Jesse
Antoine Marcel was born May 27, 1907 to Theodule and Adelaide
Marcel in Terrebonne Parrish, Louisiana. He apparently
spent his whole youth there, as he graduated from Terrebonne
High School.
After high school, he worked as a draftsman for the Louisiana
Dept of Transportation, the US Army Corps of Engineers,
then for the Shell Oil Company as a cartographer, specializing
in making maps from aerial photography. Along the way,
he served two three-year enlistments in the National GuardIn
Louisiana from 1925 through 1928 then in Texas from 1936
through 1939.
He
and his family (wife and one son, Jesse A. Marcel Jr.)
were living in Houston TX when WWII broke out, and in
March 1942 at the age of 35, he applied for and was given
a commission as a 2nd Lieutenant in the U.S. Army Air
Force. Based on his experience in mapping and analyzing
aerial photography, the Army sent him off to Harrisburg,
PA for training as an Combat Photo Interpreter/ Intelligence
Officer.
Major
Jesse A Marcel
Jesse did well in intelligence schoolwell enough
that his next assignment was to be an instructor at this
school. Eventually the Army granted his request for combat,
and in October of 1943, 1st Lieutenant Marcel found himself
assigned to the 5th Bomber Command in the southwest Pacific
Theater. For the next two years, Marcel fought the war
first as a Squadron Intelligence Officer then Group Intelligence
Officer, participating in several campaigns that resulted
in the retaking of the Philippines Islands.
During
his combat tour, Jesse performed his duties well. His
commanders rewarded his work and abilities with two Air
Medals, the Bronze Star, a promotion to Captain, and then
to Major in May, 1945.
Just
before the dropping of the Atomic Bomb, Major Marcel was
sent back to the States to get training in the use of
Airborne Terrain Mapping Radar systems.
With
the war over, Marcel was reassigned in January, 1946 to
the 509th Composite Group at the Roswell Army Air Force
Base (The 509th later became the 509th Bombing Group and
then, with the separation of the Army Air Corp as the
U.S. Air Force, the 509th Bombing Wing.) In July 1947,
Marcel briefly found himself the center of attention when
he brought in the debris of a Flying Disk
that Mac Brazel had found on Fosters Ranch.
In
August 1948, he was transferred to the Strategic Air Command,
where he was eventually put in charge of a Pentagon briefing
room for the Air Force Office of Atomic Energy (AFOAT-1).
There his responsibilities were to make sure that materials
(charts, illustrations, etc) were produced and ready on
schedule, and to maintain the organization of the briefing
room staff.
In
January 1949, he signed a statement that he fully intended
to continue his career in the Air Force, but in the following
year he received word that his elderly mother required
assistance that his sister could not provide. His request
for a hardship release from active duty was granted, so
in July 1950 he returned to Houma, Louisiana There, he
drew on his long time hobby in Ham Radio to become an
Electronic Repairman, specializing in Televisions, Transmitters
and Receivers. When he was released from active duty,
his commission (as a Lieutenant Colonel) was transferred
to the Air Force Reserves, and he eventually received
his full discharge in 1958. Jesse Marcel died in 1986
at the age of 79.
Jesse,
in spite of his claim that he was under orders to never,
ever talk about his role in the alien disk recovery, occasionally
did let on to others that that he had been once involved
in a UFO recovery. In 1978, one of his Ham Radio correspondents
mentioned Jesses story to Stanton Friedman, a UFO
researcher, and this led to telling his story of the Flying
Disk to the world.
Source:
http://www.roswellfiles.com/Witnesses/Marcel.htm