The
truth is out there: Roswell incident recalled by local vet who was there 60 years
ago
By: GARY WARTH
- Staff Writer
Something
happened in Roswell, New Mexico, 60 years ago this summer.
In
June or early July 1947, a farmer found strange debris while working on a ranch
about 70 miles north of Roswell. He put some of it in a box and drove to the local
sheriff. Neither man knew what to make of it, so the sheriff called Roswell Army
Air Field, which sent two men to investigate.
On
July 9, 1947, the Roswell Daily Record, a newspaper, printed a story with the
alarming headline: "RAAF Captures Flying Saucer On Ranch in Roswell Region."
Other
than those facts, there appear to be few things people agree on regarding what
has become known as "the Roswell incident."
Six
decades later, competing UFO enthusiasts promote their own theories, skeptics
dismiss the spaceship claims as outrageous, and the military, which originally
claimed all the fuss was over a weather balloon, now sticks to its story that
it was an experimental spy craft.
Escondido
resident Milton Sprouse, 85, said he knows what happened in Roswell ---- not because
he favors one theory over another, but because he was there.
As
for the outrageous stories of mysterious metal, alien corpses and a military coverup?
It's
all true, he said.
From
atom bombs to flying saucers
Before
arriving at Roswell Army Air Field in 1945 as a corporal and engine mechanic,
Sprouse already had participated in an undisputable historic event.
As
a member of the 393rd Bomb Squadron assigned to the 509th Composite Group, Sprouse
worked on the ground crew of Big Stink, one of the B-29 bombers stationed on the
Pacific island of Tinian, where the two atomic bomb missions on Japan were launched
to end World War II.
After
the war, the 509th Composite Group was reassigned to Roswell, where they were
renamed the 509th Bomb Wing. Sprouse continued to lead the ground crew of Big
Stink, which had been renamed Dave's Dream after the pilot.
"There
was nothing there but tumbleweeds blowing for miles," he said about arriving
at Roswell in November 1945.
Sprouse
first learned that something odd was going on at Roswell after returning from
a three-day trip to Florida aboard Dave's Dream.
"I
was there the day they announced a UFO had crashed," he said. "The next
day, it was published in the Roswell Daily Record, and that night, all the generals
said the story was untrue."
Farmer
William "Mac" Brazel had found debris on the J.B. Foster Ranch, where
he was a foreman, sometime in June or early July. Brazel took some of the material,
which reportedly included sticks, rubber strips, metallic foil and sturdy paper,
to Sheriff George Wilcox, who called the air base.
Intelligence
Officer Jesse Marcel was sent to the sheriff's station. Marcel reported what he
saw to Air Force commanding officer Col. William Blanchard, who told him to go
with Brazel to the ranch and examine the crash site.
After
spending the night at the ranch, Marcel and another officer loaded their vehicles
with debris, some of which reportedly was marked with mysterious symbols, and
drove back to the base. Blanchard then ordered a press release stating that the
base had captured a flying saucer.
The
original story ran in the local paper July 8. That same day, the debris was loaded
onto a B-29 and sent with Marcel to an Air Force base in Texas. Marcel was photographed
with what was said to be the debris, and the military issued a statement saying
that it was in fact a weather balloon.
Search
for the truth
Meanwhile,
Sprouse said, all copies of the Roswell newspaper were collected by officers,
and hundreds of men from the 509th were taken to the crash site and told to walk
shoulder-to-shoulder through the field, looking for debris pieces.
Sprouse
himself did not go because he was told he was needed for Dave's Dream, but five
men from his ground crew went to the ranch.
"They
said it was out of this world," Sprouse said about what the crew reported
finding. Among the objects it reported seeing was a metallic foil that, when crumpled,
unfolded without a crease.
But
what was the debris? Was it really something from another world, or just the product
of overactive imaginations fueled by the monotony of a desolate 1950s desert town?
One
thing that is agreed upon now: It was not from a weather balloon.
In
1995, after years of questions about the incident, the U.S. Air Force admitted
the weather-balloon story was fabricated to cover up a top-secret project called
Project Mogul designed to detect atomic activity over the Soviet Union with high-altitude
balloons.
Some
of the launches in the project contained more than two dozen neoprene balloons
strung across more than 600 feet.
Charles
Moore, a Project Mogul scientist interviewed in the Air Force report, has spoken
in public about the project and described striking similarities to what was found
at the ranch outside of Roswell and the Project Mogul material, which used sticks,
metallic paper and strangely marked tape.
The
strange markings that had seemed like cosmic hieroglyphics may have had a much
more mundane explanation: Moore said the project used tape made at a toy factory.
The
balloons were launched in June and July 1947 from Alamogordo Army Air Field in
New Mexico. One flight was launched June 4 and tracked to Arabela, N.M., about
17 miles from the Foster ranch, before its batteries ran down and contact was
lost.
More
questions
But
if the debris did come from a Project Mogul craft, how could a string of balloons
create the types of gouges on the ground some witnesses have reported?
Then
again, maybe there were no gouges; skeptics of the UFO theory have noted that
some witnesses changed their stories about what they saw on the crash site.
The
Project Mogul explanation also does not address why some people reported seeing
alien bodies at the site. Those were explained in another report in 1997 that
concluded the bodies actually were anthropomorphic dummies used to test high-altitude
parachutes.
UFO
believers found the explanation a little too convenient. There also was a timing
problem, as the parachute tests were not conducted until the 1950s. The timing
discrepancy has been explained as the result of people who over the years confused
the two incidents and compressed memories of them into one event.
Sprouse,
however, said he recalls people speaking about "alien bodies" immediately
after the debris discovery.
"They
took the bodies to a hangar, and there were two guards at each door with machine
guns," he said.
Sprouse
said one witness, a barracksmate, was an emergency-room medic who reported seeing
what he called "humanoid" bodies in the hospital.
"They
went to the ER room and two doctors and two nurses were called in, and they dissected
two of those humanoid bodies," he said. "Then the doctors and nurses
were transferred.
"My
friend said he saw the bodies, and I believed him," Sprouse said. "He
said, 'We don't think the humanoid ate food.' I don't know why he said that. The
digestive system wasn't designed for food or something."
Like
the other doctors and nurses, Sprouse said, his friend suddenly was transferred,
and he never heard from him again. Others on the base, however, kept the story
alive.
"I
heard it so many times, it had to be true," he said.
Sprouse
said he knew Marcel, but he never spoke to him after the incident.
"From
that day on, I could never get close to him," he said.
The
story lives on
After
the story about the UFO crash was retracted, the rest of the world largely forgot
about Roswell and accepted that what had been discovered was just a misidentified
weather balloon.
The
men stationed at the base, however, did not easily forget.
"They
were still talking about it when I left, and I left in '56," Sprouse said.
In
1978, Marcel was interviewed by a researcher and appeared in a documentary, "UFOs
Are Real," the following year. The National Enquirer interviewed Marcel in
1980 for an article in which he said the woodlike debris could not be burned and
the thin metal could not be bent. "The Roswell Incident" was released
in 1980 as the first of a string of books on the subject.
As
interest grew in the Roswell UFO incident, so did the number of detractors. Some
have questioned Marcel's credibility, saying he got caught up in UFO hysteria
and was known to exaggerate his own military past.
Jesse
Marcel, Jr. published his own book this year, "The Roswell Legacy,"
defending his father, who died in 1986.
Sprouse
has not kept up with all the books and documentaries on Roswell and did not go
to Roswell in July for the 60th anniversary of the discovery.
He
does, however, attend annual reunions with the 509th, which attracts 25 to 30
veterans.
"The
Roswell incident comes up every year, but there's nothing really new," he
said.
Sprouse
also speaks about his experience at Tinian to about five high schools a year,
and he often is invited to speak to other groups. He usually ends his talk with
his memories of Roswell, often to the surprise of his audience.
At
a talk in Tucson, Ariz., earlier this year, Sprouse said a man came up to him
afterwards and said, "I don't believe a damn thing you said."
"I
told him, 'You can believe what you want, but I know it's true,'" Sprouse
said.