The Berwyn Mountain Incident, widely referred to as the
‘Welsh Roswell’ is, next to the
Rendlesham Forest Incident of 1980, (referred to as the British Roswell), the
world famous and well-known British UFO crash story to date.
At 8:30 p.m. on January 23, 1974, a large disclike craft was
seen to fall from the skies over Clwyd in Wales. Dozens of witnesses across
Lancashire and Cheshire had phoned the police that evening after seeing a
strange formation of green lights erratically over the skies of the north-west.
At exactly 8.38 p.m., something impacted
into the Berwyn Mountains in Clwyd, and the resulting tremor, which measured
4.5 on the Richter Scale, was felt in Wrexham, Chester, Liverpool, Southport,
and even in some areas of Greater
Manchester.
Police immediately converged on the Berwyn Mountains,
expecting to find a crashed passenger jet, but just what they did find has
never been divulged. A convoy of army trucks passed through Chester that night
and made their way to the epicenter of the crash site, then the army threw a
cordon around the area. Even the police and crash investigators were warned
off. A nurse who lived near the scene of the impact told a local newspaper that
a flying saucer ‘ the size of the Albert Hall’ had smashed into a mountain,
throwing debris and bodies for over a mile. She said she walked up to one of
the bodies, and realized it wasn’t human, but before she could describe what
she had seen, the military intervened, and two Ministry of Defence officials
ordered her to remain silent about the UFO because her comments ‘would
constitute a threat to national security and the defence of the realm’.
That nurse has never been in the area since, and the news
reporter who visited the scene of the alleged crash refused to talk about the
incident up until his death in 1979.
In 1980, an electronics engineer named Arthur Adams, who had
worked on Concorde, visited the Berwyn UFO crash-site and found strange green
coloured pieces of metal embedded in the rocks there. He took samples of the
metal to his laboratory and discovered that a sample the size of a 1-inch cube
gave off two kilowatts of electricity, when wired up to a volt meter. Mr. Adams
contacted the Daily Express, and they published a series of articles about the
strange find, but the Ministry of Defence stepped in and killed the story.
Today, no one knows what crashed in the Welsh Mountains on
that winter night in 1974; some think it was an experimental man-made
top-secret military aircraft possibly a prototype Stealth bomber; others think
it was an alien craft from another world. If so, what happened to the bodies
that were seen scattered all over the mountain after the crash? The case is a
real X File…
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