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Shag
Harbour has a paper trail a mile wide, from various
government and military agencies, as well as film
of the actual retrieval operation which was shown
right across the country on the CBC (Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation) evening news. After the event, and after
the government's claims that nothing of any import
occurred, it faded away completely. Faded, only to
be resuscitated 26 years later by the indefatigable
Christopher Styles, a researcher from Halifax and
MUFON's Assistant Director for Nova Scotia. Chris'
work on this case is nothing short of phenomenal,
and all the more exemplary considering this was his
first formal investigation.
On
the night of 04 October 1967, shortly after 11:00
PM, a UFO some 60 feet in diameter was seen to hover
over the water near the tiny fishing village of Shag
Harbour, Nova Scotia. The UFO, which displayed four
bright lights that flashed in sequence, tilted to
a 45-degree angle and descended rapidly towards the
water's surface. Upon impact, there was a bright flash
and an explosive roar. Concerned witnesses began calling
the nearby Barrington Passage RCMP detachment. None
of those witnesses mentioned anything about a UFO.
Most believed that a large aircraft had ditched into
the harbour and that there might be survivors.
Eventually,
three RCMP officers arrived at the shore near the
impact site. Corporal V. Werbicki and Constable Ron
O'Brien, dispatched from the Barrington Passage Detachment,
were approaching from east of the site. Constable
Ron Pond, who was on highway patrol on Highway #3,
was heading towards Shag Harbour from a position west
of the impact site, and his position allowed him to
view the UFO while it was still in flight. The unusual
lighting configuration and flight characteristics
tipped Cst. Pond off to the unusual nature of the
object long before he heard from Cpl. Werbicki, who
received his information through the initial complaints
to the detachment.
When
all three officers met at the impact site they found
that the UFO was still floating on the water about
a half-mile from shore. It was glowing a pale yellow
and was leaving a trail of dense yellow foam as it
drifted in the ebb tide. Neither the Rescue Co-ordination
Centre in Halifax nor the nearby NORAD radar facility
at Baccaro, Nova Scotia, had any knowledge of missing
aircraft, either civilian or military. Cst. Pond reported
that the object had "changed" during its
descent to the water's surface, i.e., it changed shape,
and that it appeared to be "no known object."
Later, other local witnesses described much the same
details as those of Cst. Pond. Also, a coast guard
lifeboat from nearby Clark's Harbour and several local
fishing boats were summoned to investigate, but the
UFO had submerged before they reached the site. The
sulfurous-smelling yellow foam continued to well to
the surface from the point where the UFO went down,
and a 120 by 300 foot slick developed. Search efforts
continued until 3:00 AM and then resumed at first
light the next day. Everybody involved was convinced
that "something" -- that is, something real
and unidentified -- had gone into the water.
The
next morning a preliminary report was sent to Canadian
Forces Headquarters in Ottawa. After communicating
with NORAD, Maritime Command was asked to conduct
an underwater search ASAP for the object responsible
for the concern in Shag Harbour. Seven navy divers
from the HMCS Granby searched throughout the daylight
hours until sundown of 08 October 1967. On Monday,
09 October 1967, Maritime Command canceled the search
effort claiming "nil results." Outside of
the local area, media attention quickly faded.
The
Shag Harbour crash/retrieval became Case #34 in the
infamous Condon Committee Report which would serve
as Project Blue Book's swan song. The case was brought
to Dr. Condon's limited attention by the late Jim
Lorenzen of the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization
(APRO). Dr. Levine, the investigator assigned to the
case, allocated the grand total of two long distance
phone calls to this investigation. One call was to
the Watch Officer at Maritime Command and the other
was to an RCMP spokesperson. Dr. Levine was assured
that there was nothing to the case and that further
investigation was futile. Thus, interest in the Shag
Harbour case withered away, and the case remained
dormant until the spring of 1993.
Chris
Styles, inspired by the work of the late Leonard Stringfield
and Stanton Friedman, felt the time was right to re-open
an investigation of Shag Harbour. With a modest grant
from the Fund for UFO Research and much kind advice
from veteran researchers Don Berliner and Stanton
Friedman, Styles began to sift through the large legacy
of documents and witness testimony that the Shag Harbour
crash generated. Since the spring of 1993, here in
point form, is a list of key points that have become
apparent as a result of the research effort:
- Of
the witnesses who called the Barrington Passage
RCMP Detachment, not one said anything whatsoever
about a UFO. It was the authorities, i.e., RCMP,
RCN, RCAF, NORAD and Coast Guard that first referred
to the possibility of a UFO being the object responsible
for the Shag Harbour crash. It is also especially
interesting to note that in the intervening years,
many persons in authority warned Styles that this
particular or that particular witness was a drinker.
However, not one of these people gave testimony
that was in any way exaggerated, fanciful, suspicious,
or contradictory to other testimony in any way.
All the truly astounding observations and statements
came from the professionals involved in the search
effort, the military brass, or the witnesses to
the peripheral related sightings that are part of
the 04 October 1967 milieu.
- A
vast amount of documentation -- including most of
the military orders and communications between the
military bases and CFHQ -- was unclassified and
readily available to the public in Canada's National
Archives file RG 77. The composite picture that
is painted is one of an extremely serious search
effort for a UFO with the belief that it may in
fact have been a vehicle of extraterrestrial origin.
This was a serious consideration right up through
the cancellation of the Maritime Command search
effort and afterwards.
- Within
the Canadian military, concerns about Shag Harbour
and other high-profile cases such as Falcon Lake,
Manitoba (Stephen Michalak) caused the topic of
UFO responsibilities to be brought to the attention
of then Defense Minister Leo Cadieux. After lengthy
consultation with Canada's Scientific Advisor, the
Chief of Defense Staff Dr. H. Sheffer, Brigadier
Ross and staff at the RCAF's "AIR DESK"
(Canada's Blue Book equivalent), UFO responsibilities
were transferred to Canada's National Research Council.
A document, sent to the Chairman for the Advisory
Committee on Scientific and Industrial Research
and signed by the Defense Minister, was released
to Styles by Department of National Defense's (DND)
Directorate of History. It states Canada's belief
in the possibility that "UFOs exhibit advanced
technology which could contribute to scientific
or technical research."
- The
night of the Shag Harbour crash there were several
sightings over eastern Canada that were every bit
as solid and significant. Some of these were hidden
in "X-file reports," were unavailable,
or were simply forgotten. The sighting of four UFOs
by the crew of the M.V. Nickerson, a dragger with
18 men fishing off Sambro, Nova Scotia, had solid
returns on its Decca radar for over two hours (this
was from two hours till one half-hour before Shag
Harbour began). Sightings all down the Nova Scotia
coast in the hours just before Shag Harbour roused
both 12-year-old Darrel Dorey and Shelburne insurance
salesman R. Grandy Irwin to file official reports
before Shag Harbour ever hit the headlines. Air
Canada Flight 305 of 04 October 1967, while westbound
on V 300 between Sherbrooke and St. Jean, encountered
UFO activity that caused the pilot and co-pilot
to file official reports in the hours just before
the Shag Harbour crash.
- Newspaper
clippings published after the search effort was
officially terminated show that in some military
circles the interest in Shag Harbour and related
sightings from that area and time period still ran
high.
An
extremely interesting story dated 02 November 1967
-- almost a month after the Shag Harbour incident
-- ran in all the southwest Nova Scotia weekly papers.
It bore the title "Military wants UFOs reported."
It was credited to a Major Victor Eldridge. Styles
discovered that the Major wore many hats. Besides
serving as a town councilor in the community of Yarmouth,
Nova Scotia, and doing military columns for the southwest
Nova Scotia weeklies, Victor Eldridge also served
throughout the entire Shag Harbour incident as Chief
Administrative Officer for CFS Barrington at nearby
Bacarro, Nova Scotia. This base was a key staging
area for the Shag Harbour search effort and was a
NORAD radar facility as part of the Pine Tree Line.
Unlike practically everyone else -- the RCMP officers
and RCAF and Navy personnel who have talked both on
and off the record -- Styles discovered that the major
had absolutely no memory of the event or of any other
UFO incident involving the base. And neither did his
CO.
This
stance became even more suspect when a RCMP UFO report
dating from November 1970 mentions that the CO from
CFS Barrington, one Colonel Rushton, called the Barrington
Passage detachment to request the completed copy of
the RCMP UFO report on what would later be known as
the Smith Brothers sighting of Shag Harbour. Colonel
Calvin Rushton also requested a list of civilian witnesses
from Cst. Ralph Keeping. Though having "no memory
of Shag Harbour or the subsequent search effort,"
Major Eldridge, in a 01 May 1993 telephone interview
with Chris Styles, assured him that, "There was
not enough to it to warrant any journalistic treatment."
A strong opinion indeed from a man who did not know
what he was being asked about just seconds before.
It is also an opinion not shared by the military witness
(Cpl. Timothy Nielson) who experienced the same Close
Encounter and missing time episode as the Smith Brothers
of Shag Harbour.
- The
role played by Father Michael Burke-Gaffney in the
Shag Harbour crash and other UFO cases was largely
unknown before Styles' investigation. This former
and now deceased Jesuit priest was an astronomer
and cornerstone at St. Mary's University in Halifax.
What was less known -- and would have made UFO debunker
Donald Menzel proud -- was that Father Gaffney also
held a position with Canada's NRC as a UFO investigator
and government contact person. Requests from Ottawa
can be found in Canada's RG 77 file calling for
the priest to gather physical samples from UFO trace
cases and Close Encounters to send to NRC headquarters
for detailed analysis. Despite this high level of
involvement, the father was often quoted in the
press a propos his "being sick to death about
UFOs."
In
a 18 October 1967 interview in the Halifax Chronicle-Herald,
Father Gaffney claimed to have no interest in the
phenomenon, and then states that speculation on the
topic did no good. Hmmmmm. This statement would appear
to be somewhat at odds with the files, in fact genuine
RCMP X-files, which Styles found among the personal
papers of the late astronomer. Two of those x-files
are replies to Father Gaffney from the superintendent
of the Nova Scotia RCMP, assuring the father that
he would receive UFO reports from southwest Nova Scotia
as quickly as was reasonably possible. In fact, personal
notes in archives from this period of October 1967
show that he took notes on the details of UFO sightings
given to him over the telephone, even before they
could be mailed or telexed. Time seemed to be an important
concern for this scientist who had "no interest
in the UFO phenomenon."
- The
Story! Perhaps the most exciting element of Styles'
investigation is the story of an attempted recovery
operation at a point some 25 miles up the Nova Scotia
coast from the impact site, near the community of
Shelburne.
At
this point in the investigation, this story is only
just that, a story. However, though hard documentation
is so far lacking to confirm the details, there are
documents that support the belief that there was in
fact a second search effort other than the one confirmed
at Shag Harbour. Also, some of the military personnel
in secondary roles have gone on the record regarding
their roles, their instructions and orders, and their
second-hand knowledge of this other naval operation
off Government Point. Men who were directly involved
have told their stories, but have requested anonymity
due to the usual and familiar concerns about family
and pensions.
The
"story," unlike other crash/retrieval scenarios,
has what we might call a "happy ending":
after ships sat over the submerged UFO for a week,
watching it being repaired by yet another craft, the
flotilla is ordered to show challenge to a soviet
submarine that decided to violate the then 12-mile
international limit and attempt to make contact with
the underwater UFO. As this confrontation unfolds,
both UFOs leave the area underwater and move toward
the Gulf of Maine, where they break the surface and
fly away. This departure gives rise to a second major
sighting on 11 October 1967 of two UFOs sighted in
that area by multiple witnesses from Shag Harbour
to Yarmouth.
As
a wrap-up to this Shag Harbour report, a direct quote
from Chris Styles himself would be fitting. Chris
hopes:
"to
avoid comparisons to other UFO crashes and their respective
investigations and legends. It would be tragic to
get into a 'my UFO crash is better than your UFO crash'
argument. Crash scenarios, like every other aspect
of the UFO phenomenon, offer the promise of a greater
understanding of UFOs, wherever they occur. We should
be ready for anything, though. Yeats may have been
more correct than he knew when he was heard to say
that 'Knowledge increases unreality.' We should be
ready to have our belief systems challenged."
The
Shag Harbour Crash/Retrieval has been been featured
on TV's Sightings, Strange Universe and others, and
has been the focus of many radio programs and newspaper
articles as well. Chris Styles, along with Don Ledger,
are co-authors of the upcoming book Dark Object, based
on the Shag Harbour investigation.
The
Shag Harbour investigation continues to unfold. It
is imperative that anyone with any relevant information
on the Shag Harbour incident or related cases should
come forward and share their knowledge.
Relatively
speaking, the Shag Harbour case is a fairly recent
one. Many of the original witnesses to the event are
still alive (and for the most part, still kicking)
and have been interviewed. However, the investigation
is reaching a critical point. There are still a few
missing pieces to the puzzle. And we know that there
are people out there with valuable information that
we do not have.
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