June 30, 2021
We spent the night at a Super 8 in Las Vegas (New Mexico), a quirky hotel in a quirky little town. I loved the peacock decoration that was part of the hotel landscaping.
Things were quiet until the late 1970s when a retired military man exposed the "cover-up" to a UFOlogist, or a researcher of UFO sightings. Many more "eyewitnesses" soon came out of the woodwork, including several who said that at least one alien spacecraft had crash-landed and bodies had been recovered by the military.
In 1994, the US Air Force came out with a report stating that the crashed object was a nuclear test surveillance balloon, and in 1997 they added that the recovered "alien bodies" were probably test dummies that had been dropped from high altitude.
What I can gather is this: 1) Something crashed into a field 75 miles outside Roswell in July 1947; 2) There was some kind of cover-up, although whether it was because it was a nuclear-related device or a UFO can be debated; 3) There are a lot of crazy people out there; 4) Roswell makes a big chunk of money off its UFO/alien image. As for #4, why else would we have gone to Roswell, except perhaps as a bathroom stop on our way to Carlsbad Caverns?
As soon as you hit the edge of Roswell's business district, there is no question what the big draw is.
Like almost all Roswell tourists, we beelined for the International UFO Museum and Research Center.
The museum also includes re-creations of possible scenarios:
One of the things that was most interesting to me was the explosion not of the alien ship, but of the pop culture related to UFOs that happened after 1947. Movies about space aliens and space travel started popping up within a few years. According to this museum, there have been over 600 feature films with space alien themes (e.g., Close Encounters of the Third Kind, E.T., Star Wars, Star Trek).
Along with the well-known movies, there have been plenty I have never hear of, such as The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951). It starred a giant, soft-spoken robot named Gort.
Gort and one of his co-stars are on display in the museum.
The most hilarious section of the museum was the speculative morgue/pathology lab dioramas. The pictures speak for themselves.
Signage at the museum notes, "The Mayan people were consumed with worship of the heavens. They calculated and created a solar calendar that is so accurate that it predicts today's eclipses within 13 seconds of their happening. Perhaps, their obsession with the skies was a result of extraterrestrial beings taking these people under their wings--literally."
Apparently UFOs have visited the native population as well.
Did you know there are SEVEN LEVELS of UFO sightings? Neither did I.
Well, that was fun (and a place I probably only need to experience once in my life).
Back on the street, we had a few more "close encounters of the alien kind."
On the other hand, we ate a bowl of ice cream at Baskin-Robbins that was out-of-this-world good.
Roswell is the county seat of Chavez County, and even the county courthouse is covered in the popular Alien Green (although it was completed in 1911, 36 years before the UFO crash).
On our way out of town, we passed by this colorful carved Indian, chained to a hotel sign--a sad image indeed.
. . . and this alien pioneer.
Love your post. You paid much more attention and got much more out of it than I did. I enjoyed the experience of being there, for its quirkiness. Loved all the strange green aliens all over town. Thanks for paying such good attention and helping to know what I missed!
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