Date:
July 17, 1955
Location: Bexley, United Kingdom
It
was July 17, 1955 when Margaret Fry spotted the object
as she was making her way to her GP's surgery in King
Harold's Way from her home in Hythe Avenue. Mrs Fry described
it as saucer shaped with a "blue/silver/grey/pewter
texture, yet none of those colours". She said it
had three spheres set into its base, one of which "flopped
out", landing on the ground at the junction of nearby
Ashbourne and Whitfield roads.
An artist's impression of the UFO seen landing at the
junction of Ashbourne and Whitfield roads
Margaret Fry says she saw the saucer
Source:
The News Shopper, (London, UK), March 7, 2007
Flying
saucers famous landing
By Linda Piper
Memories
of Bexley's most spectacular UFO sighting have been turned
into a book by one of the people who witnessed it. LINDA
PIPER reports.
IT
WAS July 17, 1955 when Margaret Fry spotted the object
as she was making her way to her GP's surgery in King
Harold's Way from her home in Hythe Avenue.
Both
she and her doctor Dr. Thukarta, and around a dozen children
playing in the street, saw the strange craft.
Mrs.
Fry described it as saucer shaped with a "blue/silver/grey/pewter
texture, yet none of those colours."
She
said it had three spheres set into its base, one of which
"flopped out", landing on the ground
at the junction of nearby Ashbourne and Whitfield roads.
The
children went over for a closer look before it rose into
the sky and disappeared from view after a few minutes.
News
Shopper ran an appeal in 2002 for any of the children
to come forward.
Rodney
Maynard, who was in his 60s and living in Belvedere, remembered
the incident vividly. He
was 15 at the time, and working as a labourer on the building
site in nearby Streamway.
Mr.
Maynard said: "We were on our lunch break when
we heard something was happening in King Harold's Way.
So we went up there to have a look. This
thing had landed in the road."
He
added: "It took up the whole width of the road
and overlapped onto the pavements. It wasn't on the ground.
It had about eight massive suckers. The centre was still,
but the outer rim was spinning slowly and it had white
lights flashing, like a camera flash."
He
said there were about 30 people watching it and they could
hear it humming.
Mr.
Maynard recalled: "It had what looked like windows,
but the glass was concave and moulded together so you
could not see in. A
couple of us went forward to try and touch it, and it
began to spin faster."
He
said the craft then lifted slowly, tilting lightly and
hovered above their heads. Then,
it moved slowly until it was over Bedonwell Primary School,
where it hovered again for about a minute.
Mr.
Maynard said: "It shot up into the sky and disappeared."
He
says his brother, who was 16 at the time, also saw it.
Mr.
Maynard says the craft was "black, sleek and streamlined,
with a surface like polished metal". He
added: "It was very fine and beautiful. It wasn't
a prank."
Mr.
Maynard said he had never forgotten the experience but
did not talk about it because "people would think
you were barmy."
He
said he and his friends used to talk about it among themselves,
"but our mums kept telling us we had not seen
anything."
Mrs.
Fry, now in her late 70s, now lives in Abergele in north
Wales.
She
relives the experience in her book entitled Who Are They?
and gives details of other UFO sightings in the Bexley
and Kent areas.
Mrs.
Fry has also been helping UFO enthusiast and retired policeman
John Hanson with his books on the subject.
He
has been trying to track down other witnesses to the July
1955 incident, some of whom were named by Mr Maynard as
Ron Deadman, Tony Savin, Vic Clarke and Tommy Staggs.
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case1054.htm