Did Howard Hughes ever get a chance
to view a captured or crashed UFO
and its occupants? I have long pondered
this question and there may now be
an answer to it. According to a former
employee of Hughes Aircraft, he did.
The visit allegedly occurred not long
after the crash of an alien spacecraft
near Roswell, New Mexico, in 1947.
You may think this story belongs in
the BELIEVE OR NOT file and you may
be right, but I feel compelled to
pass it on to you anyway.
Linda is a retired teacher. She taught
in public and private schools for
over thirty years and has emailed
me an impressive array of diplomas
and certifications. She also emailed
a few photos and some paperwork that
verifies the fact that her father
probably worked for Howard Hughes.
Because she asked for anonymity, I
cannot say much more about her or
divulge where she currently lives
at this time. I have encouraged her
to come forward at some point and
tell her own story in her own words.
Linda says that her father was involved
with Hughes Aircraft as early as 1942,
but the timeframe that concerns this
story is the year 1947. It was during
the summer of that year that Howard
Hughes was obsessed with getting his
oversized wooden seaplane nicknamed
the "Spruce Goose” ready for a test
flight. Officially known as the H-4
Hercules, the aircraft flew only once
on November 2, 1947. The amount of
time and work that went into getting
the Hercules ready for that flight
was unbelievable.
Her father worked closely with Hughes
during the Hercules project and later
became a full-time employee of Hughes
Aircraft. The two men met after he
was referred to Hughes by a mutual
acquaintance just after the USA declared
war on the Axis powers and entered
World War II. Linda told me that Hughes
used as her dad as a “problem solver.”
He had a knack for being able to look
at most any mechanical problem and
quickly suggest a practical solution.
He also had the kind of temperament
that allowed him to work with the
eccentric billionaire.
Hughes was besieged with a number
of problems during the summer of 1947
including a U.S. Senate inquiry into
the way he had managed funds for the
Hercules and XF-11 Photoreconnaissance
Aircraft projects. Linda says that
shortly after he testified at the
Senate hearings, Howard Hughes returned
to oversee work on the Hercules and
spoke to her father about his possible
involvement in an important government
project.
According to Linda, Howard Hughes
and her father were not friends and
her dad would probably not be considered
a part of Hughes‘ inner circle if
such a thing existed. However, he
did spend a lot of time with Hughes
during the Hercules project and the
two had a casual working relationship
as long as her father delivered the
goods. She told me that her dad said
he was busy brainstorming with some
engineers when Hughes summoned him
into an empty office. Hughes had a
kind of inquisitively stern look on
his face and that usually meant that
he wanted some advice on how to solve
a problem or was about to start a
new project.
Howard stepped away from the door
to the office, but didn’t close it.
There was enough noise outside of
the office so that no one could hear
their conversation anyway. Howard
sat down on a stool near the window.
Linda’s father stepped over to where
he was sitting and listened intently.
Hughes hated repeating himself and
despised people that were not good
listeners. Hughes told her dad that
he had been contacted by a “high ranking
member of the United States Armed
Forces” while he was in Washington,
D.C.
The billionaire was used to receiving
unusual requests from the military.
He was known as someone that could
keep a secret and solve complicated
problems. According to Linda’s father,
this one might have been the mother
of all the most secret and complicated
situations that the government ever
faced. Hughes said that he visited
a military base on the way back from
the congressional hearings. He didn’t
mention where it was located and provided
few details about what happened there.
Linda’s father said that Hughes seemed
uncomfortable talking about his visit
to the base. He hated situations that
he couldn’t personally control and
seemed to indicate that the entire
event was orchestrated and controlled
by the military. With the exception
of Hughes, no civilians were present.
Howard said that they showed him a
new type of aircraft. Most of it was
in pieces and it was obvious that
the thing had crashed or been shot
down. Hughes assumed it might have
been something that the Russians cooked
up.
It wasn’t until Hughes got closer
to the material that he noticed it
was anything but conventional. He
didn’t pick up or touch any of it,
but told Linda’s father that it looked
like “the damnedest stuff I’ve ever
seen.” The military officers present
told him that despite the fact that
it was in pieces, the material was
extremely resistant to heat, cold
and pressure. They also said that
it was almost impossible to penetrate,
yet it might have been an implosion
that caused the crash. Howard never
said if it had any writing on it and
provided no further details about
the material or the aircraft.
Hughes told Linda’s father that the
dead bodies of the crew members from
the aircraft had also been recovered
by the military and were mostly intact.
He said they allowed him to view the
bodies and described them as looking
like “dwarves” or “deformed midgets”
wearing seamless flight suits. He
added no details about where or how
they were being kept. Instead, he
got right to the point. “They want
me to figure this thing out and I
want you on board,” Hughes explained.
That was the end of their meeting.
A few weeks later Hughes took Linda’s
father aside again and told him to
forget about their previous conversation
in the office. He gave her dad the
impression that there were too many
hassles and not enough money for him
to get involved with that project.
Her father felt it was more plausible
to believe that Hughes wouldn’t have
been able to run the show and didn’t
want to get involved with something
he couldn’t fully direct. Or, perhaps
he knew or had learned something more
about the project that turned him
off to it.
It wasn’t until many years after
their conversation in that office
that Linda’s father came to realize
that Hughes might have been talking
about a crashed UFO and, specifically,
one that probably crashed or was shot
down during the summer of 1947. Her
dad had never shown any type of interest
in UFOs or Aliens. Linda believed
he might have come across the information
about one of the UFO crashes from
the tabloids that his wife read. The
timing would have been correct because
I saved issues of the National Enquirer
and other supermarket tabloids during
the 1970s and recall articles about
alien and military encounters and
UFO crashes.
I asked Linda if her dad might have
been kidding her about the Hughes
incident. “Oh, no,” she said, “Dad
never told tale tales. He had enough
true stories about Hughes and other
important people he met throughout
the years… He didn’t need to make
up stories… I am certain he was telling
me the truth.” I also asked Linda
how many times they discussed that
story after he first told it to her.
She replied, “Not more than a couple
of times… He wasn’t interested in
UFOs… He told me the story on a whim
because he thought it might give me
a chuckle or two… Dad had nothing
to add to the story and I believe
that’s why we never discussed it much.”
Unfortunately, her father passed
away a few years ago. I doubt he realized
the impact that the story had on his
daughter. Before she heard it, Linda
barely gave the subject of UFOs a
second thought. Afterward, she slowly
became fascinated with the subject
and told me, “My father told me that
what Howard said he saw sounded a
lot like what the tabloids were describing
as crashed alien spaceships… and the
bodies that he viewed fit the descriptions
of aliens… I do not believe everything
that politicians tell me, but I never
saw a reason to disbelieve what they
were saying about UFOs. What would
they have to gain by lying about them?
It wasn’t until my father told me
the story about Howard and the material
that I began to doubt their denials…”
Linda said that she started reading
UFO articles published in some of
the mainstream newspapers and magazines.
Those tidbits awakened a casual interest
in learning more about the subject.
However, after retired Colonel Jesse
Marcel came forward to expose the
Roswell UFO cover up, she went out
of her way to learn as much as she
could about UFO crashes and military
encounters. “I purchased a used copy
of a book by Donald Keyhoe and read
it cover to cover,” Linda told me.
“That book opened my eyes… I now believe
there is much more to the subject
than what we‘re being told.”
I asked Linda why she waited so long
to tell the story she heard from her
father about Howard Hughes and the
strange aircraft. “I am a very private
person… I believe in doing all I can
to promote education and to encourage
students to stay in school. I want
them to go as far as they can in life…
I do not want to become the poster
child for government conspiracies…
You seem legitimately interested in
discovering the truth about UFOs and
Aliens. I believe that if people have
a chance to learn about the story
that my father told to me, they might
feel compelled to come forward and
share their own experiences and information
with you.”
I have a million more questions for
Linda, but it is obvious that her
father was given little more than
a thumbnail sketch about Howard Hughes
experience with a strange object and
its occupants. He was only able to
tell her what Hughes had told him.
Not the best scenario, so I cannot
say for sure that this story involves
a crashed UFO and it‘s occupants.
I can say that I believe Linda’s dad
heard a story about a strange aircraft
and unusually tiny crewmembers from
Howard Hughes and that he told it
to his daughter just the way he heard
it, straight from the horse’s mouth.
I have been researching Linda’s story
for about a week. I have spoken with
her over the phone on several occasions.
With her permission, I recorded the
calls and subjected them to a voice
stress analysis using an inexpensive
testing unit I purchased a few years
ago. If accurate, the results indicate
that she was not being deceptive during
our conversation. As a experienced
UFO researcher, I was pleased that
she cooperated with various requests
I had for more information. That is
almost always a good sign.
Linda has emailed enough documentation
to make me believe that she is who
she claims to be and that her father
was employed at Hughes Aircraft. The
materials she provided indicate that
he probably worked for Howard Hughes
on specific projects as a consultant
before he became a full time employee.
Because Hughes never told him that
he actually saw an alien spacecraft
or referred to the dead crew members
as aliens, we have to fill in the
blanks with some careful speculation.
If Linda’s story does anything, it
proves that people out there are sitting
on important information about UFOs
because they still fear the repercussions
that can result from coming forward
to share it. The blame for that may
be placed on the doorstep of a news
media that seems incapable of covering
anything deeper that where politicians
attend church or how old they are.
They ignore real news and issues in
favor of serve serving statements
from government flunkies bent on forwarding
an increasingly outdated agenda. For
more, visit http://newsletter.ufoguy.com
About the Author
Author: Bill Knell is a popular paranormal
author, speaker and consultant. Author's
Website: UFOguy.com
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