4e11564f430b0ced

28957619.pdf

NARA·NARA_PBB_597821_pdfs-2·pdf·18.8 MB·4 pages

Scores

1.3
Document value
0.0
Cross-references
2.0
Provenance
3.6
Info density
0.0
Topic relevance
0.5
Anomalousness

Events this document cites (1)

OCR'd text preview (4 of 4 pages)

Source: mistral_ocr · confidence ~95%

page 1
|  1. DATE | 2. LOCATION | 12. CONCLUSIONS  |
| --- | --- | --- |
|  25 Feb 54 | Long Island, Kentucky | ☐ Was Balloon ☐ Probably Balloon ☐ Possibly Balloon  |
|  3. DATE-TIME GROUP Local GMT 25/1645Z | 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 civilian | ☐ Was Astronomical ☐ Probably Astronomical ☐ Possibly Astronomical  |
|  7. LENGTH OF OBSERVATION 40-60 seconds | 8. NUMBER OF OBJECTS two | 9. COURSE ☐ Other ☑ Insufficient Data for Evaluation ☐ Unkno
page 2
(CLASSIFICATION)
(Leave blank)

|  COUNTRY OF ORIGIN | United States of America  |
| --- | --- |
|  REPORT NO. | UNCLASSIFIED  |

AIR INTELLIGENCE INFORMATION REPORT

AREA REPORT CONCERNS
Huntington Station, Long Island

AGENCY OF ORIGIN
26th Air Division Roslyn, New York

DATE OF REPORT
25 Feb 1954

SOURCE OF INFORMATION
Mr. [redacted]

DATE OF INFORMATION
25 Feb 1954

PREPARING OFFICER
2d/Lt. B. H. Derrick
E.T. Derrick

EVALUATION
B-2

REFERENCES (Control number, directive, previous report, etc., as applicable)
AFR 200-2A 2 November 1953

SUBJECT
Unidentified Objects

SUMMARY (Enter concise 
page 3
ORIGINATING AGENCY
28th Air Division (Defense)
REPORT NO.
PAGE 2 OF 2 PAGES

On 25 February 1954, at 1645Z, Mr. [redacted] and Mr. [redacted] of Grumman Aircraft Corporation, observed from their aircraft, two (2) bright yellow objects at 4,000 feet over the area of Huntington Station, Long Island, New York. The objects appeared round and about 3 feet in diameter with no sound, trails or unusual features. The objects, which were observed from 40 seconds to 60 seconds, seemed to maintain the same distance from the observers for approximately thirty (30) seconds and then they disappeared. Weather
page 4
26 FEB 54
NORTH ATLANTIC

INFORMATION ONLY (NO CASE)

HYDROGRAPHIC BULLETIN

METEORS
NORTH ATLANTIC

The Master of the Greek SS. Hellenic Sky reports that at 0100 G. M. T., February 27, 1954, in lat. 34°38' N., lon. 60°05' W. he observed a very bright meteor nearly full-moon size. It was moving to the west and finally exploded with a loud noise and a brilliance so great that the whole sky was illuminated for several seconds.

Full text and original imagery available on Internet Archive →