Local
UFOs sighted
The
week flying saucers came to the Inland Valley
Joe
Blackstock, Our Past
Think
the Inland Valley is the last place a flying saucer would visit?
Then
consider the July 6, 1947, experience of the R.V. Allen family of Riverside Drive
in Ontario:
"The
rancher said that while he and Mrs. Allen and their daughter Dolores were seated
in their motor car about 9:30 p.m., they saw a whole `school' of the strange discs
overhead from south to north and insisted that they `played about in the air just
as perch do in the water,"' wrote the Ontario Daily Report the next day.
Not
convinced?
How
about B.A. Runner who saw - and heard - some strange things that same night on
West California Street?
"Runner
reported that several of the discs sailed over his house about 8 p.m., circled
about and returned, one of them flying so low that the sound of an attached motor
could be distinctly heard," wrote the newspaper.
And
this was the day BEFORE the startling announcement in Roswell, N.M., of the recovery
of a "flying disc" by the Army. That disclosure (which was quickly refuted
by military officials) has helped spawn decades of UFO sightings, invaders-from-Mars
movies andconspiracy theorists.
Whether you believe in UFOs or not, it was
obvious people locally - fueled by fear or wonder or too many stimulants - saw
something up there.
On
July 8, a "spinning platter" was said to have crashed into an almond
grove near Lancaster. Redlands truck driver H.J. Stell reported "silvery
eggs in a straight line" flew over March Field near Riverside.
Jerry
McAdams saw a disc as "big as a house" in Beverly Hills: "It seemed
to give off a low whistle as it disappeared."
On
the morning of July 10, Pomona residents on West 10th Street told the Pomona Progress-Bulletin
they saw three tumbling objects in the air, each sparkling as the sun reflected
off them.
Now,
not everyone was impressed by all this flying saucer talk - the Progress-Bulletin
reported on July 8 that an irreverent skywriter drew two giant circles in the
sky and spelled out the word, "Saucers," to mock the frenzy.
All
this uproar wasn't easy for newspapers to keep straight.
According
to a front page wire service story in the July 7 Daily Report, a plane shot down
a flying saucer over Montana and the story quoted both the pilot and his cameraman.
But on the next page of the same edition was a last-minute bulletin saying it
was a hoax - the story grew from the pilot and his friends sitting around telling
tales.
On
July 8, a reward of $1,000 was offered for anyone who could capture one of these
flying things - an offer that only made things more crazy:
San
Francisco designer Frank Borel produced a new women's hat drawn, he said, from
a flying saucer he claimed he saw in a nightmare.
Newspapers
and radio stations were swamped by callers, though Kansas officials bragged that
none of its residents saw UFOs because as a "dry" state it barred alcohol
consumption.
A
North Hollywood man planned to ask for the $1,000 prize after a 30-inch disc conveniently
landed in his garden. It contained a radio tube and two exhaust pipes and spewed
out a lot of smoke.
In
the interest of serious science, though, I must report that a flying saucer was
indeed captured in the Inland Valley that week.
Pomona
police about 10 p.m. on July 8 caught two young men atop a building under construction
at 2nd Avenue and Gibbs Street. Two others were nabbed in the street below.
They
had made a 20-pound saucer fabricated from two plow blades on which they had attached
some batteries and wires to add to its look. They had planned to set the saucer
afire and hurl it into the intersection below, hoping to panic the good folks
of Pomona.
The
four - in their early 20s from Pomona, San Dimas and Covina - even stenciled "SBAAB"
and "XP85" on the saucer to imply it was some kind of strange experimental
craft gotten loose from the San Bernardino Army Air Base (Nevada's Area 51 was
still something far in the future for that sort of thing).
They
were questioned and then later released, perhaps because that kind of out-of-this-world
crime was something for which no law had yet been created.