e18a1f76382b282a
28937766.pdf
NARA·NARA_PBB_597821_pdfs-1·pdf·12.7 MB·3 pages
Scores
0.5
Document value
0.0
Cross-references
2.0
Provenance
0.0
Info density
0.0
Topic relevance
0.0
Anomalousness
OCR'd text preview (3 of 3 pages)
Source: mistral_ocr · confidence ~95%
page 1
05/21302 ATIC NO. --- AF NO. --- REPORT NO. Army Letter DATE OF REPORT 4 April 51 TIME OF SIGHTING 1630 EST SHAPE "piece of pipe" SIZE --- COURSE 360° NO. IN GROUP one HOURS --- PATTO --- SKETCHES --- DATE OF INFO 3 April 50 LOCATION Summerville, S. C. SOURCE Civilian woman DATE IN TO ATIC --- COLOR "very shiny" SPEED very slow ALTITUDE est. 150' LENGTH OF TIME OBSERVED 3 Min. TYPE OF OBSERVATION Ground MANEUVERS --- REMARKS: No noise. Passed directly over source's home. Temporary ATIC Form 329 (2 Jan 52) HC
page 2
me1A 1 HEADQUARTERS THIRD ARMY FORT MCPHERSON, GEORGIA UNCLASSIFIED AJACI-3 360.33 7 April 1950 SUBJECT: Unconventional Aircraft TO: Commanding General Air Materiel Command Wright-Patterson Air Force Base Dayton, Ohio Attention: MCI (Control No. A-1917) Inclosed herewith is summary of information re unidentified flying objects seen over Summerville, South Carolina, 3 April 1950. FOR THE COMMANDING GENERAL: for JOHN MEADE Colonel, GSC AC of S, G-2 1 Incl: S/I dtd 4 Apr 50 DOWNGRADED AT 3 YEAR INTERVALS DECLASSIFIED AFTER 12 YEARS DOD DIR 5200.10 504.1 ANALYSIS DIVISION FILE FILE NUMBE…
page 3
UNCLASSIFIED SUMMARY OF INFORMATION DATE 4 April 1950 PR FIRING OFFICE Field Area Office No. 22, Post Office Box No. 201, Naval Base, South Carolina SUBJECT Unidentified flying objects seen over Summerville, South Carolina on 3 April 1950. CODE FOR USE IN INDIVIDUAL PARAGRAPH EVALUATION OF SOURCE: OF INFORMATION: COMPLETELY RELIABLE A CONFIRMED BY OTHER SOURCES USUALLY RELIABLE B PROBABLY TRUE FAIRLY RELIABLE C POSSIBLY TRUE NOT USUALLY RELIABLE D DUBITFULLY TRUE UNRELIABLE E IMPROBABLE RELIABILITY UNKNOWN F TRUTH CANNOT BE JUDGED SUMMARY OF INFORMATION Mrs. , The Elms, Summerville, South…
Full text and original imagery available on Internet Archive →