3b52e44b2006dbe5

28938999.pdf

NARA·NARA_PBB_597821_pdfs-1·pdf·25.8 MB·6 pages

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OCR'd text preview (6 of 6 pages)

Source: mistral_ocr · confidence ~95%

page 1
|  1. DATE | 2. LOCATION | 12. CONCLUSIONS  |
| --- | --- | --- |
|  25 Jan 51 | Warner Robins AFB Ga | ☑ Was Balloon ☐ Probably Balloon ☐ Possibly Balloon  |
|  3. DATE-TIME GROUP Local GMT 25/232Z | 4. TYPE OF OBSERVATION ☑ Ground-Visual ☐ Ground-Radar ☐ Air-Visual ☐ Air-Intercept Radar | ☐ Was Aircraft ☐ Probably Aircraft ☐ Possibly Aircraft  |
|  5. PHOTOS ☐ Yes ☑ No | 6. SOURCE 3 Civilian - one ex-pilot | ☐ Was Astronomical ☐ Probably Astronomical ☐ Possibly Astronomical  |
|  7. LENGTH OF OBSERVATION 3 minutes | 8. NUMBER OF OBJECTS 1 | 9. COURSE N.W  |
|  10. BRIEF SUMMARY OF SIGHTING S
page 2
Drawing made by
29 Jan 51

UNCLASSIFIED

"A" REPRESENTS
LIGHT GOING
TO A POINT
ABOVE OBJECT.

POINT LEANS

LIGHT
PROJECTING
FROM
OBJECT,
GOING
TO A
POINT.

OBJECT

ANGLE
SHOULD BE
APPROX.
70°
Hover

FINISH
NW

UNCLASSIFIED

" "A" REPRESENTS
LIGHT GOING
TO A POINT
ABOVE OBJECT.

OBJECT

NOTE: RATIO BETWEEN
SIZE OF OBJECT AND SIZE
OF LIGHT IS NOT CORRECT.
OBJECT SHOULD APPEAR
MUCH LARGER.

UNCLASSIFIED
PRACTICE
SKETCH

Incl 2
page 3
RESTRICTED
UNCLASSIFIED

7. During the period of Mr. [redacted] observation, the object moved from South to North West. In its steplike progress, the object reached an altitude of approximately 8,000 to 10,000 feet. It required about three minutes for this climb. The light seemed even brighter at the higher altitude. It hovered at that altitude for perhaps thirty seconds. The point of light was directly above the object at that time. Then the point leaned at an angle of about 70° and point and object moved upward at that angle at tremendous speed and went out of sight. Mr. Farmer stated that h
page 4
UNCLASSIFIED
SPOT REPORT OF UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECT

1. a. Observer:
Mr. [redacted]
[redacted]
Zeigler Apartments
Warner Robins, Georgia

b. Location: Zeigler Apartments area, Warner Robins, Georgia
c. Date and time: 25 January 1951 at "around 1800 hours"
d. Weather C A V U: Clear; visibility 10 miles on 25 January 1951 at 1828 hours. (Official report of Base Weather Station)

2. Mr. [redacted], Radio Electronics Repairman at Robins AFB, was interviewed by the Intelligence Office on 29 January 1951. He stated that on 25 January 1951 he was in his apartment when his little daughter ran in an
page 5
UNCLASSIFIED

8. Mr. [redacted] has taken no particular interest in the subject of flying saucers. His reading along that line has been confined to occasional newspaper stories regarding unidentified aerial objects.

2
UNCLASSIFIED
Incl 3²
page 6
RESTRICTED
UNCLASSIFIED
SPOT REPORT OF UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECT

1. a. Observer:
Mr. Zeigler Apartments
Warner Robins, Georgia

b. Location: Zeigler Apartments area, Warner Robins, Georgia
c. Date and Time: 25 January 1951, "around sunset"
d. Weather C A V U: Clear; visibility 10 miles on 25 Jan 51 at 1828 hours. (Official report of Base Weather Station.)

2. Mr. , Aircraft Mechanic at Robins AFB, was interviewed by the Intelligence Office on 29 January 1951. He stated that on 25 January 1951 he was in his apartment when his son ran in and told him that a plane was on fire. Mr. went outside 

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