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65 HS1 834228961 62 HQ 83894 Serial 130
Page 64
64 / 126
Excerpt from letter to Dr. R. Tousey from
Mr. John F. Cole
South Brooksville, Me,
July 28, 1947.
Having in mind the ridicule which has been heaped.on those innocent
or perhaps gullible individuals who have reported disks, I would be a little
cautious in interpreting. But it is safe to say truthfully, that something
unusual attracted my attention, and I was in a perfectly sober. condition,
barring the mild stimulation, afforded by cool spring water filtering through
North Haven greenstone cracks. It should be easy to determine if the "disks"
were @ new type jet plane, or bomber, or rocket. ‘The fact t t it was July
3, about 2:30 P.M. (summer time) or Greenwich Civil time 1830 might suggest
that they were engaged in some naval demonstration from Eastport, Bar Harbor
or Belfast. The group appeared to be at an altitude of about 50° -- I suffer
from @ mild cervical arthritis--but my eyes are well corrected for astigma-
tism and hypermetropia, and I doubt if my cerebral cortical Lesions are suffic-
iently advanced to affect my balance. What first made me look up was the un-
usually loud roar and I was surprised not to see a well defined group of planes
quite near. Instead I had to look rather sharply to see the bunch-of very
light colored objects, in a general northerly direction and travelling roughly
in a NW (true) direction. This was reasonably correct, as I was on Cox's
hill, and looked over towards Backwood's Mount, that is the conspicuous flat
tep planated hill at Harborside. The group could hardly have covered more
than 14° angular diameter in the sky, and bunched rather closely with no
regular formation. There might have been 10, I couldn't say and with 90' of
arc spread, would easily be within the limit of visibility for discreet ob-
jects. As a group they were going so as to cover 30° of arc, estimated of
course, in perhaps 10 or 15 seconds. If one of them, sey, subtended 1/10°,
with a possible wing spread of 100 feet, it would put it at a distance of
over 10 miles, and quite invisible for a light object. Besides, with 30°
arc of travel at a 10 mi. distance would be roughly 5 miles in 15 seconds
or 20 mi. per minute or 1200 mi. per hour! !--rather fast for a bomber—-hi.
A 50 ft. objects at 5 miles dist. would be about 600 mi. per hr.--also faet
going. The only concrete evidence of form apveared on the left tangent of
the group--two dark shaped forms: o£ which may have been tail wings.
Doeen't the Douglass bomber have these? And since they were in no regular
formation, but seemed among themselves to be moving irregularly like a swarm
of bees, why shouldn't all of them have shown wings? The loud roar suggeste
they may have been much closer, and rather small. The sky background was
hazy blue, and the sun behind me. One plane towing a lot of balloons, I
believe, would have been easily recognized. Havy any meteorites been re-
Ported? At that time of day, has there been any abrupt change of radio field
strength? or ionization?
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