09-09-1922
In the London Daily Express, Sept. 11, 1922, it is said that, upon September 9th, John Morris, coxswain of the Barmouth (Wales) life boat, and William James, looking out at sea from the shore at Barmouth, saw what they thought was an aeroplane falling into the ocean. They rushed out in a motor boat but found nothing. In the Barmouth Advertiser of the 14th, it is said that this object had fallen so slowly that features described as features of an aeroplane had been seen. In newspapers and aeronautical journals of the time, there is no findable record of an aeroplane of this earth reported missing.
This reference: The Complete Books of Charles Fort, pp. 638-639, © 1974, from Charles Fort’s book Lo ! © 1931.
Original reference: London Daily Express, Sept. 11, 1922
UFOCAT PRN – 11037
UFOCAT URN – NONE London Daily Express, Sept. 11, 1922
UFOCAT URN – NONE The Barmouth Advertiser, Sept. 14, 1922
UFOCAT URN – NONE The Complete Books of Charles Fort, pp. 638-639, © 1974 from Charles
Fort’s book “Lo !” © 1931
UFOCAT URN – 11037 A Century of Landings by Jacques Vallee, #0045, © 1969.
UFOCAT URN – 11035 Catalog through 1950 by H. Edward Hill, #073, no date of publication.
UFOCAT URN – 11036 Data-Net Report, March 1971
UFOCAT URN – 11038 Computerized Catalog (N=3173) by Luis Schoenherr, #045, no date of
publication
UFOCAT URN – 69698 World-Wide Catalog of Type 1 Reports by Peter Rogerson, #0100, no date
of publication
Europe - United Kingdom, Wales
Note: “looking out at sea” and “falling into the ocean” would be the Cardigan Bay.-CF-
Barmouth Latitude 52-45-00 N, Longitude 4-04-00 W (D-M-S)
Cardigan Bay Latitude 52-30-00 N, Longitude 4-25-00 W
Reference:
http://gnswww.nga.mil/geonames/GNS/index.jsp UFO Location (UFOCAT) – Latitude 52.72 N, Longitude 4.05 W (D.%)
http://www.waterufo.net/item.php?id=42