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#mac-brazel

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The front page of the Roswell Daily Record, July 8, 1947. The top headline reads 'RAAF Captures Flying Saucer On Ranch in Roswell Region.' Below it are smaller stories about a missing telephone operator and a Texas news roundup.
MYSTERY

Roswell 1947 & Area 51

On July 8, 1947, the public information office of the Roswell Army Air Field issued a press release stating that the 509th Bomb Group had recovered the remains of a 'flying disc' from a ranch in Lincoln County, New Mexico. The release was carried on the front page of the *Roswell Daily Record* that afternoon under the headline 'RAAF Captures Flying Saucer On Ranch in Roswell Region.' Four hours later, General Roger Ramey at Fort Worth held a counter-press conference identifying the debris as a weather balloon. The story disappeared from the national press within a day. It stayed disappeared for thirty-one years. In 1978, the UFO researcher Stanton Friedman tracked down a retired Army officer named Jesse Marcel — the intelligence officer who had originally examined the ranch debris in 1947 — and recorded an interview in which Marcel said the material had not been a weather balloon. From that single interview emerged what is now the most-told American conspiracy story of the postwar period. In 1994 and 1997, after a Congressional inquiry, the U.S. Air Force published two reports identifying the 1947 debris as part of the classified Project Mogul — high-altitude acoustic balloons designed to detect Soviet atomic tests — and the supposed alien bodies of later witness accounts as anthropomorphic test dummies used in high-altitude parachute experiments between 1953 and 1959. Separately, in August 2013, the CIA's declassification of the U-2 spy plane history formally acknowledged the existence of Area 51 — the remote Nevada testing facility at Groom Lake — by name, for the first time.

Space & UFOlogy
1947

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