Donald
Edward Keyhoe (June 20, 1897 - November 29, 1988) was
an American Marine Corps naval aviator and writer
of many aviation articles and stories in a variety of leading
publications.
In
the 1950s, he became well-known as an UFO researcher,
arguing that the U.S. government should conduct appropriate
research in UFO matters, and should release all its UFO
files. Jerome
Clark writes that "Keyhoe was widely
regarded as the leader in the field" of Ufology
in the 1950s and early-to-mid 1960s.
Early
life and career
Keyhoe
was born and raised in Ottumwa, Iowa. He earned
a B.S. degree at the United States Naval Academy in 1919,
and was commissioned a Marine
Corps Lieutenant.
In
1922, his arm was injured during an airplane crash in
Guam. During his long convalescence, Keyhoe began writing
as a hobby. He eventually returned to active duty, but
the injury gave Keyhoe persistent trouble, and, as a result,
he retired from the Marines in 1923. He then worked
for the National Geodetic Survey and U.S. Department of
Commerce.
In
1927, Keyhoe managed a very popular
coast-to-coast tour by Charles Lindbergh. This
led to Keyhoe's first book, 1928's Flying
With Lindbergh. The book was a quick success,
and led to a freelance writing career, with many of Keyhoe's
articles and fictional stories (mostly related to aviation)
appearing in a variety of leading publications.
Keyhoe
returned to active duty during World War II in a Naval
Aviation Training Division, retiring again a Major.
Writing
for the pulps and glossies
By
the time his UFO books appeared, Keyhoe was already a
well-established author, with numerous appearances in
the pulp magazines of the 1920s and 1930s. Four of his
short stories were printed in Weird Tales, one of the
most prestigious of the pulps: "The
Grim Passenger" (1925), "The
Mystery Under the Sea" (1926), "Through
the Vortex" (1926) and "The
Master of Doom" (1927). He also produced
the lead novel for all three issues of a short-lived magazine
called Dr.
Yen Sin: The
Mystery of the Dragon's Shadow (May/June 1936),
The Mystery
of the Golden Skull (July/August 1936)
and The
Mystery of the Singing Mummies (September/October
1936).
Keyhoe
wrote a number of air adventure stories for Flying
Aces, and other magazines, and created
two larger-than-life superheroes in this genre. The first
of these was Captain Philip Strange, referred to as "the
Brain Devil" and "the
Phantom Ace of G.2.". Captain Strange
was an American intelligence officer during World War
I who was gifted with ESP and other mental powers. His
existence has been perpetuated beyond Keyhoe's stories
as a minor member of the Wold Newton universe.
Keyhoe's
other "superpowered"
flying ace was Richard Knight, a World War I veteran who
was blinded in combat but gained a supernatural ability
to see in the dark. Knight featured in a number of adventure
stories set in the 1930s (when the stories were written).
Many
of Keyhoe's stories for the pulps were science fiction
or weird fantasy, or contained a significant measure of
these elements a fact that was not lost on later
critics of his UFO books.
He
was also a freelancer for Saturday
Evening Post, The
Nation, and Reader's
Digest.
Flying
Saucers Are Real
Following
Kenneth Arnold's report of odd, fast-moving aerial objects
in the summer of 1947, interest in "flying
disks" and "flying
saucers" was widespread, and Keyhoe followed
the subject with some interest, though he was initially
skeptical of any extraordinary answer to the UFO question.
For some time, True
(a popular American men's magazine) had been inquiring
of officials as to the flying saucer question, with little
to show for their efforts. In about May 1949, after the
U.S. Air Force had released contradictory information
about the saucers, editor Ken Purdy turned to Keyhoe,
who had written for the magazine, but who also, importantly,
had many friends and contacts in the military and the
Pentagon.
After
some investigation, Keyhoe became convinced that the flying
saucers were real. As their forms, flight maneuvers, speeds
and light technology was apparently far ahead of any nation's
developments, Keyhoe became convinced that they must be
the products of unearthly intelligences, and that the
U.S. government was trying to suppress the whole truth
about the subject. This conclusion was based especially
on the response Keyhoe found when he quizzed various officials
about flying saucers. He was told there was nothing to
the subject, yet was simultaneously denied access to saucer-related
documents.
Keyhoe's
article "Flying Saucers
Are Real" appeared in the January, 1950
issue of True
(published December 26, 1949) and caused a sensation.
Though such figures are always difficult to verify, Captain
(U.S. Air Force), Edward J. Ruppelt, the first head of
Project
Blue Book, reported that "It is
rumored among magazine publishers that Don Keyhoe's article
in True was one of
the most widely read and widely discussed magazine articles
in history."
Capitalizing
on the interest, Keyhoe expanded the article into a book,
The Flying Saucers Are Real
(1950); it sold over half a million copies in paperback.
He argued that the Air Force knew that flying saucers
were extraterrestrial, but downplayed the reports to avoid
public panic. In Keyhoe's view, the aliens wherever
their origins or intentions did not seem hostile,
and had likely been surveilling the earth for two hundred
years or more, though Keyhoe wrote that their "observation
suddenly increased in 1947, following the series of A-bomb
explosions in 1945". Dr.
Michael D. Swords characterized the book
as "a rather sensational but accurate account
of the matter". (Swords, p. 100) Boucher and
McComas praised it as "cogent, intelligent and
persuasive".
Keyhoe
wrote several more books about UFOs. Flying
Saucers From Outer Space (Holt, 1953) is perhaps
the most impressive, being largely based on interviews
and official reports vetted by the Air Force. The book
included a blurb by Albert M. Chop, the Air Force's press
secretary in the Pentagon, who characterized Keyhoe as
a "responsible, accurate reporter" and
further expressed guarded approval for Keyhoe's arguments
in favor of the extraterrestrial hypothesis. Such endorsements
only cemented the belief, held by some observers, that
the Air Force's mixed messages about UFOs were due to
a cover up.
Carl
Jung argued that Keyhoe's first two books were "based
on official material and studiously avoid the wild speculations,
naivete or prejudice of other [UFO] publications."
Others
have disagreed with Keyhoe's assessments. In his 1956
book, The Report on Unidentified
Flying Objects, Edward
J. Ruppelt wrote, "the Air Force
wasn't trying to cover up", and declared that
"The problem was tackled with organized confusion."
Ruppelt's
book indicates that Ruppelt held some dim views of Keyhoe
and his early writings; Ruppelt noted that while Keyhoe
generally had his facts straight, his interpretation of
the facts was another question entirely. He thought Keyhoe
often sensationalized material and accused Keyhoe of "mind
reading" what he and other officers were thinking.
Yet Keyhoe cites conversations with Ruppelt in later books,
suggesting that Ruppelt may have occasionally advised
Keyhoe.
The NICAP Era
In
1956, Keyhoe cofounded the National
Investigations Committee On Aerial Phenomena
(NICAP).
He was one of several prominent professional, military
or scientific figures on the board of directors, which
lent the group a degree of legitimacy many of the other
contemporary "flying saucer clubs" sorely lacked.
NICAP
founder Thomas Townsend Brown was ousted as director in
early 1957 after facing repeated charges of financial
ineptitude. Keyhoe replaced him; he was only slightly
better at managing NICAP's
finances, and the group continued their efforts
With
Keyhoe in the lead, NICAP
pressed hard for Congressional hearings and investigation
into UFOs. They scored some attention from the mass media,
and the general public (NICAP's
membership peaked at about 15,000 during the early and
mid 1960s) but only very limited interest from government
officials.
However,
there was increasing criticism of the Air Force's Project
Blue Book. Following a widely publicized
wave of UFO reports in 1966, NICAP
was among the chorus which called for an independent scientific
investigation of UFOs. The
Condon Committee was formed with this goal
in mind, though it quickly became enmired in infighting
and, later, controversy. Keyhoe publicized the so-called
"Trick Memo", an embarrassing memorandum written
by a Condon Committee coordinator which seemed to suggest
that the ostensibly objective and neutral Committee had
determined to pursue a debunking operation well before
even beginning their studies.
Television
appearances
On
22 January, 1958, Keyhoe appeared on a CBS
live television show the Armstrong
Circle Theatre to speak on the topic of UFOs.
Keyhoe charged that a U.S. Congressional committee was
evaluating evidence that "will absolutely prove
that the UFOs are machines under intelligent control."
However, CBS stopped the
audio portion of the live broadcast. Herbert A. Carlborg,
CBS Director of Editing stated
"this program had been carefully cleared for security
reasons".
On
8 March, 1958, Keyhoe appeared on The
Mike Wallace Interview on ABC
and spoke about flying saucers, contactees and the details
of the Armstrong Circle Theatre
censorship, which he blamed on the Air Force rather than
CBS.
Later life
NICAP's
membership plummeted in the late 1960s, and Keyhoe faced
charges of incompetence and authoritarianism. By 1969
Keyhoe turned his focus away from the military and focused
on the CIA
as the source of the UFO cover up. NICAP's
board, headed by Colonel Joseph Bryan III, forced Keyhoe
to retire as NICAP
chief. Under Bryan's leadership, the NICAP
disbanded its local and state affiliate groups, and by
1973 it had been completely closed.
In
1973, Keyhoe wrote his final book about UFO's, Aliens
from Space. It promoted "Operation Lure",
a plan to entice extraterrestrials to land on Earth, and
described the problems Keyhoe had getting information
from government agents.
Beyond
this book, Keyhoe had little contact with Ufology as he
settled into retirement. He did, however, speak at a few
UFO conferences after his ouster from NICAP.
In 1981, he joined MUFON's
board of directors, but his membership was essentially
in name only due to declining health, and he had little
to do with the organization. He died in 1988 at the age
of 91. He was buried in Green Hill Cemetery in Luray,
Virginia.
Several
of Keyhoe's books are now in the public domain and are
available online.
Books
Flying with Lindbergh,
2003 (reprint), Kessinger Publishing, ISBN 0-7661-4294-9
The Flying Saucers Are
Real (1950), 2006 (reprint), Cosimo Classics,
ISBN 1-59605-877-3
Flying Saucers from Outer
Space (1953), Henry Holt and Company, NY
The Flying Saucer Conspiracy,
1955, Henry Holt and Company, NY
Flying Saucers: Top Secret,
1960, G.P. Putnam & Sons, ASIN B000EB427C
Aliens from Space: The
Real Story of Unidentified Flying Objects,
1973, Signet Press, ASIN B000HYOMMG
The Vanished Legion,
2011 (reprint), Age of Aces, ISBN 0982095066
Captain Philip Strange:
Strange War, 2011 (reprint), Age of Aces, ISBN
0982095082
The Complete Adventures
of Richard Knight Volume 1, 2011 (reprint),
Altus Press, ISBN
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Keyhoe