The Flatwoods Monster AKA “The Braxton County Monster” or “Phantom of Flatwoods”
First Reported: September 12, 1952, Flatwoods in Braxton County, West Virginia
Classification: Extraterrestrial
History: At 7:15 PM on September 12, 1952, brothers Edward (age 13) and Fred May (12), and friend Tommy Hyer (10), reported seeing a UFO appear in the sky and land on nearby farmland. They ran to report what they had seen to the May boys’ mother, Kathleen May, who gathered a group of locals, including West Virginia National Guardsman Eugene Lemon, to investigate. After reaching the site, they reported seeing a large, pulsating “ball of fire” and a pungent mist that burned their eyes. Noticing two smaller lights under a nearby oak tree, Lemon shined his flashlight on them and revealed a hooded, lizard-like hominid creature. The creature hissed at them and the group fled in terror. The following morning, around 6:30 AM, the president of the local Board of Education reported seeing a flying saucer take off from the area of the reported event.
Possible Explanation: Aside from the fact that those reporting the encounter to the authorities were alleged bootleggers and might have possibly been just a bunch of drunks happening upon a meteorite crash that had been described in three states already that evening (Maryland, Pennsylvania, and ultimately West Virginia), the paranormal investigation group Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI) also reviewed the case in 2000 and that the hooded, lizard-like hominid described was probably just a barn owl on a tree branch.
Legacy: Every year in Flatwoods, West Virginia there is a “Green Monster Festival” to celebrate the purported alien visitor.
First Reported: September 12, 1952, Flatwoods in Braxton County, West Virginia
Classification: Extraterrestrial
History: At 7:15 PM on September 12, 1952, brothers Edward (age 13) and Fred May (12), and friend Tommy Hyer (10), reported seeing a UFO appear in the sky and land on nearby farmland. They ran to report what they had seen to the May boys’ mother, Kathleen May, who gathered a group of locals, including West Virginia National Guardsman Eugene Lemon, to investigate. After reaching the site, they reported seeing a large, pulsating “ball of fire” and a pungent mist that burned their eyes. Noticing two smaller lights under a nearby oak tree, Lemon shined his flashlight on them and revealed a hooded, lizard-like hominid creature. The creature hissed at them and the group fled in terror. The following morning, around 6:30 AM, the president of the local Board of Education reported seeing a flying saucer take off from the area of the reported event.
Possible Explanation: Aside from the fact that those reporting the encounter to the authorities were alleged bootleggers and might have possibly been just a bunch of drunks happening upon a meteorite crash that had been described in three states already that evening (Maryland, Pennsylvania, and ultimately West Virginia), the paranormal investigation group Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI) also reviewed the case in 2000 and that the hooded, lizard-like hominid described was probably just a barn owl on a tree branch.
Legacy: Every year in Flatwoods, West Virginia there is a “Green Monster Festival” to celebrate the purported alien visitor.
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