Skip to main content
    כתוביות ותמלול בעברית

    Horace Burns & William Blackburn witnessed separate UFO landings during the Virginia flap of 1964-65

    4/18/2026Eyes on Cinema
    חזרה לעמוד הסרטון

    תקציר הסרטון

    In the early 1960s, the state of Virginia became a flashpoint for unexplained extraterrestrial activity during what would later be known as the "UFO Waves of 1964-1965." During this turbulent period, hundreds of reports flooded into the authorities, but two cases stood out above the rest due to their dramatic level of detail and the physical evidence left behind. The stories of Horace Burns, an industrial technician, and William Blackburn, an innocent bystander, provide a rare glimpse into close encounters of the second kind that shaken the scientific community and U.S. Air Force investigators of the era. The case of Horace Burns, which occurred in December 1964, is considered one of the most credible accounts in the history of ufology. While driving down the highway, Burns spotted a massive, cone-shaped object landing in a nearby field. What makes his testimony extraordinary is that the object was not merely visible, it directly affected its environment: his car engine abruptly stalled and his headlights faded—a classic hallmark of electromagnetic interference often attributed to unidentified craft. A subsequent investigation by scientists from the University of Maryland revealed anomalous radiation levels in the soil at the precise spot Burns identified as the landing site. Shortly thereafter, William Blackburn experienced a similar and equally harrowing event, reinforcing the sensation that something extraordinary was unfolding in the skies over Virginia. The testimonies of Burns and Blackburn were not isolated incidents, but rather links in a chain of events that prompted the U.S. government’s Project Blue Book to invest significant resources into analyzing the findings. The combination of witnesses with reliable technical backgrounds, physical evidence on the ground, and cross-referenced radar data makes the Virginia affair a milestone in the study of unidentified phenomena, raising piercing questions about what truly transpired in those isolated East Coast fields six decades ago.

    Cookies & Privacy 🍪

    We use cookies to improve your experience

    For more information, see our Privacy Policy