1-23-2014 Correction: The Abington sighting was in October of 2012, not October of 2013.
A recent wave of UFOs have been sighted in the area of the Bridgewater Triangle, as well as all over the world. These sightings differ immensely from the flying saucer, metallic-colored disk shaped sightings of the crafts sighted in 1940s to the 1960s and the triangle-shaped craft seen by many in the area in the 1970s. These UFOs are glowing fireballs flying in formation. Usually five—sometimes six--glowing spheres, sometimes moving at incredibly high speeds, sometimes rotating in formation.
A recent wave of UFOs have been sighted in the area of the Bridgewater Triangle, as well as all over the world. These sightings differ immensely from the flying saucer, metallic-colored disk shaped sightings of the crafts sighted in 1940s to the 1960s and the triangle-shaped craft seen by many in the area in the 1970s. These UFOs are glowing fireballs flying in formation. Usually five—sometimes six--glowing spheres, sometimes moving at incredibly high speeds, sometimes rotating in formation.
The first of
these local sightings was on October 12, 2013. Five orbs floated in over the
Boston skyline and were captured on video by a witness in a nearby Boston
skyscraper. Here is a clip of the sighting.
Many others saw
this sky event in the area. And some were reported to the National UFO
Reporting Center. Two of these reports were also about sightings in Bridgewater
on the night of November 20th. One witness saw six “orange fireballs”
in the sky moving “slowly in a pattern” and then disappearing one by one. Another
reported seeing the “orange lights rising into the sky”, subsequently curving
into a circle formation and again, disappearing one by one after about five
minutes. Another Bridgewater witness reported seeing “six lights in formation
of the Big Dipper-then looking closer, they moved changing formation. They were
hovering over a house fairly low. I pulled over to photo them. As I did
again they changed formation till they were in a vertical straight line. Then
they went up and disappeared.”
Many other sightings of the same phenomenon were reported from the towns of Hanover, Weymouth, New Bedford, and Swansea, as well as Bridgewater, in a ten week span from October to early December.
of UFO activity in southeastern Massachusetts, from Boston to the South Shore. I dug into newspaper archives to see if there were other times in history where mass sightings were documented. I wasn’t disappointed. There was indeed. I found some absolutely intriguing (not to mention BIZARRE) accounts documented in the Boston Globe. The most unusual of these being a mass sighting in Boston over Braves Field in 1947.
On July 11, 1947--just two days after in infamous Roswell Incident--the Boston Globe reported the following:
"Greater Boston stepped into the lead in the new American past time--spotting flying saucers--when 200 persons in one group 200 sighted one of the elusive disks flying over Brave's Field floating so low over the field during the game that it was in danger of being shattered by a high flying ball.”
Nearby at the Magazine Beach Club in Cambridge on the Charles, an estimated 200 beach goers witnessed the “flying disk.”
“Irving Appleby, manager of the Magazine Beach bathhouse in Cambridge, backed up by 200 persons who were on the beach who saw the disk. And 200 people can’t be wrong. Appleby was quick to declare, “I don’t know what it was, and I am not a crackpot. But we saw something and looked like a saucer. He claimed the disk was only about four feet in diameter and appeared out of a large cloud floating by. The disk then “glided toward earth” appearing to land someone around Brighton, after a near collision with power lines.
"Greater Boston stepped into the lead in the new American past time--spotting flying saucers--when 200 persons in one group 200 sighted one of the elusive disks flying over Brave's Field floating so low over the field during the game that it was in danger of being shattered by a high flying ball.”
Nearby at the Magazine Beach Club in Cambridge on the Charles, an estimated 200 beach goers witnessed the “flying disk.”
“Irving Appleby, manager of the Magazine Beach bathhouse in Cambridge, backed up by 200 persons who were on the beach who saw the disk. And 200 people can’t be wrong. Appleby was quick to declare, “I don’t know what it was, and I am not a crackpot. But we saw something and looked like a saucer. He claimed the disk was only about four feet in diameter and appeared out of a large cloud floating by. The disk then “glided toward earth” appearing to land someone around Brighton, after a near collision with power lines.
Another very
unusual mass sighting occurred in 1972 when hundreds of South Shore residents
witnessed a “silvery, triangle transparent object” moving west between 8 and 9
pm on the Fourth of July. The craft was seen in the towns Cohasset, Hingham,
Marshfield, Hanover, Rockland, Hanson and Whitman.
Dozens
of calls came into Weymouth and Hanscom Naval Bases. An Air Force
representative confirmed that they received many calls about the craft from
nervous citizens, but declared, “We don’t know what it was.”