Date:
August 31, 1954
Location: Nowra, Australia
One
of the most controversial radar visual reports of the
fifties occurred on August 31st, 1954. The story leaked
out in December, 1954, and made front page headlines.
The official navy file on the event remained classified
until the Directorate of Naval Intelligence released a
copy upon my request in 1982. During his 1973 visit to
Australia, Dr. Hynek was able to interview the pilot involved
in this famous incident.
Source:
Bill Chalker
One
of the most controversial radar visual reports of the
fifties occurred on August 31st, 1954. The story leaked
out in December, 1954, and made front page headlines.
The official navy file on the event remained classified
until the Directorate of Naval Intelligence released a
copy upon my request in 1982. During his 1973 visit to
Australia, Dr. Hynek was able to interview the pilot involved
in this famous incident, which became known as the "Sea
Fury" encounter.
Dr.
Hynek made his notes on this interview available to me
during my 1984 visit to the Chicago headquarters of his
organisation, the Centre for UFO Studies (CUFOS). I, in
turn, provided Dr. Hynek with a copy of the official file
on the incident.
Lieutenant
J. A. O'Farrell was returning to Royal Australian Navy
Air Station Nowra after a night cross country in a Sea
Fury aircraft. After contacting Nowra at about 1910 hours,
O'Farrell saw a very bright light closing fast at one
o'clock. It crossed in front of his aircraft taking up
position on his port beam, where it appeared to orbit.
A second and similar light was observed at nine o'clock.
It passed about a mile in from of the Sea Fury and then
turned in the position where the first light was observed.
According
to O'Farrell, the apparent crossing speeds of the lights
were the fastest he had ever encountered. He had been
flying at 220 knots. O'Farrell contacted Nowra who in
turn confirmed that they had two radar "paints"
in company with him. The radar operator, Petty Officer
Keith Jessop, confirmed the presence of 2 objects near
the Sea Fury on the G.C.I. remote display. The two lights
reformed at nine o'clock and then disappeared on a north
easterly heading. O'Farrell could only make out "a
vague shape with the white light situated centrally on
top."
The
Directorate of Naval Intelligence at the time wrote that
O'Farrell was "an entirely credible witness"
and that he "was visibly 'shaken' by his experience,
but remains adamant that he saw these objects"
In
a recent interview, "Shamus" O'Farrell described
the incident:
"I
said, "Nowra, this is 921. Do you have me on radar."
"And a few seconds later they came back and said,
"Affirmative 921. We have you coming in from the
west. We have another two contacts as well. Which one
are you." "I said, "I think I'm the central
one." And so they said, "Do a 180...for identification."
So I did a quick 180 and then continued on around and
made it a 360 back to where I was going."
"They
said, "Yes, we've got you. You're the centre aircraft."
I said that's correct. They then said to me, "Who
are the other two aircraft," and I said, "I
don't know. I was hoping you would tell me, because I
didn't think there was anyone up here. "They said,
"Well there shouldn't be, and they certainly shouldn't
be that close to you."
"So
the conversation went on like this and I was very pleased
to be talking to somebody because it gave me a lot of
reassurance. With that these two aircraft came in quite
close to me and I could really see the dark mass and that
they were quite big, but I couldn't make out any other
lights or any other form of an aircraft. With that they
took off and headed off to the north east at great speed."
"I
was about to press the button and tell them at Nowra that
the two aircraft were departing when Nowra called me up
and said, "The other two aircraft appear to be departing
at high speed to the north east. Is that correct?"
and I said, "Yes!". And they said, "Roger,
we'll see if we can track them." They tracked them
for a while and then lost them. "I came in and landed
at 7.30 (1930) and when I got there there were quite a
few people waiting for me. I thought it was a bit strange
and so they came over, and they said, "You sure you
had aircraft out there!", and I said yes."
"The
Surgeon Commander came over and spoke to me. He said did
I feel sick, or was I upset. I said no. He ran his hand
over my head to see whether I had any bumps. He had a
look at me and decided I was okay. So then he said, "Perhaps
you'd like to come to the sick bay after you've changed
and we'll do an examination." So after I was finished
I went up to sick bay and he gave me a more thorough medical,
and said, no, I appeared to be alright. I found out later,
that at the same time, they checked to make sure I hadn't
been drinking before I took off and all that sort of thing."
During
this interview, Dr. Hynek's involvement came up:
"This
man (Hynek) - a professor - had made a study of thousands
of sightings all around the world and he had decided my
sighting was one of those that he had not been able to
explain away by other means. Any way I had a talk with
him. He was a very interesting chap and he made the comment
that there were about 13 or 15, I don't remember, sightings
that he was aware of over the years that were like mine
and could not be explained away. The interesting thing
he said was that all of these sightings had been made
by professional people in aviation."
"By
that, he meant they were military pilots, military air
crew, civil aviation operators, air traffic controllers,
and the like, or airline pilots. These were the ones he
was now (1973) going around meeting the people themselves
and investigating. All the others he had written off and
had been able to explain down to some other phenomena.
It came to the point where he said, "Your sighting
cannot be explained away." And he left it at that.
To this day I wouldn't know where it came from or where
it went."
I
have had the opportunity to talk extensively with Shamus
O'Farrell. I was particularly interested in how the interview
with Dr. Hynek in 1973 came about:
"It
was done through Sir Arthur Tange, who was secretary of
the Department of Defence at the time. Hynek contacted
him direct.... Sir Arthur Tange contacted me and said
Hynek was coming out. He had written to him, through the
US Embassy, to set up a meeting.... And the next thing
I knew I had a telephone call one day from Sir Arthur
Tange saying that Hynek was coming and he would like me
to met him. I said, well, I haven't got all the facts,
there all a bit hazy. So he sent me the two Defence Department
files over to read, to refresh it all."
Bill
Chalker: "That seems to indicate a high level
of interest in Hynek's visit at the time?"
"Yes,
well, I don't think so. All that happened was that it
was more of a courtesy because he was a very important
guy, Hynek, and they wanted to show him the courtesies
etc. As far as Defence was concern it was dead and forgotten
but they had not got rid of the files. They kept them.
Normally when files like that are written off they are
either decided they'll put them in Archives or dispose
of them and destroy them. But they had done neither. They
had remained in the JIO. They'd kept them. I don't know
what they had in mind about it, I never questioned it.
I just used them as a means to refresh my memory.
"Later
the guy who became the chief Defence scientist, John Farrands,
was very interested in it too, and he had done a lot of
early investigations in most of the reports when he was
chief defence scientist and in the period just before
he became chief defence scientist. He had a talk with
me. I was a friend of his. I use to meet with him at lunch.
He went over it in great detail. He knew it all. He agreed
it was something that couldn't be refuted. No matter how
hard they tried, and they tried very hard to knock it
all back. They checked everything from medical, down to
when was the last time I had had a drink..."
Bill
Chalker: "That must have been a bit of a concern
to you?"
"Well,
I wanted to hush it all up. That sort of investigation
made me look a bit of a fool. I was worried it wasn't
going to do my career any good. "(Apart from the
radar witness) it locked in a sighting over the NDB (non
directional beacon) at Narulan, at the same time. There
happened to be a guy working on the NDB. It was down at
the time. He had gone to repair it. He happened to look
up at the time because he saw these lights fly overhead.
Also the air traffice control officer in the tower at
Mascot saw them approaching him. "It was all investigated
by the then RAAF guy who did it and later it was also
investigated by the Joint Intelligence Bureau."
In
1993, I assisted The Extraordinary television programme
with a recreation of the Sea Fury incident. Shamus O'Farrell,
Keith Jessop and I were interviewed on the show. The case
stands as one of the best unexplained radar visual UFO
cases on record in Australia.
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case66.htm