Nov 12 2007
|
|
The British Mothman
A few days ago I received an email from someone in Nebraska asking if Britain has its own equivalent of the infamous Mothman of Point Pleasant, West Virginia. Well, yes it does: it’s known as the Owlman.
Some might argue that the Mothman is more of a cryptozoological entity, rather than one strictly tied to the UFO issue. However, there can be no doubt that when Mothman mania reached its height in the 1960s, Point Pleasant was saturated with reports of UFOs, Men in BlackĀ and weird goings-on; as well as sightings of the large, flying man-thing.
And such was the case with the Owlman of England, who burst onto the scene in 1976, amid a torrent of weird creature sightings, UFOs, and much more of a distinctly fortean nature.
Jon Downes, of the British-based Center for Fortean Zoology wrote a book about the controversy, titled The Owlman and Others.
And, for the person who wrote to me, and for everyone else, here’s an article that Jon wrote on the British Mothman:
In April 1976, Tony Shiels, known to many as ‘Doc’ and sometimes as ‘The Wizard of the Western World’ wrote a letter:
“A very weird thing happened over the Easter weekend. A holiday-maker from Preston, Lancs., told me about something his two young daughters had seen … a big, feathered bird-man hovering over the church tower at Mawnan (a village near the mouth of the Helford River). The girls (June 12, and Vicky, daughters of Mr Don Melling), were so scared that the family cut their holiday short and went back three days early. This really is a fantastic thing, and I am sure the man wasn’t just making it up because he’d been told I was on a monster hunt. I couldn’t get the kids to talk about it (in fact, their father wouldn’t even let me try), but he gave me a sketch of the thing drawn by June.
“There have been no reports, so far as I know, of anybody else seeing the Bird-Man … even if it turned out to be just a fancy dress hang-glider, you’d think someone else would have spotted him … but Mawnan is not a place for hang-gliding! I really don’t know what to think … it’s as if a whole load of weirdness has been let loose in the Falmouth area since last autumn!”
Although, if you read any of the books on general mystery animals such as Alien Animals by Janet and Colin Bord, or indeed any of the contemporary copies of Fortean Times the claim that Cornwall had been particularly weird at the time is often made, it is not until you visit the Cornish Studies Library in the back streets of Redruth, sit yourself down at one of their microfiche machines, and physically examine twelve months or more’s issues of The Falmouth Packet, The West Briton and The Western Morning News that you can see quite how strange the time actually was. For a period between the late autumn of 1975 and the early spring of 1977 it seems that Southern Cornwall was seized by a period of collective madness. Much of this is chronicled in some depth in my book The Owlman and Others but even there I think that I failed to give a true picture of quite how strange the area had become.
Click here for the rest of the article.
This entry was posted
on Monday, November 12th, 2007 at 9:00 am and is filed under The Redfern Files, Eyewitness Accounts, Alien Encounters, UFO Sightings, Evidence, UFOlogists, Strange Creatures, UFOlogy, Occult/Esoteric. You can follow responses via RSS 2.0 feed.
You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is not allowed.
del.icio.us Digg Reddit Ma.gnolia Technorati Help
- Related News Stories:
- Blogging the Mothman »
- John Keel: Mothman & UFOs »
- Mothman Phone Home »
- British X-Files »
- Silver Bridge Disaster 40 Years On »
|
November 12th, 2007 at 7:39 pm
Mothman, Dover Demon, Owlman, Varginha…
Why do these entities always appear to young people?
Maybe for the same reason poltergeist activity also is more common among youngsters dealing with the hardships of puberty… al that psychic energy at a constant state of unrest…