New
Book Tells the Inside Story of the Roswell UFO Crash
& Other Paranormal
Events

Roswell USA: Towns That
Celebrate UFOs, Lake Monsters, Bigfoot, and Other Weirdness
Authored by John LeMay,
Illustrated by Neil Riebe, Edited by Noe Torres. 254 pages. Click
here to order.
As featured on the Jeff Rense radio program, click here to listen to Jeff's interview with author John LeMay and editor/publisher Noe Torres (from April 22, 2011).
A new book by Roswell, New
Mexico, historian and author John LeMay provides a fresh new look at
the world’s most famous UFO case, the alleged 1947 crash of a flying
saucer in the desert north of Roswell. The 254-page paperback, Roswell
USA, available from RoswellBooks.com, looks at the so-called “Roswell
Incident” from the unique perspective of someone who was born and
raised in the “Alien Capital of the World.” LeMay’s childhood was
filled with tales of flying saucers and alien autopsies, and, in his
youth, he rubbed elbows with several key Roswell eyewitnesses,
including Robert Shirkey, who said he saw UFO debris being loaded onto
a B-29 bomber at the Roswell Army Air Field in 1947.
In his book, LeMay
discusses how the UFO phenomenon has radically changed Roswell,
beginning with what occurred in the summer of 1997, when about 40,000
tourists and reporters descended upon the desert town to celebrate the
50th anniversary of an event that skeptics claim did not even happen.
Never had the world seen such an amazing spectacle – an entire town
celebrating the crash of a flying saucer and the alleged recovery of
extraterrestrial beings. Despite controversy that persists to this day,
UFO tourism was born that summer in the New Mexico desert, and the
annual celebration of the Roswell Incident became a fixture that
continues to fill the town’s coffers to overflowing every July. Indeed,
in a town once known as the “Dairy Capital of the Southwest,” UFOs and
“Little Green Men” have become Roswell's top tourist draw.
Relying on his extensive
personal knowledge of all things Roswell and his unlimited access to
the archives of the Historical Society for Southeast New Mexico, where
he works as an archivist, LeMay presents a careful reconstruction of
the famous UFO crash, including details that many readers may not have
previously heard. In describing the discovery of strange metallic
fragments at a sheep ranch north of town, LeMay writes, “At daybreak,
Monday July 7, the three men arose and went out to survey the debris
field. Sheridan Cavitt, Army counterintelligence agent, and Mack
Brazel, local rancher, on horseback, and Jesse Marcel, intelligence
officer, in a military jeep, soon came upon the mystery that would
haunt the rest of their lives. Marcel and Cavitt finally understood
what had caused Brazel’s agitation on the previous day as they came
upon a vast field littered with the same type of strange metallic
debris that Brazel had taken into town. Marcel speculated that the
stuff must have come from some type of aircraft that exploded over the
ranch.”
According to LeMay,
“Little did the men realize at that time, that the Foster Ranch debris
field was just a ‘bounce’ or ‘skip’ site. After the UFO scattered
debris there, it bounced and maintained flight for a while, finally
crashing to the earth somewhere closer to Roswell, in Chaves County,
possibly about 40 miles north of town. Later that same morning, the
actual crashed ship was discovered by several local residents and some
civilian archeologists conducting research in the area.”
In addition to revisiting
the 1947 UFO incident, LeMay also provides a unique glimpse into what
it’s like to live in the one place on Earth most closely associated
with flying saucers and extraterrestrials. His analysis of the odd
things that happen in Roswell, especially during its annual UFO
festival, is priceless. For example, he tells the story of an object
that surfaced during the 2008 Roswell UFO Festival that subsequently
went “viral” and generated interest all over the planet – a small rock.
“The most enigmatic piece
of debris yet, if it can even be called debris, is the Roswell Rock,”
LeMay writes, “Small enough to fit in the palm of one’s hand the rock’s
decidedly alien looking nature comes from the fact that on its surface
is depicted several lunar phases. More startling is that the raised
pattern on the face of the rock identically matches a crop circle found
at Liddington Castle in England in 1996… The rock is also highly
magnetic and will spin when put under a compass ... News of the rock’s
discovery hit Roswell in 2008 just after the 61st UFO Festival was
winding down. Not since the Japanese jewelry incident of 1996 had
something like this turned up and caused such a stir.”
LeMay’s keen insight and
marvelous sense of humor also focus on some of Roswell's other,
lesser-known mysteries, such as the “alien ghost” that haunts the New
Mexico Rehabilitation Center. “In July 1997, when interest in the
Roswell Incident was peaking due to the 50th anniversary celebration,
Josephine Morones, stepped out of the staff kitchen one night and was
struck by a very odd sensation,” LeMay says in his book, “Turning to
look down the hall, she saw the most bizarre sight of her life - a
small figure that looked somewhat human but clearly was not.”
LeMay quotes the
eyewitness as saying, “My thing was very weird. The hands weren’t like
fingers; they were like mittens. All I could see was the thumb. The
skin, or whatever it had on, was like silk tape. We have [silk tape
here] and it looked to me like someone wrapped up in that silk tape. It
had the egg/pear shaped head. You know how people talk about the
slanted eyes and all of this? This one had round eyes. That’s what
really got me. It didn’t have a nose; as far as a mouth it had a little
bitty mouth. At first I thought somebody was playing a trick on me. I
really did. I couldn’t explain the feeling.”
Written with an eye to
historical accuracy, and an occasional wink of the eye, LeMay’s book
also chronicles some of Roswell’s “other” mysteries, such as the
"second" Roswell UFO Crash (in 1949); Bottomless Lakes where cars sink
into the depths and monsters emerge to the surface; the Headless
Horsewoman of Lover's Lane, a Victorian Era Spook with an axe to grind
against young lovers; and others.
Roswell is by no means
the only town to use strange events and bizarre creatures to draw
tourism dollars. Nor was it the first. In the second part of
LeMay’s book, he takes us on a tour of other towns all over the U.S.
that celebrate weirdness – such as Churubusco, Indiana, where a nine
month long hunt for a giant turtle in 1948 has served the town well in
tourism for the last 60 years, and Flatwoods, West Virginia, where a
one-time alleged sighting of a strange alien monster has since resulted
in the “Flatwood Monster Days” festival and toy figures of the creature
being sold all the way in Japan. Also, there is Lake Champlain, New
York, which has since become America’s very own Loch Ness. Point
Pleasant, West Virginia, celebrates Mothman Days and has its own
Mothman Museum. In the White River Monster Reservoir in Arkansas, it is
illegal to harm a river monster that may or may not have existed in the
river’s depths. Kelley, Kentucky, is the site where aliens from outer
space laid siege to a farm house in 1955. And, many UFO enthusiasts
visit a lonely country cemetery in Aurora, Texas, where lie the remains
of an extraterrestrial, or so they believe, that crashed there in 1897.
The list of weird creatures and bizarre events goes on.
Are all of the stories in
his book believable? “I am not a ufologist - nor am I a
cryptozoologist, folklorist, or any other sort of ‘official’
researcher,” LeMay says in the introduction to his book, “Neither will
one go away convinced one hundred percent that any of the strange
things described in this book ever happened for sure. Like Frank Dobie,
I’m merely collecting these tales and passing them on in writing so
that they survive for future generations.”
He continues, “Do cars
really disappear in Bottomless Lakes only to reappear into Carlsbad
Caverns? Was an alien ghost really spotted in the halls of the old Army
base hospital? Did some guy really see a dinosaur on the outskirts of
town? Did an alien really survive the 1947 crash and end up in Nevada’s
mysterious Area 51? Who knows? The fun kicker to all of these stories,
or any other good yarn, though, is usually nobody can prove that they
didn’t happen.”
Roswell USA is published
by RoswellBooks.com, and is available in paperback for $14.95 by clicking here. It is also available on Amazon.com
and other major online retailers, and in the Roswell area, may be
purchased at Roswell Landing, 205 North Main Street (Phone:
575-622-3036). It features over 50 photographs and illustrations,
cartoons by Doug Ogg and Keith Bell, original illustrations by Neil
Riebe, and impressive cover art by Brian Norwood.
Author John LeMay was
born and raised in Roswell, New Mexico, where he grew up among the
aliens. He is the author of several books about the history of New
Mexico. His works include Images of America: Roswell, Postcards of
America: Roswell, Images of America: Chaves County, and Images of
America: Towns of Lincoln County, all published by Arcadia Publishing
of Mount Pleasant, South Carolina. LeMay is also an archivist and
serves on the board of directors for the Historical Society for
Southeast New Mexico, located in Roswell.