Date:
August 1952
Location: Seat Pleasant, Maryland, United States
Sometime
in August, 1952 (the exact date cannot be recalled) during
the major UFO sighting wave of that year, Mrs. Suzanne
E. Knight, a young housewife and mother, saw a UFO at
close range with what appeared to be an occupant aboard.
The UFO appeared to Mrs. Knight to resemble the wingless
fuselage of a plane and was dull silver in color.
Source:
NICAP (National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomenon)
Sometime
in August, 1952 (the exact date cannot be recalled) during
the major UFO sighting wave of that year, Mrs. Suzanne
E. Knight, a young housewife and mother, saw a UFO at
close range with what appeared to be an occupant aboard.
At
about 9:30 p.m. on that hot summer evening, Mrs. Knight
was in her kitchen when she heard a peculiar "bzzt"
noise, apparently against the screen of the kitchen window.
The noise was repeated several times and thinking it was
a large insect, she went to the window and looked out.
She saw a bright object descending rapidly at a 45-degree
angle and thought it was a plane about to crash; instead,
the object came to a hovering position at a right angle
to her, approximately half a city block away and about
300 feet above the ground.
The
UFO appeared to Mrs. Knight to resemble the wingless fuselage
of a plane and was dull silver in color. Something similar
to smoke was coming from the rear. The side of the object
facing Mrs. Knight was lined with a number of square windows
through which a brilliant yellow light was shining. On
top and to the front of the object, to her left, was a
small red light, extended somewhat above the body.
On
the underside of the UFO was an undercarriage similar
to the gondola of a dirigible; this also contained a row
of smaller, square windows and was brilliantly aglow inside
with yellow light. Mrs. Knight thought she observed what
appeared to be rows of seats, similar to theatre seats,
in this lower portion. Through the upper windows she was
able to see what appeared to be a row of cabinets with
slanted tops.
"There
was a man in front," Mrs. Knight wrote in her
report to NICAP, "looking straight ahead towards
the front [to her left]. I couldn't understand what he
was looking at so intently, and not moving either. I expected
to see a lot of instruments or dials, etc. similar to
instrument panels on airplanes, but there were none that
I could see." She said that the bright yellow
glow in the object made everything inside look yellow,
"even the man." This occupant wore a
kind of helmet and "around his arm and the side
of his helmet, next to his face, there seemed to be a
shadow or a dark line."
After
watching for a minute or so, Mrs. Knight left the window
to phone the newspaper, but she was unable to get an answer.
When she returned to the window, the object was still
there but the man had disappeared and the undercarriage
was no longer visible.
"I
thought maybe it had moved up into the fuselage, because
not even an outline of the car was visible, but it should
have been because the street light would have shown it."
At
that point, the lights in the object were abruptly extinguished
and the UFO turned from a dull silver color to a glowing
red, "like the door of an old pot-bellied stove."
(Compare with Mrs. Starr's report - see next case.) It
also began to rock toward and away from the witness and
gave the appearance of being "wavy, like water
running over a rock or like heat waves coming out of an
electric toaster." She then began calling for
someone else in the house to come and see the object,
but while she was looking for her sister, the object departed.
Altogether, the incident had lasted approximately three
minutes, at least two minutes of which Mrs. Knight had
had the object in clear view.
The
witness told her sister of what she had seen, omitting
the detail about the occupant (she was certain her sister
would disbelieve her); the sister displayed disinterest
and a certain degree of skepticism, so Mrs. Knight ceased
to talk of it. She forgot the incident until a number
of years later, when she told her husband and children.
The report came to the attention of NICAP and Mrs. Knight
made out a full report in September, 1967. Following this,
she has been interviewed further by a member of the Capital
Area NICAP Subcommittee. Mrs. Knight holds a responsible
job in Prince Georges County.
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case557.htm