Visitors Now: | |
Total Visits: | |
Total Stories: |
Story Views | |
Now: | |
Last Hour: | |
Last 24 Hours: | |
Total: |
A mysterious event back in 1955 inspired some of Hollywood’s most famous movies, including E.T. and Poltergeist. The event? A Kentucky family claimed to have been visited by aliens from outer space. LEX 18′s Adam Winer took a trip back the the scene of this alleged alien encounter for LEX 18′s Mystery Monday.
They said that for four hours, they fought off the aliens by shooting at them. Back in 1955, everyone thought the Sutton family was crazy. The family claimed to have been visited by a flying saucer and creatures they described as small goblins. And the Sutton story has never wavered – even 55 years later.
Geraldine Sutton Stith wasn’t yet born when her father had the unexplained encounter. “They were keeping it hid from us if you want to know the truth about the whole thing,” she said.
It happened, her father Elmer Lucky Sutton one day explained to her, on the night of August 21, 1955. “The family actually battled with something for that long a period of time,” said Stith. They battled for several hours. They ran to Hopkinsville to get help. Then they battled again until 5:15 in the morning.
“It was like a horror movie. These little suckers were like being shot and being hit and coming back,” she said.
Story continues here: http://www.lex18.com/news/mystery-monday-did-kentucky-town-fight-off-aliens-in-1955-/#!prettyPhoto/0/
The Kelly–Hopkinsville encounter, also known as the Hopkinsville Goblins Case, and to a lesser extent the Kelly Green Men Case, is the name given to a series of allegedly connected incidents of alleged close encounters with supposed extraterrestrial beings. These were reported in the fall of 1955, the most famous and well-publicized of which centered around a rural farmhouse at the time belonging to the Sutton family, which was located between the hamlet of Kelly and the small city of Hopkinsville, both in Christian County, Kentucky, United States. It is from these main incidents that the entire case takes its name.
Members of two families at the farmhouse allege to have seen unidentifiable creatures and other witnesses attested to lights in the sky and odd sounds.
However the events are regarded as one of the most significant, well-known and well-documented cases in the history of UFO incidents, and a favorite for study in ufology, as many others, including local policemen and state troopers, were involved and taken seriously enough as to be officially investigated by the United States Air Force. The encounter has shaped much of the narrative of the UFO tradition, including flashing lights appearing in rural areas and sightings of so-called little green men.
A claim is also made for another encounter with allegedly the same creatures in another part of the United States along the Ohio River a week prior to the incidents in Kentucky, which itself had numerous witnesses.
Illustration of Hopkinsville Alien
Credit: Wikipedia
The Hopkinsville Case
There were dozens of eyewitnesses to the incidents, which included two families present at the farmhouse and others in the area; other civilians, some of whom had no connection to the families at the farmhouse; and even one in another state. Perhaps most significantly the witnesses also included several local policemen and a state trooper who saw and heard strange phenomena such as unexplained lights in the night sky and noises the same night.[citation needed]
The seven people present in the farmhouse claimed that they were terrorized by an unknown number of creatures similar to gremlins, which have since often been referred to as the “Hopkinsville Goblins” in popular culture. The residents of the farmhouse described them as around three feet tall, with upright pointed ears, thin limbs (their legs were said to be almost in a state of atrophy), long arms and claw-like hands or talons. The creatures were either silvery in color, or wearing something metallic. Their movements on occasion seemed to defy gravity with them floating above the ground and appearing in high up places, and they “walked” with a swaying motion as though wading through water. Although the creatures never entered the house, they would pop up at windows and at the doorway, working up the children in the house to a hysterical frenzy. The families fled the farmhouse in the middle of the night to the local police station and sheriff Russell Greenwell noted they were visibly shaken. The families returned to the farmhouse with Sheriff Greenwell and twenty officers, yet the occurrences continued. Police saw evidence of the struggle and damage to the house, as well as seeing strange lights and hearing noises themselves. The witnesses additionally claimed to have used firearms to shoot at the creatures, with little or no effect, and the house and surrounding grounds were extensively damaged during the incident.
Even years later the eyewitness stories still corroborated remarkably under individual questioning, although speculation amongst the eyewitnesses regarding the motivations of the creatures has ranged from field study on their part, or that the creatures were acting out of mere curiosity or even outright malevolence. The two families involved were noted locally to not be the types to make up a hoax, the families obtained no financial gain or significant fame from the incident, and fled the area when the incident became known locally and they gained an abundance of trespassers wanting to see the site.
UFO researcher Allan Hendry wrote “[t]his case is distinguished by its duration and also by the number of witnesses involved.” Jerome Clark writes that “[i]nvestigations by police, Air Force officers from nearby Fort Campbell, and civilian ufologists found no evidence of a hoax”. Although they never formally investigated the case, Blue Book listed it as a hoax . So was Isabel Davis, one of the most hardheaded of UFO investigators.
Location of Hopkinsville, Kentucky
On the evening of August 21, 1955, Billy Ray Taylor of Pennsylvania was visiting the Sutton family of Kentucky. The Sutton family home was a rural farmhouse located near the towns of Kelly and Hopkinsville, in Christian County, Kentucky (the farmhouse still stands today although the Sutton family moved soon after the incident). There were a total of eleven people in the house that night, including the children of the two families.
The Sutton farmhouse had no running water, causing Billy Ray Taylor to go outside to the water pump for a drink at about 7:00 p.m. Taylor said he observed strange lights in the sky to the west, which he believed to be an unusual craft. He described it as disc-shaped in appearance, and featured lights on its side that had “all of the colors of the rainbow”. He ran back to the house excitedly telling the others about his “flying saucer” sighting, but no one believed him; instead thinking that he had become overly excited after seeing a vivid “shooting star”.
At about 8.00 p.m., the families began hearing strange and unexplained noises outside. The Sutton family dog which was in the yard outside began barking loudly and then hid under the house, where it remained until the next day. Going outside a few minutes later with their guns, Billy Ray Taylor and Elmer “Lucky” Sutton then asserted that they saw a strange creature emerge from the nearby trees.
When the creature approached to within about 20 feet, the two men began shooting at it, one using a shotgun, the other man using a .22 rifle. There was a noise “sounding like bullets being rattled about in a metal drum”, and the creature, they said, then flipped over and fled into the darkness and shadows. Sure that they had wounded the creature, Lucky and Solomon went out to look for it. Hendry writes that as the men were stepping from the porch, they saw one of the creatures perched on an awning. They again shot at the creature, and it was knocked from the roof. Again they heard the rattling noise, although the creature was apparently unharmed.
Hopkinsville aliens illustration
Credit: Wikiedia
Lucky and Solomon returned to the house in a disturbed state. Within minutes, Lucky’s brother J. C. Sutton said that he saw the same creature (or at least a similar creature) peer into a window in the home; J. C. and Solomon shot at it, breaking the window, whereupon it too flipped over and fled. The creatures could be heard loudly scurrying about on the roof, and scratching as though trying to break through. For the next few hours, the witnesses asserted that the creatures repeatedly approached the home, either popping up at the doorway or at windows in an almost playful manner, only to be shot at each time they did. The witnesses were unsure as to how many of the creatures there were; except for one sighting of two at the same time, all other sightings were of only one, although the first story claimed twelve to fifteen. At one point the witnesses shot one of the beings nearly point blank, and again would insist that the sound resembled bullets striking a metal bucket. The floating creatures’ legs seemed to be atrophied and nearly useless, and they appeared to propel themselves with a curious hip-swaying motion, steering with their arms. Clark writes that “i f the creatures were in a tree or on the roof when hit [by gunfire], they would float, not fall, to the ground.”
Involvement of authorities in Kentucky
At about 11 p.m., a state highway trooper near Kelly independently reported some unusual “meteor-like objects” flying overhead, “with a sound like artillery fire coming directly from them.”[3]
Hendry writes that Sutton family matriarch “Mrs. Lankford … counseled an end to the hostilities,” noting that the creatures had never seemed to try harming anyone nor had they actually entered the house.[2] Between appearances from the creatures, the family tried to temper the children’s growing hysteria. At about 11.00 p.m., the Taylor-Sutton crew decided to flee the farmhouse in their automobiles and after about 30 minutes they arrived at the Hopkinsville police station. Police Chief Russell Greenwell judged the witnesses to have been frightened by something “beyond reason, not ordinary.” He also opined “[t]hese were not the sort of people who normally ran to the police … something frightened them, something beyond their comprehension.” A police officer with medical training determined that Billy Ray’s pulse rate was more than twice normal.
Twenty police officers accompanied the Suttons back to the farmhouse, and several entered it to assess the damage. According to Daniels et al., “[t]he official response was prompt and thorough.”[5] In 1998, Karal Ayn Barnett wrote, “By all accounts, the witnesses were deemed sane, not under the influence [of drugs or alcohol], and in such a state of terror, no one involved doubted that they had seen something far beyond their ken.”
Police interviewed neighboring farmhouses, whose residents were also distressed and reported to the police strange lights, strange sounds, and of hearing the gun battle at the Sutton farmstead. Police and photographers who visited the home saw many bullet holes and hundreds of spent shells, and further discovered what Clark describes as “an odd luminous patch along a fence where one of the beings had been shot, and, in the woods beyond, a green light whose source could not be determined.”[3] Though the investigation was inconclusive, Daniels et al. writes, “Investigators did conclude, however, that these people were sincere and sane and that they had no interest in exploiting the case for publicity. The patch sample, although photographed, was never collected and had mysteriously disappeared by the noon the next day. “
Police left at about 2:15 a.m., and not long afterward, the witnesses claimed that the creatures returned. Billy Ray fired at them once more, ruining yet another window. The last of the creatures was allegedly sighted just before dawn, at about 4:45 a.m. on August 22, never to be seen again.
Legacy
The Hopkinsville Goblins Case garnered massive publicity within hours of its alleged occurrence. The August 22, 1955 Kentucky New Era claimed that “12 to 15 little men” had been seen.[6][7] Clark writes that none of the witnesses ever claimed this, rather that “[t]he observers had no idea how many of the creatures there were. They could only be certain that there were at least two because they saw that number at the same time.”
Later, on August 22, Andrew “Bud” Ledwith of WHOP radio interviewed the seven adult witnesses in two different groups. He judged their tale of the events as consistent, especially in their descriptions of the strange glowing beings. Ledwith had worked as a professional artist, and sketched the creatures based on the witnesses’ descriptions. These were generally consistent, though the female witnesses insisted that the creatures had a somewhat huskier build than the male witnesses remembered, and Billy Ray Taylor was alone in insisting that the beings had antennae.Hendry describes Ledwith’s efforts as “fortunate … because the publicity soon grew so obnoxious to the Sutton family that they later simply avoided telling the story and refused to cooperate [with UFO investigators, excepting Isabel Davis].”
As reports reached the newspapers, public opinion tended to view the story as a hoax and showed only brief interest in the event. Some residents of the local community, including members of the police department, were skeptical of the Sutton’s story and believed that alcohol (possibly moonshine) may have played a part in the incident, although to date no evidence has been found to support this belief. The fact that some of the witnesses worked for a carnival somehow contributed to the belief in a hoax.
The farm became a tourist attraction for a brief period, which upset the Suttons who tried to keep people away, eventually attempting to charge people an entrance fee to discourage them. That only convinced the sight-seers that the family was attempting to make money from the event, and increased the public view that the event was a hoax. Finally, the Suttons refused all visitors and refused to discuss the event further with anyone. To date, family members who witnessed the event rarely talk to reporters or researchers, and by given accounts have stuck to their version of the event. As late as 2002, Lucky Sutton’s daughter, Geraldine Hawkins, believed her father’s account, stating,
It was a serious thing to him. It happened to him. He said it happened to him. He said it wasn’t funny. It was an experience he said he would never forget. It was fresh in his mind until the day he died. It was fresh in his mind like it happened yesterday. He never cracked a smile when he told the story because it happened to him and there wasn’t nothing funny about it. He got pale and you could see it in his eyes. He was scared to death.”
Ufologist Allen Hynek had interviews with two persons with direct knowledge of the event a year after the event took place.
In addition to Ledwith’s sketches, Pfc. Gary F. Hodson of the 101st Airborne Division stationed at nearby Fort Campbell sketched the creatures based on eyewitness descriptions. The “men” were described as approximately 3 feet tall and either being silver in color or wearing silver-colored clothing that lit up or glowed when the invaders shouted to each other. All of the witnesses agreed about the appearance of the creatures.
There have been numerous books, documentaries and debates regarding the incidents although no firm conclusions have ever been established.
Possible explanations
In 1957, U.S. Air Force Major John E. Albert concluded that the Kelly-Hopkinsville case was the result of the witnesses seeing a “monkey painted with silver [that] escaped from a circus,” and that Mrs. Lankford’s imagination had exaggerated the event. Isabel Davis (Ufologist), for one, rejected this explanation as not only entirely speculative, but absurd: “monkeys are hairy creatures, monkeys have long tails, monkeys are notorious chatterboxes, and monkeys struck by bullets bleed and die … no amount of ‘optical illusion’ can explain a mistake of this magnitude.”
It could have been a misidentification of Great Horned Owls, which are nocturnal, fly silently, have yellow eyes, and aggressively defend their nests. There were meteor sightings at the time which could explain the UFO claims.
Man Lives With Extraterrestrials For Year In The Himalayas, Breaks 40 Year Silence To Tell The Story
Mysterious Ancient Artifacts Discovered in Saudi Desert, Legendary City Of Gerrha Found
Huge Face Of Grey Alien Appears In Northern Lights
Kentucky Family Battles Aliens For Four Hours, Shooting At Them
2 Doctors Inspect Presumed Alien Skeleton
Electro Magnetic Pulse Effects & Preparedness
These Forces Will Push Silver Over $100
Biggest Planet Ever Found: Astronomers Directly Image Massive Star’s ‘Super-Jupiter’
Human Poo To Renewable Biodiesel Fuel
Invisibility Cloak Hides Objects Of Different Sizes
is this the same blood line of Sutton’s that are famous for there moonshine? Just saying.
Crap..If on the NEWS MEDIA is all LIES and FEAR MONGERING STORY
In regards to the Elmer Sutton case…this appears to be a factual encounter with an Alien culture from an alternate reality, not this particular reality we call Earth life.
It appears that one of the main reasons these Alien beings choose this particular house or family was because…this family expressed a rather large degree of ‘FEAR & POWERLESSNESS”.
The challenge, for this family, Mr. Sutton’s family, was to release their sense of..”Powerlessness, survival mentality and to replace it with a…”CONQUEST or FIGHT FOR THEIR LIVES” mentality.
The reason the Alien creatures were able to be hit or struck by the bullets being fired by the Mr. Sutton…and have no apparent ‘effect’ was….due to the fact that…these beings who appeared to the Family were in fact…’Mental Probes or Projections’ from the Aliens who were gathered in their craft, this being a type of experiment to analyze the humans reactions.
With respect….
Light
What would be cool, is if we could get those space things, to attack the Tea Baggers in the US. Now that would be a sight to behold. lol
no it wouldn’t ~ a sight 2 behold would B disclosure
lol..omg
Wow, they just walked up and got shot at? Hillbillies. Who was terrorizing whom?
ya gotta laff
Kentucky is awesome.
In Kentucky, trespassers will be shot. Survivors will be shot again. We don’t give a flying F’. Aliens are weirdos and they should have went to some city slickers if they wanted to ‘visit’.
that’s just cousin zep , your cousin, cousin-cousin.. generations of cousins marrying cousins.
I’m surprised this garbage gets news. If beforeitnews is going to put this on the site then they should have a lighter side category. Beings from another galaxy fighting humans with guns. It’s not even cute or funny, why give this crap any coverage?
Also known as demons.
Yes, they’re crazy.
Serioulsy, unless you yourself have been abducted and have proof, which then provides the knowledge to KNOW ANYTHING about “aliens”, stop pretending to be a leading expert, where there are none! It’s nto that I don’t beleive that another life form other than us is out there, but for one to speak of something we as a people REALLY KNOW nothing about (except conjecture), is absolutely ridiculous, and then to claim to know their defense mechansims is utterly Pshycotic, how the bleep would you know?????? How do you know it wasn’t their natural skin, how do you know what alien it was and what built in protection it may have had, how do you know, it wasn’t a shield they put on before exiting the aircraft?? My point is why would one even think to speak on behalf of aliens and what they are REALLY about, unless you have lived with them or are one of them?????/ Okay you ONLY alien expert., there is enlightenment and wisdom, and then there is just Psychoticness.
I agree, as I have seen things I cannot explain, heard them ect. You can look like something from a sci fi flick and tell me you are from Mars. Does this mean I can tell you I met these dudes from Mars?. Its all conjecture then on my part. The fact they did not stick around and charge a fee to look around at there farmstead tells me a lot.
Better not because they would nuke them…… not a good idea for the rest of us.