The index page for the 1954 French flap section of this website is here.
Reference for this case: 16-Oct-54-Belfort.
Please cite this reference in any correspondence with me regarding this case.
In their 1979 book, the two "skeptical" ufologists Gérard Barthel and Jacques Brucker indicated that on October 16, 1954, at 08:45 p.m. in Belfort, there was a "luminous phenomenon very fast, very high, only one 'object', obvious description of a meteor", and that they conducted an investigation.
They gave no details and no source.
Further in their book, they claimed that "the few serious investigators" who had admitted the fact that it was a meteor which had generated this type of observations were the technicians of the scientific office of the Air Force.
In fact, in 1958, Aime Michel had also reported that on that night, a big meteor had crossed the sky of France around 09:30 p.m.
[Ref. aml1:] AIME MICHEL:
Aimé Michel wrote about the October 16, 1954, 09:30 p.m. meteor:
THE TEST OF THE METEOR. October 16, as if it was purposely, a splendid meteor crossed the north of France towards 09:30 p.m.. It was observed on a score of departments by thousands of people, from the Allier to Lorraine and from the Swiss border to Paris. Naturally many witnesses believed to have seen a Flying Saucer and said so. The newspapers printed "Flying Saucer in Orly", or "in Montididier", or "in Metz." But once again the description made by all these weak brains appeared of a remarkable honesty.
[...]
The innumerable gathered testimonys show indeed that even when the witnesses called "Flying saucer" the observed object, their description is identical on 200.000 square kilometres where the visible phenomenon was visible: an "orange ball followed by a trail", a "large luminous ball with a tail", a "flying egg followed by a trail", a "bottle's bottom with a trail of thirty times its diameter", etc. The same phenomenon is uniformly described.
[...]
[Ref. bbr1:] GERARD BARTHEL AND JACQUES BRUCKER:
The two authors note this case of October 16, 1954:
"Belfort - 90 - 08:45 p.m.: investigation. Very fast luminous phenomenon, very high, only one "object", obvious description of a fireball."
Further in their book, they claim that "the few serious investigators" who had admitted the fact that it was a meteor which had generated this type of observations were the technicians of the scientific office of the Air Force.
The meteor of October 16, 1954, at 09:30 p.m.
(These keywords are only to help queries and are not implying anything.)
Belfort, Territoire de Belfort, luminous, high, fast, night, object
[----] indicates sources that are not yet available to me.
Version: | Created/Changed by: | Date: | Change Description: |
---|---|---|---|
0.1 | Patrick Gross | April 9, 2006 | First published. |
1.0 | Patrick Gross | December 27, 2009 | Conversion from HTML to XHTML Strict. First formal version. |
1.1 | Patrick Gross | October 26, 2019 | Addition of the Summary. |