate (Feet/Min)
|
Ground
Speed MPH
|
Landmark
|
01:42
PM
|
289
|
0
|
0
|
0
- 300
|
First
two F51's take off from Marietta AAF, Georgia.
|
01:43
PM
|
289
|
0
|
0
|
0
- 300
|
Last
two F51's take off from Marietta AAF, Georgia.
|
02:50
PM
|
10
|
5000
|
0
|
300
|
Position
report, ~30 mi SW (~SSW) of Standiford AAF, Louisville, KY (~10 mi
S of Godman).
|
02:52
PM
|
0
|
5000
|
3000
|
180
|
Mantell
and his men enter max climb spiral directly over Godman Tower.
|
02:53
PM
|
0
|
8000
|
3000
|
180
|
Still
in climb over Godman.
|
02:55
PM
|
0
|
14000
|
3000
|
180
|
Leveled
out from spiral climb vectored straight SSW to 210.
|
03:00
PM
|
25
|
17000
|
600
|
300
|
Max
range F51 visible from Godman with unaided eye.
|
03:08
PM
|
65
|
21800
|
600
|
300
|
Near
Bowling Green airport.
|
03:09
PM
|
70
|
22400
|
600
|
300
|
Clements
abandons Mantell, who now climbs at combat max rate/speed.
|
03:11
PM
|
79
|
25000
|
2000
|
240
|
Mantell
passes out, loses control of the plane which begins descending in
a spiral.
|
03:12
PM
|
83
|
23000
|
-2000
|
240
|
Picks
up speed.
|
03:13
PM
|
87
|
21000
|
-2000
|
300
|
1st
spiral complete.
|
03:15
PM
|
-92
|
17000
|
-3000
|
350
|
2nd
spiral complete.
|
03:17
PM
|
-92
|
10000
|
-10000
|
500
to 200
|
Mantell
regains consciousness, tries to throttle back.
Plane
breaks up at Mach limit, engine overheats, vertical dive then flat
spin.
|
03:18
PM
|
92
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Impact
4 miles South of Franklin, KY. Plane hard lands on belly.
|
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