Wurtsmith Air Force Base
Michigan
30 October 1975
Wurtsmith AFB, located 2 miles west of Oscoda, Michigan, had its beginning
in 1923 as a landing area for Army airplanes from Selfridge Field near
Detroit. In 1953, it was formally named for Michigan's World War II hero,
Major General Paul B. Wurtsmith, who died in an aircraft accident.
Wurtsmith was home for the 379th Bombardment Wing which controlled the
524th Bombardment Squadron and the 920th Aerial Refueling Squadron. The
base was signed over to SAC in April, 1960 and the 40th Air Division,
which was reactivated in July 1959 and assigned to the Strategic Air
Command's Eighth Air Force, was headquartered there. The Division's
mission at Wurtsmith was to supervise and monitor the operation of the
379th and 410th Bombardment Wings, the 305th Aerial Refueling Wing, the
351st Strategic Missile Wing, the 128th Aerial Refueling Group, and the
931st Aerial Refueling Group. Wurtsmith was one of the northern tier bases
that housed nuclear weapons. Wurtsmith encompasses some 5,200 acres of
land and had about 3,500 people assigned. It was formally closed in June,
1993, and all nuclear weapons were removed.
The unusual events that began at Loring AFB in Maine on October 27, 1975
moved west and continued at Wurtsmith three days later...
10:10 P.M., October 30th, 1975.
Persons in the base family housing area in the southeast part of Wurtsmith
began seeing a low-flying aircraft that they thought was a helicopter. It
had running lights and it hovered and moved up and down in an erratic
fashion. An airman guarding the Capehart housing area gate observed an
object with one white searchlight and two red lights at the rear. It was
heading in a west-southwest direction. Another airman, on duty at the
motor pool, saw lights near the western perimeter of the base. Sergeant
Robert J. Anderson, also on duty at the motor pool, saw a KC-135 tanker
and below the tanker he saw an unknown craft with a steady red light.
Sounds similar to that of a helicopter were heard intermittently by
observers.
10:25 P.M.
Security policemen at the back gate of Wurtsmith reported to their command
post that they had observed an unidentified helicopter with no lights. The
craft had hovered over the weapons storage area at low altitude. The craft
moved towards the north, and when it reached the northern perimeter, it
turned on its lights. Guards inside the weapons storage area reported
seeing the craft and hearing a sound similar to that made by a helicopter.
10:30 P.M.
Radar Approach Control reported tracking low-flying objects on radar. They
tracked a return as it flew a distance of thirty-five miles southeast of
Wurtsmith. No visual sighting was made by tower personnel, and (oddly) no
attempt was made to contact the unknown craft by radio. At that point, a
KC-135 tanker returned to Wurtsmith from a refueling mission. The Wing
Commander, Colonel Boardman, ordered the KC-135 to try to intercept and
identify the craft. The tanker was vectored in by Radar Approach Control.
Captain Myron Taylor, a navigation instructor who was on board the KC-135,
later reported in a statement to 379th Bomb Wing Historian Staff Sergeant
Paul J. Cahill, that:
I remember seeing lights similar to strobe lights which were flashing
irregularly. We followed the lights north out over Lake Huron and then the
UFO swung south...
...after observing the lights we determined that there were in fact two
objects and the irregular flashing appeared to be some sort of signal
being passed from one to the other in an effort to maintain the same
position.
...I would estimate that our altitude was about 2,000 feet and our speed
approximately 200 knots.
...I would guess that we stayed close to the UFO most of the time,
approximately one mile away, and each time we attempted to close on the
object it would speed away from us. We followed the UFO down to Saginaw
Bay and started across the Bay when we lost it because of all the fishing
boat lights.
...On the way back [to Wurtsmith], we picked up the UFO again at our eight
o'clock position. We turned away, and it proceeded to follow us. Finally,
we turned back in the direction of the UFO and it really took off back in
the direction of the Bay area. I know this might sound crazy, but I would
estimate that the UFO sped away from us doing approximately 1,000
knots.
...we proceeded but at that point we were low on fuel and were forced to
return to Wurtsmith. I remember that while on final approach we saw the
lights again near the Weapons Storage Area.
...Captain Higginbotham was questioned by the OSI and cautioned not to
discuss the incident.
A report was made to NORAD. The extract from the NORAD Command Director's
Log reads:
31 Oct 75/0445Z:
Report from Wurtsmith AFB through Air Force Ops Center - incident at
0355Z. Helicopter hovered over SAC weapons storage area then departed
area. Tanker flying at 2700 feet made both visual sighting and radar skin
paint. Tracked object 25NM SE over Lake Huron where contact was lost.
The local police and the Saginaw, Michigan FBI office were notified, with no results.
All possible air traffic in the area was investigated, but none explained the UFO.
Since the Michigan Department of Natural Resources sometimes sent out
helicopters to catch hunters spotlighting deer in nearby Huron National Forest, they were contacted. They had no aircraft in the air at the time.
The incidents were never explained.
This article was previously published in 1998. It has been revised slightly by removing dead links and adding new ones as needed.
Loy Lawhon
Due to past abuses, I do not allow articles to be reprinted on other sites. You may use the first paragraph and provide a link to this page for the rest of the article.
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Print References:
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"Above Top Secret" by Timothy Good
"The UFO Coverup" by Lawrence Fawcett & Barry J. Greenwood
"U.F.O.s Are Real" by Sergeant Clifford E. Stone
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