The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

75 years ago, Roswell ‘flying saucer’ report sparked UFO obsession

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July 8, 2022 at 7:00 a.m. EDT
A sign directs travelers to the start of the "1947 UFO Crash Site Tours" in Roswell, N.M., in 1997. (Eric Draper/AP)
6 min
correction

An earlier version of this article stated incorrectly that Project Mogul was a military program designed to intercept Russian radio messages. It was designed to detect sound waves from Soviet nuclear tests. This version has been corrected.

The world was worrying about war when rancher W.W. Brazel walked into the sheriff’s office in Corona, N.M., on a hot, dusty day 75 years ago to report a “flying disk” he might have found on his property, about 100 miles northwest of Roswell Army Air Field.

The next day — July 8, 1947 — the public information officer at the base issued a news release stating the U.S. Army Air Forces had recovered a “flying saucer” at the ranch. While military brass quickly retracted the statement, it was too late: The legend of Roswell as the “UFO Capital of the World” was already soaring — much like the countless bright objects many Americans claimed to have seen in the sky that summer.