The Continuing
Search for the Roswell Archaeologists: Closing the Circle
by Thomas J. Carey
IUR, Volume 19, Number 1; January/February 1994
In the November/December issue I examined and rejected the
Barney Barnett story of archaeologists at the site of a downed
UFO on
the Plains of San Agustin in July 1947. There is no corroborating
testimony for this event. But by rejecting the Barnett story,
should we
altogether reject the notion of archaeologists as witnesses
to a 1947
crash/retrieval in New Mexico?
Not just yet. In their 1991 book UFO Crash at Roswell, Kevin
Randle and Don Schmitt devoted an entire chapter (pp. 113-117)
to the
search for the Roswell archaeologists. In addition to discussing
the
Barney Barnett story (which they have since rejected along
with a Plains
of San Agustin UFO crash), the authors mention three other
accounts, one
firsthand and two secondhand, describing apparent archaeological
witnesses to UFO crash/retrievals. If not for these, I would
have to
conclude that the search was over and go home. The remainder
of this
article focuses on these additional archaeological witnesses
as well as
the case for a crash/retrieval in southeastern New Mexico
during the
first week of July 1947.
CACTUS JACK
A secondhand source named Iris Foster came forward as a
result
of seeing the Unsolved Mysteries show that featured the Roswell
case and
was interviewed by Randle and Schmitt for their 1991 book.
The former
owner of a cafe near Taos, New Mexico, she related that during
the early
1970s (well before the publication of The Roswell Incident
in 1980 by
William Moore and Charles Berlitz) a fellow known locally
as Cactus Jack
used to frequent her establishment for coffee. He told a tale
of being
"out there when the spaceship came down" and seeing
a "round object but
not real big" and dead alien bodies "laid out."
He described their blood
as being "like tar" which stained their silver uniforms.
I interviewed
Iris Foster in 1991, 1992, and 1993 to learn more, if possible,
about
Cactus Jack. He was, according to Foster, "like a character
out of a
grade-B Western" with white hair and beard who could
have passed for a
prospector or a pothunter (an amateur archaeologist) as far
as she knew.
His real name was Larry Campbell and he lived out of a camper
when she
knew him in Taos. She did not know the where or the when of
his story
but assumed that it happened a long time ago, most probably
in the
1940s, so it is merely an assumption that he may have been
talking about
the Roswell events of July 1947.
In talking with Foster, I learned that she had a sister,
Peggy
Sparks, also of Taos, who remembered Cactus Jack. She recalled
that he
appeared to be in his late 50s when he was a customer at her
sister's
cafe. This means that he would have been in his mid or late
30s in 1947
and, were he alive today, would be in his late 70s or early
80s. In
fact, Sparks stated further that Cactus Jack may indeed still
be alive
because, according to a lawyer friend in Taos, he was last
seen in 1990
in the town of Las Vegas, New Mexico. She understood that
he was burned
in a fire in his camper and wound up in a state-run nursing
home there.
Using various techniques, I identified not one but two "Cactus
Jacks" residing in the state of New Mexico: One living
"somewhere in New
Mexico" according to his Albuquerque dentist son, and
the other
currently incarcerated in a federal prison near the Texas
border for
drug running. Unfortunately (or fortunately), neither's real
name was
Larry Campbell. As I later found out, the name Cactus Jack
is commonly
used in the Southwest to describe any number of scruffy-looking
characters who look like they just stumbled out of the desert
or from
under their favorite rock, take your pick. My own mental image
of Cactus
Jack falls somewhere between Walter Brennan's portrayal of
Granpappy
Amos on the old The Real McCoys TV show ("Li'l Luke!
Li'l Luke!") and
Roy Rogers' hirsute sidekick, Gabby Hayes ("You, betch'm,
Roy!").
Following up on the lead that Cactus Jack may have been
burned
in a fire in 1989 or 1990, Kevin Randle spent a day in Las
Vegas, New
Mexico, checking the local newspaper for a death notice or
a reference
pertaining to such a fire. Nothing. After several failed attempts,
I was
finally able to get someone at the state-run nursing home
in Las Vegas
to check their records to see if a Larry Campbell was ever
a resident
there. After a few minutes' wait, they responded that they
had no record
of such a person there.
There matters lay for the better part of last year until,
following a talk on Roswell that I gave in Alamogordo in November
1993,
a member of the audience came up and introduced himself as
someone who
might be able help me find the Roswell archaeologists. Although
he was
not specific, he said that he had sophisticated sources and
databases at
his disposal that might be brought to bear in the search.
Not wishing to
give away the store by divulging any of the archaeologists
on my hot
list, I gave him the task of trying to locate or otherwise
determine the
current status of the elusive Cactus Jack/Larry Campbell.
There is
nothing to report as yet, but one can hope that something
will turn up
one way or the other. Realistically speaking, however, Cactus
Jack is an
investigator's worst-case scenario and a long shot at best:
no known
residence, no known employer no known friends or relatives,
nothing.
Chance may intervene as it has already done elsewhere in this
endeavor,
but I do not expect further developments in the Cactus Jack
saga.
THE DYING ARCHAEOLOGIST
After viewing the Unsolved Mysteries TV show in the fall
of 1989
that featured the Roswell incident, a former nurse at the
St. Petersburg
(Florida) Community Hospital named Mary Ann Gardner called
the show to
relate a story that was told to her in 1975 by a terminally
ill cancer
patient who was in her charge at the time. Up until the time
that she
saw the Unsolved Mysteries show, the startled nurse had considered
the
dying woman's story as nothing more than a medication-induced
flight of
fancy, but the woman' s story bore enough resemblances to
the story on
Unsolved Mysteries that she decided to call the show with
it.
According to the dying woman (Gardner cannot recall her name
after so many years), she was a friend of someone who was
part of a
group which was out rock hunting or looking for fossils. The
woman
related that she was not supposed to be with them but went
along anyway.
Gardner referred to the group as archaeologists but, based
upon the
available testimony, they would more likely have been geologists
or
paleontologists interested in rocks or fossils - not archaeologists
who
are interested in artifacts. Whether they were professionals,
amateurs,
or students cannot be ascertained from what is currently known.
Also
unknown is the time frame of the story, but Gardner's sense was that it
must have happened in the late 1940s because the woman did
say that she
was a student at that time. The woman appeared to be in her
70s in 1975,
which would mean that she would have been in her 40s if it
occurred in
the 1940s.
To continue, as the group was exploring the.landscape, they
came
upon a crashed craft of unknown type with bodies lying about.
"They were
little people!" She described them as being small in
stature with "big
heads and slanted eyes" and wearing silvery flight suits.
While the
group was examining the bodies, units of the U.S. military
arrived on
the scene, secured the area and swore everyone to secrecy
- echoes of
the Barney Barnett story. Even as the woman was telling the
story in
1975, according to Gardner, she kept looking around apprehensively
to
see if anyone was listening. "They said that they can
find you," she
whispered to Gardner. "Who can find you?" the nurse
replied. "The
government! . . . So, please, please don't tell anyone that
I told you."
The terror that the woman still displayed, given her condition
and the
passage of so many years, made a lasting impression on Gardner.
The location of the crash scene, according to Gardner's
best
recollection of what the woman had said, was Mexico. Whether
or not the
dying woman meant New Mexico instead of Mexico is unknown,
but Gardner
is sure that the woman did in fact say "Mexico,"
which brings to mind
another UFO crash/retrieval that allegedly occurred in Mexico
just
across the border from Del Rio, Texas, in December 1950. The
crash
supposedly resulted in a jurisdictional dispute between the
United
States and Mexican governments, with the United States winning
out and
sending military units into Mexico to recover the vehicle
and bodies.
After straining several times to hear Gardner's testimony
in her
tape-recorded interview with Kevin Randle (dominated by an
annoyingly
loud buzzing noise) and after reviewing a transcript of the
interview,
it is my conclusion that the dying woman was herself not an
archaeologist, geologist, or a paleontologist but a friend
of someone in
the latter category.
If the location of the crash was Mexico, then it does not
pertain to the events of July 5, 1947, near Roswell but most
likely to a
later crash/retrieval near the Texas/Mexico border. On the
other hand,
if she did mean to say New Mexico, perhaps I should have been
scouring
the geological and paleontological literature instead of archaeological
literature, a daunting task.
Don Schmitt has already taken a trip to the Community Hospital
in St. Petersburg, Florida, to ascertain the name of women
who died of
cancer there in 1975 with the hope of having Gardner look
at the list of
names and pick out the right one. At the last minute, he was
denied
access by hospital administrators to pertinent records that
might have
provided us with the woman's name and, thus, the starting
point to
investigate and verify her story.
Over the course of the past two years, I have written Gardner
several times in an attempt to set up a telephone interview
with her. On
the most recent occasion I provided her with a list of names,
one of
which might possibly be the dying cancer patient, but to date
she has
not responded to any of my letters. Her phone number is also
now
unlisted, so I cannot call her. It is clear to me that for
reasons
unknown she does not choose to cooperate with the investigation
or be
bothered about this story anymore. Barring a change of attitude
on her
part or the hospital in St. Petersburg, I see no way that
the
investigation into the dying cancer patient's identity can
proceed
beyond what is already known.
THE ANONYMOUS ARCHAEOLOGIST
On February 15, 1990, Kevin Randle received an unsolicited
telephone call at his Cedar Rapids home from a gentleman professing
to
be one of the archaeologists in the party that witnessed the
crashed UFO
and dead alien bodies in New Mexico in 1947. (What is interesting
here
is that the individual telephoned Randle, who has an unlisted
number
known only to a few friends and associates; callers to the
Unsolved
Mysteries TV show who offer information pertaining to one
of the
featured stories are not given numbers to call or places to
write, but
their names and numbers are passed on to the show's participants.)
The
anonymous caller said that he had gotten Randle's number from
a woman in
Albuquerque who had also called the show earlier to offer
her assistance
in trying to find the archaeologists.
The woman is the niece of a deceased Santa Fe archaeologist
who
had worked at Los Alamos during World War II. After the war
he worked
for a government agency (allegedly the Department of Energy,
but this
wasn't established until 1977) that assigned him to investigate
UFO
reports among his other duties and to travel periodically
to Washington,
D.C., for debriefings on the subject. The woman, an archaeologist
in her
own right, was interviewed by both Randle and me several times
and has
been absolutely no help to the investigation. It has even
occurred to me
that, based upon what I already know about the case with regard
to the
archaeologists, she has been trying to lead the investigation
astray.
When confronted, she has stonewalled and as a result is no
longer
cooperating with the investigation. Truly bizarre.
For his part, Randle, who usually tape records (the annoying
buzz notwithstanding) his interviews, did not record this
one - much to
my chagrin, as I could have tried to match the voice of the
anonymous
caller against the sixty or so archaeologists that I have
talked to in
the course of the investigation. In fact, I may have already
interviewed
the anonymous archaeologist without knowing it. Randle did,
however,
immediately commit to paper his recollection of the interview.
To date,
I have read and reread the transcript of that conversation
at least a
hundred times. The following is taken from Randle's transcript
of his
conversation with the anonymous archaeologist.
According to the caller, he and some colleagues had been
driving
on back roads and across open country looking for signs of
pre-Contact
Indian occupation. At this point Randle tried to trip up the
caller by
asking him about the Plains of San Agustin, but the caller
said that,
no, they had been in the area near the Capitan Mountains,
in Lincoln
County in east-central New Mexico. When they came up over
a rise, they
saw about half a mile away in the arroyo below, something
that looked
like a fat aircraft fuselage without wings. He said that he
saw no sign
of a dome, portholes, hatch, or markings on it. He said that
they then
drove down toward it and stopped. There was another man already
there
(Barney Barnett? Cactus Jack? or another eyewitness that Randle
and
Schmitt have recently identified?) who was standing close
to something
lying on the ground.
His attention at first was drawn to the craft because it
was
fatter and more rounded than an airplane, perhaps disc-shaped.
He
couldn't be certain, however, because it was so badly damaged.
He stated
that he saw three bodies, and he went on to describe the one
closest to
the man. It was small, but had a big head for its size and
big eyes. Its
head was turned to one side so that it was hard to see its
facial
features. He did say that there was a mouth but could not
recall a nose.
The creature was wearing a silvery-colored flight suit and
had one of
its arms bent at an odd angle as if it had been broken in
the crash.
Reminiscent of the Barney Barnett story, the caller then
related
that they had not been there very long when the military arrived,
ordered the civilians away and to stand facing away from the
craft and
told them not to tell anyone what they had seen - that it
was a matter
of national security. An officer took down their names and
where they
were going to school and then threatened them with a loss
of
government-sponsored grants or funds if they talked. They
were then
escorted from the site and taken to a nearby road by armed
soldiers and
told to drive in an easterly direction.
That was all that the caller knew or cared to divulge to
Randle
at the time. He said that he was a professional man and feared
that he
would be laughed at if he mentioned this story to his colleagues,
but he
wanted to share it with someone who would listen. He then
said that he
had told Randle all that he wanted to and hung up.
We can conclude from the foregoing that the anonymous caller
was
not alone, that they were driving in a vehicle, probably a
car, and were
not on foot. Of equal importance to the ongoing investigation
was the
caller's statement that they had been operating in the vicinity
of the
Capitan Mountains in Lincoln County and not on the Plains
of San Agustin
in west-central New Mexico. We may also assume that in the
ensuing
years, he has not told the story to any of his professional
colleagues.
CHANGING FOCUS
In their 1991 book, Randle and Schmitt placed the UFO crash
site
on the Foster/Brazel ranch in Lincoln County about 2-3 miles
from the
debris field, located southeast of the town of Corona. If
the anonymous
caller was correct, then the impact site was actually much
closer to
Roswell than previously thought. In the last two years, Randle
and
Schmitt have been able to pinpoint the exact location of the
alleged
impact site with the aid of separate eyewitnesses who took
them there:
it is located approximately 30 miles north-northwest of Roswell
in
Chaves County. These developments have the added benefit of
answering
the question as to why Chaves County sheriff George Wilcox
was
dispatched to the crash site and not his counterpart in Lincoln
County.
There never has been, to my knowledge, any dispute as to
the
location on the sheep ranch near Corona where ranch foreman
William W.
(Mac) Brazel discovered a field full of strange, metallic
debris
scattered about; but nothing resembling the main body of the
craft or
its occupants, if any, was reported discovered there. In their
1980
book, Berlitz and Moore suggested that the impact site containing
the
main body of the craft and its dead occupants was located
on the Plains
of San Agustin, based upon the Barney Barnett story, because
that was
all that they had at the time to link the debris field with
a story of a
crashed UFO.
In 1990, Randle and Schmitt moved the impact site from the
Plains to the Foster/Brazel ranch and even brought along Barney
Barnett
as well, based upon the lack of witnesses to a Plains event
and the
testimony of the anonymous archaeologist. By 1993, based upon
eyewitness
testimony, Randle and Schmitt have moved the impact site to
its present
location just outside of Roswell.
GEOGRAPHY AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF
SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO
Geologically, geographically, and archaeologically, the
state of
New Mexico can be divided roughly in half. The western half
is dominated
by the high country of the Colorado Plateau and numerous small
mountain
ranges surrounding the hospitable Rio Grande River Valley
which runs
north to south through the entire state. It was here (and
in eastern
Arizona) that the Desert Cultures of the Southwest - the Anasazi,
Hohokam, and Mogollon - took up a more sedentary and agriculturally
based way of life (800-130O A.D.) than their big- and small-game
hunting
ancestors.
Since the 1870s, archaeologists specializing in southwestern
archaeology have concentrated their efforts in this area,
a rich one
artifactually and relatively speaking, to understand the chronology,
diversity, and relationships between these competing cultures.
Copious
remains of settled villages, the pueblos, along with ancient
religious
artifacts make this region an archaeological feast. Thus,
archaeologists
working out of such notable and respected institutions as
the University
of New Mexico (Albuquerque), the University of Arizona (Tucson),
and the
Laboratory of Anthropology/Museum of New Mexico (Santa Fe)
have
concentrated their efforts in western New Mexico and eastern
Arizona -
not in eastern New Mexico. This fact became quite evident
to me when I
was investigating the case for a UFO crash/retrieval on the
Plains of
San Agustin in west-central New Mexico.
Southeastern New Mexico, on the other hand, is dominated
by a
vast, flat, dry and desolate plain called the Llano Estacado
(staked or
stockaded plain) which covers about 60,000 square miles (400
miles north
to south and 150 miles east to west) in eastern New Mexico
and western
Texas, an area known geologically as the Permian Basin. In
a recent
filmed documentary about the Roswell UFO crash, this area
was described
as a place that is "west of lost and north of nowhere"
(UFO Secret: The
Roswell Crash, New Century Productions, 1993). Perhaps, more
graphically, it has also been referred to as the "Sahara
of North
America."
Narrowing the focus even more, the area between the Pecos
River
in the east and the mountains to the west is semiarid country
of gently
rounding hills except near watercourses where they become
steeper. The
terrain is cut by numerous dry canyons, called draws or arroyos,
which
join to form wider drainages emptying into still larger drainages
or
rivers. These draws once had a constant supply of water, but
the failure
of the springs supplying them has caused them to dry up. Today
they
carry only flood waters after heavy rains. The region boasts
sparse
vegetation that consists mostly of short grasses, and various
species of
yucca, juniper, and mesquite - except along rivers such as
the Pecos and
the Hondo where walnut, cottonwood, and scrub oak can be found.
Unlike
the Rio Grande Valley and the mountains to the west where
Indians
settled and lived for centuries prior to the arrival of whites,
southeastern New Mexico saw only nomadic bands of Plains Indians
who
came to these barren lands to hunt antelope and buffalo.
The archaeology of southeastern New Mexico reflects its
harsh
topography. Habitation sites such as those found in the western
part of
the state are relatively rare, far outnumbered by temporary
encampments
that archaeologists call "kill sites" where game
animals were killed and
eaten. Such sites usually contain projectile points, scrapers,
and other
tools left over from hunting activities, but structures such
as the
pueblos of western New Mexico are rare. Archaeologists who
come into
this area are usually looking for Clovis points and other
Paleo-Indian
artifacts. The Clovis site, located at Blackwater Draw between
Clovis
and Portales, is the earliest uncontested Paleo-Indian site
in the New
World (some 11,000 years ago).
ARCHAEOLOGICAL ACTIVITIES IN
SOUTHEASTERN NEW MEXICO
Compared to the archaeological goings-on in the western
part of
the state, a literature search focusing on the southeastern
part of the
state has yielded results almost as barren as its landscape.
I have had
more than one archaeologist tell me that, besides containing
nothing
much of archaeological interest, the area was just too hot
for field
work. Be that as it may, a few hardy souls have ventured into
the area
to do archaeology. Alfred V. Kidder, Sr., of the Carnegie
Institute of
New York, worked in the Pecos Valley during the 1920s, while
Henry
Percival Mera of Santa Fe and C. B. Cosgrove conducted some
investigations in the general area mostly in the 1930s. All
three are
long dead.
In the early 1940s a young archaeology student named Donald
Lehmer conducted fieldwork on the Jornada Branch of the Mogollon
in the
Tularosa Basin near Alamogordo. The war interrupted, and the
results of
the work were not published until 1948. Lehmer has proved
to be most
elusive in trying to identify his whereabouts in 1947. He
has worked
variously in New Mexico, Arizona, Texas, the Dakotas, Nebraska
and
Mexico. There may have been other places, but that is all
that I can
come up with at present. He was a faculty member at a small
college in
Nebraska until he died as a result of complications after
an auto
accident in 1975. His wife was also killed in the crash.
Although I still have not been able to pin down his whereabouts
during the summer months of 1947, I did locate his daughter.
A former
archaeology student at the University of New Mexico, Megan
Lehmer is now
a practicing psychologist. When asked, she knew nothing of
the alleged
Roswell UFO crash/retrieval and doesn't remember her father
ever
mentioning such a thing. Just to be certain, however, she
promised to
ask other family members for me and let me know the results.
She
contacted me some months later to report that no one in the
family had
ever heard their father mention the case.
I also located and interviewed Lehmer's archaeological
associates including his best friend, Bryant Bannister, and
his mentor,
the late Emil Haury, both of the University of Arizona. If
Lehmer had
confided to anyone outside of his immediate family, these
would be the
ones he would have told if he had been involved in the events
near
Roswell. Both Bannister and Haury said that Lehmer never mentioned
such
a thing to them at any time when they knew him. All who knew
of Lehmer's
activities stated that, as far as they knew, he did not return
to the
Tularosa Basin after World War II.
The archaeological literature revealed only one other major
effort in southeastern New Mexico during the period ten years
before to
ten years after 1947 (my literature search encompassed this
extended
period to give me a better picture of which archaeologists
were
interested in the area both before and after the alleged UFO
crash).
Jane Holden Kelly, a West Texas archaeological student who
would go on
to get her doctorate at Harvard based upon her researches
in
southeastern New Mexico, conducted an archaeological investigation
of
the Sierra Blanca region of Lincoln and Chaves Counties. I
located Kelly
at the University of Calgary in Canada and have exchanged
letters and
interviewed her on several occasions. She acknowledged being
in the area
with her father, W. Curry Holden, of Texas Tech in Lubbock,
in the late
1940s, but she says that she did not start her fieldwork at
Sierra
Blanca until 1950. Her work was published in a 1966 monograph,
which
enabled me to determine who helped her in the fieldwork and
contact a
number of them. They all verified the fact that her work did
not
commence at Sierra Blanca until 1950. All, including Kelly,
deny knowing
anything at all about a UFO crash/retrieval near Roswell.
I was able to identify a number of archaeologists who spent
periods of time in southeastern New Mexico working on smaller
projects
during the 1940s and 1950s. Arthur Jelinek worked in both
the Hondo
River Valley and in the Middle Pecos. Fred Wendorff conducted
salvage
archaeology in Lincoln County. William Roosa worked in Feather
Cave.
None confessed knowing anything at all about the subject of
this paper.
Each told the same story. "I don't know anything, you
want to talk
to..." (pick your favorite archaeologist and fill in
the blank).
LUCK BE A LADY TONIGHT
At just about this point in the search, I was starting to
get
that familiar depressed feeling that one gets when effort
is not
rewarded with success. Hours and hours of library research,
hundreds of
phone calls, and nothing to show for it. All the while knowing
that the
"anonymous archaeologist" was out there somewhere,
perhaps chucking to
himself. Surely, somebody had to know something. Either that
or I had to
face the inevitable conclusion that archaeologists - professional,
amateur, or student - were not involved in the Roswell crash/retrieval.
I was convinced that something happened close to Roswell.
Unlike the
Plains of San Agustin scenario, there were too many firsthand
witnesses
on and off the record to conclude that something of major
significance
did not occur in southeastern New Mexico in early July 1947.
In science, the simplest hypothesis is the one that must be
accepted by the scientific community until new data forces
a
reevaluation. Of all competing theories put forth to explain
the twin
events that took place near Corona and Roswell, the explanation
that
accounts for most of the known facts is that an alien spaceship
with
crew partially exploded, crashed, and was recovered by units
of the
United States Army. All other posited explanations (V-2 rocket,
Japanese
fugo balloon bomb, experimental aircraft) have been investigated
thoroughly and found lacking. The least credible of these
was the
military's explanation that it was nothing more than a weather
balloon.
They say that effort breeds luck. Well, if that is true I
was
long overdue for some. In the fall of 1992, I received a phone
call from
a new MUFON member in my area. She was a Temple University
student whose
main ufological interest was the abduction phenomenon. We
talked for a
while and were just about to conclude the conversation when
she asked,
"Are you interested in the Roswell case?" At first
I only professed a
mild interest in it. I thought that I must be dreaming when
she said
that she worked part-time with a friend in Philadelphia (as
it turned
out, she works two blocks from my city office!) whose father
"has
pictures of a crashed UFO taken in New Mexico." I asked
how he came by
these pictures. She said, "He was there!" I asked
in what capacity. "My
friend said that her father was an archaeologist." My
head was spinning.
Surely this was a setup for the Bloopers and Practical Jokes
TV show?
I have had false leads before that, after checking them
out,
made me feel foolish. As it turned out this one was less than
promised
but more than I had before. A telephone interview with my
MUFON friend's
coworker cleared it up. There were no pictures, of course,
but the
woman's story had a ring to it that I felt was promising.
She told me
that when she and her sister were children growing up in Nebraska
in the
early 1950s, her father (not an archaeologist but a vertebrate
paleontologist) told them on several occasions a story about
a crashed
UFO in New Mexico. He also told them of a big government coverup
about
it that included photographs, hardware, and alien bodies.
The sisters
did not think much of their father's story until they saw
the Roswell
case portrayed on the Unsolved Mysteries show a few years
ago. The woman
then related her reaction to me as one of jumping up from
her seat and
exclaiming, "Look! That's what Daddy was talking about!"
I was able to
confirm her account with her sister who still lives in Nebraska.
Was
their father still alive, and could I talk to him?
C. Bertrand Schultz, professor emeritus of geology
(paleontology) at the University of Nebraska, is now 86 years
old. His
academic credentials are impressive, and I would categorize
him as a
heavyweight in the field of New World paleontology, especially
with
regard to faunal remains associated with Paleo-Indian archaeological
sites. He proved to be one of the most difficult people I
have ever
interviewed. Not that he was a hostile witness - he wasn't,
but, as with
some people of advanced years, it was hard to keep him focused
on the
subject at hand. In order to get a minute's worth of testimony
relating
to the reason for the interview, I had to endure an hour's
worth of his
life's story, which was certainly an interesting one (among
other
adventures, he served as a scientific adviser to novelist
James
Michener). I interviewed him over the telephone several times
in 1992
and 1993, and Kevin Randle videotaped an interview with him
in 1993.
In 1947, according to the literature, Schultz and his cohorts
at
the University of Nebraska were commencing excavation of a
promising new
Paleo-Indian site located in southwestern Nebraska called
the Lime Creek
Site. Schultz was able to tell me that he recalls driving
down to
Roswell that summer to conduct some business. He said that
as he
approached Roswell he noticed military personnel standing
by certain
roads which were cordoned off. Other than a mild curiosity
as to what
was going on, he did not pay much attention to this because,
"I had
other things on my mind." He continued on to Roswell
where, he says, he
met up at some point with an archaeologist who was well known
in that
area of New Mexico and who told him the reason for the military
cordon.
In fact, the archaeologist told him the entire story of the
Roswell UFO
crash/retrieval, because he had been there! The archaeologist
told him
that everyone at first thought that it was a Russian device,
but that it
wasn't. Schultz also said that he remembers hearing about
the case on
the radio and reading about it in the newspaper at that time.
After several interviews with Schultz, I am not convinced
that
he met the archaeologist in Roswell when he said he did, right
after the
crash/retrieval. During his visit with Schultz, Kevin Randle
was able to
locate Schultz's field notes, which place him at the Lime
Creek site, in
Nebraska, on July 10, 1947, or only a few days after he says
that he was
in Roswell. Unfortunately, Randle was not able to find any
notes for the
prior week's activities that might have confirmed his whereabouts
one
way or the other. However, our investigation has been able
to place both
Schultz and the archaeologist in question at a meeting of
the American
Anthropological Association, December 28-31, in December in
Albuquerque.
It was during the course of that meeting that Schultz may
have been told
about the Roswell events by the archaeologist. A connection
between the
two was not only established but documented. Could Schultz
tell us who
the man was?
W. Curry Holden, professor emeritus of history at Texas
Tech
University, was born in 1896. Although his degrees were in
history, he
had an interest in the ethnology and archaeology of his native
West
Texas. As a result, he was a primary figure in the development
of
anthropology in West Texas during the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s
and
developed the combined History and Anthropology Department
at Texas
Tech. Although his main interests were West Texas history
and prehistory
and, later, the Yaqui Indians of Sonora, he was also no stranger
to
eastern New Mexico where he conducted excavations in the 1930s
and 1940s
in the Pecos area near Santa Fe. After World War II, his attention
turned to southeastern New Mexico when he was shown an archaeological
site (the Bonnell site) in the Hondo River Valley by his good
friend
Peter Hurd, a world-renowned western artist. In 1950 Texas
Tech moved
the headquarters of its archaeological field school to Roswell
under the
direction of Holden, to better supervise and coordinate the
excavation
of the Bonnell site. A check with Holden's colleagues leaves
no doubt in
my mind that Curry Holden was known to have been in southeastern
New
Mexico on a regular basis during the late 1940s doing archaeology.
This
was also confirmed by Holden's archaeologist daughter, Jane
Holden Kelly, mentioned above, who was usually with him at that time.
Having linked Holden to Bertrand Schultz and placed him
in the
general time frame of the late 1940s, it was time to seek
an answer to
the critical question: Was Curry Holden in the area about
30 miles
north-northwest of Roswell on the morning of July 5, 1947,
where he made
the discovery of his life? He certainly could have been there,
but was
he, as Schultz claimed, actually there? Jane Holden Kelly
thought that
he would have been near Pecos at the Arrowhead Ruin that summer.
Holden's closest colleagues, such as Texas Tech's William
Pearce and
William Meyer-Oaks, seemingly confirmed this by stating that
not only
did Holden never mention this story to them, but they had
never heard of
the Roswell story at all before I called them.
This made me uneasy because just about everyone that I talked
to
in New Mexico, eastern Arizona, and western Texas had at least
heard of
it. It should also be noted that when I was talking to Pearce
his entire
tone of voice changed when I mentioned the word "Roswell."
He began
answering my questions with a simple "yes" or "no"
as if he did not want
to offer anything further and be drawn into a discussion about
it. Mrs.
Holden, who usually accompanied her husband during his field
excavations
in a support role, said that we were mistaken.
Kevin Randle, during one of his many trips to New Mexico,
took a
detour to Lubbock to visit the Southwest Collection at Texas
Tech which
houses Curry Holden's papers. Randle discovered a number of
interesting
documents, among them a course listing for the Summer Session
of 1947 at
Texas Tech which clearly shows that Holden was not, as his
daughter
stated, at the Arrowhead Ruin near Pecos that summer but rather
was in
Lubbock teaching a history course that ran from June to July.
Actually,
William Pearce was leading the dig at Arrowhead that summer.
It is not
too big a leap in logic, in my opinion, to postulate that
he could have
made the relatively short trip from Lubbock to Roswell (about
150
miles), especially on a long weekend (4th of July), to conduct
an
impromptu, brief field trip for whatever purpose. No problem
at all.
His wife would not have been with him for such a short trip,
especially since she was preparing for a wedding to take place
the
following week. Randle also found receipts for Holden's bank
deposits.
They also lend support to our conclusion that he was in Lubbock
that
summer and not off on an extended dig somewhere. The bank
statements
also show that Holden made a huge deposit of $4,834 to his
account on
July 15, 1947, which makes one wonder how he came by such
a large sum
compared to his other bank deposits. Just as interesting as
what he
found was what Randle didn't find. The archive included all
of Holden's
income tax records for all the years from the 1930s through
the 1970s -
except for one year, 1947! Income tax records can reveal much
about a
person's lifestyle, contacts and associates, and activities
during the
course of a year. The archivist thought it was odd that only
one year
was missing but could offer no explanation other than "the
family still
controls what goes into and what comes out of the collection."
During
one conversation with the archivist, I noticed that his voice
was lower
than usual and asked him if he felt uncomfortable talking
about Curry
Holden for some reason. He answered: "Yes, Mrs. Holden
is sitting twenty
feet away." We had in hand enough circumstantial information
to suggest
that Holden could have been where Schultz said he was on that
fateful
day, but nothing definite.
In November 1992, Kevin Randle made another trip to Lubbock,
Texas, for the express purpose of interviewing W. Curry Holden
in his
home. Prior to all of this, I could only associate Lubbock
with the
Lubbock Lights of 1951 and with Buddy Holly and the Crickets.
Randle had
called prior to his visit and had found Mrs. Holden defensive
and
unresponsive. But there was something in the way she answered
his
questions that indicated to Randle, an experienced interviewer,
that
there might be something worth I pursuing further. To his
credit as an
intrepid interviewer, Randle showed up at the house unannounced
and was
granted an interview with the professor. At age 96, Curry
Holden was
frail but alert. Mrs. Holden, if not hostile, was protective
of her
fading husband. During the interview, Randle brought up the
subject of
Roswell on three separate occasions in different ways to try
to elicit,
perhaps, different responses. On each occasion, Holden replied
as
coherently as possible, given his advanced age: "I was
involved . . . I
was there and I saw everything." Randle was not able
to "flesh out" the
details of Holden's experience at the impact site during this
interview,
so he made plans to return in the spring of 1993 to tape-record
a more
extensive interview when the couple would be more comfortable.
W. Curry Holden passed away on April 21, 1993, at the age
of 96
before Randle had a chance to return.
There it was: firsthand confirmation by an archaeologist
of his
participation in the crash/retrieval events taking place outside
Roswell
in early July 1947. Kevin Randle was the only investigator
to interview
Holden about Roswell and it is upon his notes, recollections,
and
impressions of that interview that we must rely to judge the
veracity of
Holden's revelation. According to Randle, Holden knew exactly
what he
was being asked and each time responded clearly and concisely.
"Did you
believe him when he said that he was involved in Roswell?"
I asked
Kevin. Without hesitation, his reply was a resounding "Absolutely."
No doubt, there will be those who will contend that, because
of
his age, anything that Holden said in the last years of his
life is
suspect as to its basis in reality. In fact, it has already
started. His
daughter, who has lived in Canada for many years and who was
wrong about
where her father was in the summer of 1947, feels that he
may have made
up the story just to please Randle. Her stepmother, Mrs. Holden,
with
whom she was never on speaking terms, feels that her husband
may have
been "confused." I was not there, so I must rely
on Randle, as we all
must in the end.
I can say this, however, with conviction. The archaeologists
involved in this story did not have to be threatened to remain
silent.
They would have remained silent anyway, and have done so to
protect
their academic and professional reputations. The "anonymous
archaeologist" alluded to this when he said that his
colleagues would
laugh if he told them, and I have recently located a source
at the
University of Pennsylvania who is familiar with the story
but refuses to
name names to protect professional reputations, even among
the deceased.
He says that he would like to have a future in archaeology.
THE FUTURE INVESTIGATION
There are still a number of loose ends. I am focusing my
effort
on trying to obtain various corroboration for Curry Holden's
involvement
in the Roswell story. What was he doing that day? Who was
with him?
Where were they from? What exactly happened? Was Curry Holden
the
anonymous archaeologist? No, he wasn't, but that individual
is still out
there somewhere, laughing perhaps, but I am working on a scenario
that
includes both Holden and him. If and when I find him, I must
also square
the anonymous caller's account with those of other firsthand
eyewitnesses, military and civilian, at the impact site. However,
I am
running out of both time and archaeologists. As my list of
people to
contact dwindles, many of them pass on to that Great Kiva
in the sky.
There is no more time left to lose.
---------------
Thomas J. Carey, a CUFOS field investigator and state section
director for MUFON, has a master's degree in physical anthropology.
The author wishes to express his sincere appreciation to William
Moore for sharing his investigative notes and to Kevin Randle
and
Don Schmitt for their encouragement and help in the ongoing
search
for the Roswell archaeologists.
Roswell
Archaeologists
by Kevin
D. Randle
Posted
with Author's Permission
It
was Barnett who introduced the concept of archaeologists into
the Roswell crash case. Or rather, it was those repeating
the Barnett story since Barnett died before any researchers
began to investigate. (1) It was Jean Maltais who said they
were affliliated with the University of Pennsylvania.(2) The
stage was set for an area of investigation that would bear
little fruit for more than a decade.
Bill Moore, writing in his 1985
paper about the status of his Roswell investigation, said
that the link to the University of Pennsylvania had been confirmed.
(3) He offered nothing in the way of evidence that it had
been confirmed, just that statement.
As our investigation began in 1989,
there was no reason to assume that the Barnett testimony was
in error in any fashion. The conventional wisdom accepted
the Barnett story at face value, and the search for the archaeologists,
potential first-hand witnesses to the craft and bodies, was
launched. Following the well-mapped route, we began the task
of learning who was working in the state of New Mexico in
July 1947, with an emphasis
on those working in the area of the Plains of San Agustin.
Records were available listing
who was where and what was being done. The archaeological
literature provided additional clues, and while some of the
records available at the Museum of New Mexico, and the Laboratories
of Anthropology both in Santa Fe and the University of New
Mexico in Albuquerque, might be incomplete, the articles contained
aknowledgernent sections listing local help and amateurs who
assisted on the projects. In other words, there was a paper
trail that would lead back to the archaeologists if any had
been involved.
The archaeologists who were working
on the Plains or near the Plains in July have been identified
and eliminated. All of them have denied knowledge of anything
happening there. (4) Friends of them were located and questioned,
in the hope of a lead, but none developed. The only conclusion
that could be drawn was that none of them had been involved.
Given the situation, it would be
easy to decide that the story of archaeologists had somehow
been created between what Barnett actually said and what those
he spoke to heard. The Barnett end of the story was created
from second-hand testimony, and it is possible that something
had been misunderstood. Since no one can now interview Barnett
to ask him, investigators were forced to speculate about his
testimony
It would have been easy to ignore
the archaeologist connection if not for two additional facts.
On February 15, 1990, just about a year after we began to
actively investigate the Roswell case, a man claiming to be
one of the archaeologists called.
According to him, they had been
surveying the general area looking for "signs of occupation
that predated the arrival of the white man."
That was interesting but entirely
irrelevant. Anyone reading anything about the Roswell case
would have been able to invent that detail. It was clear from
the little that had been said that early-man sites were of
interest to archaeologists working in New Mexico. However,
when asked if he was one of the archaeologists who had been
on the Plains, he said, "No. We were working north of
the Capitan Mountains."
That was the new wrinkle. No one
had suggested that the archaeologists had been working anywhere
other than the Plains of San Agustin. He took it further,
saying they had been driving cross-country, searching for
evidence that the Indians had been in the area in the ancient
past. They came up over a rise, and in the area below, "maybe
half a mile, maybe more... was something that looked like
a crashed airplane without wings." The caller said that
it looked like an aircraft fuselage
that was badly damaged, with no sign of a dome, porthole,
or hatch. (5)
Interestingly, the man said that
he saw another man already there. The archaeologist didn't
pay much attention to the other witness, being so concerned
with the crashed craft that he said he now knew wasn't an
airplane. "It was more rounded." It was so badly
damaged that he couldn't tell if it had been disk-shaped or
not.
He only saw three bodies. They
were small with big heads and big eyes. He said that the head
was turned to one side, so that it was difficult to see the
facial features. The beings were wearing silver-colored flight
suits.
The military arrived moments later.
The archaeologist thought there was an officer with them but
wasn't sure. All were armed with pistols, and a couple of
them had rifles. The archaeologists were ordered away from
the craft and stood facing away from it. The man in charge
told them that it was of vital national interest that they
forget what they had seen. The man then took the names and
school affiliations, telling
them that grant programs and government funding could disappear
if they mentioned what they had seen. (6)
They were then escorted from the
area by armed guards. The archaeologist didn't mention what
happened to the man who had been there first.
The intriguing aspects of the account
were that he didn't report a disk and that they had been escorted
from the site. Although nothing had been published about the
military cordon, the archaeologist described it correctly,
saying that there was an army car sitting at the side of the
road with a couple of soldiers standing near it. They were
turning back everyone who tried to use the road.
It was an interesting story and
the man sounded sincere, but the same could be said for Gerald
Anderson. In fact, from one point of view, the Anderson testimony
was better because it wasn't anonymous and Anderson did supply
some documentation. Only after it all fell apart was the Anderson
story rejected for the hoax it was. (7)
The archaeologist changed, significantly,
the location of the crash site. He placed it in Lincoln County,
near the Brazel ranch. He changed the description of the craft
and mentioned only three bodies. It was interesting corroboration
of part of the Barnett story, but there were enough differences
to suggest the man was relating what he'd seen as opposed
to what he read. Unfortunately, with no other information,
there was little that could be done to investigate.
But that wasn't the only lead to
the archaeologists. After the "Unsolved Mysteries"
broadcast of September 1989, Mary Ann Gardner came forward.
She had been watching the program with her husband when she
turned white and felt her stomach flip over. The story of
the archaeologists was one that she'd heard about ten years
earlier from a dying cancer patient.
The woman (Gardner couldn't remember
her name) had been alone in the hospital. Feeling sorry for
her because she had no visitors, Gardner spent as much time
as she could listening to the woman's stories. Several times
she told about the crash of the ship and the little men she
had seen.
According to Gardner, "Basically...
they had stumbled upon a spaceship of some kind and... there
were bodies on the ground. The army showed up... and chased
them away and... told them that if they ever told anything
about it, that the government could always find them."
Gardner couldn't get the woman
to say much other than that they had been "little people
with big heads," and later she added, "large heads
and large eyes.
Gardner thought that the military
officers had covered the bodies the way police covered accident
victims.
Under questioning, Gardner remembered
that the woman had used the word "spaceship." Gardner
thought that one of the men had entered the ship. He didn't
explore it too far and then "the military was everywhere,
the army people were everywhere."
The woman, according to Gardner,
wasn't supposed to be there. They had been "looking for
fossils. That's what she said. They were hunting rocks and
looking for fossils.... She went with a friend."
Gardner said that when she first
heard the story, in 1976 or 1977, she thought it was the result
of a drug-induced fantasy. The woman was on painkillers because
of her cancer, but she told the story half a dozen times.
It wasn't until the "Unsolved Mysteries" broadcast
that Gardner began to believe it. (8)
Of course, there were things to
be investigated. Gardner remembered which hospital it had
been and was able to provide a time frame for the event. It
seemed simple enough to check the records at the hospital
for the names of women who died of cancer during those years.
The hospital had been sold, but
the hospital administrator said that if someone could get
to Florida, the records would be available. But once that
happened, there was a series of excuses as to why the records
weren't available. Gardner was sure she would recognize the
name if she heard it, but there was no way to learn it through
the hospital.
The next best thing was to check
the obituary pages of the local newspapers, but it was soon
evident that the task was overwhelming. All deaths in the
area, and many from the rest of the state, were listed. All
hospitals were included. Without a little more information,
or another way to limit the search parameters, the task was
impossible. (9)
These two cases, one second hand
and one from an anonymous source, suggested that the Barnett
data-that a group of civilian archaeologists had stumbled
onto the crash site-was accurate. It was clear through research
that the archaeologists had been neither on the Plains of
San Agustin nor from the University of Pennsylvania, and that
was about all that was known.
There was, as outlined elsewhere,
very good evidence that something unusual happened near Roswell.
The Mac Brazel story had a wide range of first-hand sources,
documentation, and corroboration. The Barnett story had none
of these.
Tom Carey, in fact, remembered
the statement made by Moore in 1985 in which Moore claimed
that he had confirmed the connection to the University of
Pennsylvania. He called Moore and learned that he had spoken
to an archaeologist at Pennsylvania who, according to Moore,
remembered the story. Moore identified him as Bernard Wailes,
who was still at Penn. Wailes denied it was he, said that
he hadn't arrived in this country until the 1960s and knew
nothing about the UFO crash near Roswell. He didn't even remember
meeting Moore. (10)
The search then had to center on
the area around the Brazel ranch and the areas north of Roswell.
That was where something could be documented to have happened.
It was the general area identified by the anonymous archaeologist,
and it was about the only clue that was left.
Those at the Laboratory of Anthropology
in Santa Fe took a look at all the reports filed from the
area north of the Capitan Mountains east toward Roswell. The
Museum of New Mexico provided the names of those who had been
working in that area from 1945 through 1955.
The two names that popped up were
Donald Lehmer and Jane H. Kelly Both were professionals who
had written monographs that included information from the
proper region. Lehmer, unfortunately, had been killed in an
automobile crash, (11) but Kelly was alive and teaching. The
scientific director of the Center for UFO Studies (CUFOS),
Mark Rodeghier, spoke with her, and she said that she hadn't
gotten into the region to make her study until sometime after
1948 (12) That seemed to be documented by her monograph.
Friends and advisors to Lehmer
were found and interviewed. Fred Wendorff knew Lehmer well
and said that Lehmer had never mentioned a thing to him. Wendorff
believed that had Lehmer been involved, he would have said
something. Others who knew Lehmer said that he had never mentioned
it. Family members were eventually found, including a daughter,
Megan, who wrote Tom Carey, "I've talked to my brothers
and my father's cousin. He never mentioned anything about
the Roswell incident or anything about UFOs to them."
(13) That seemed to eliminate Donald Lehmer.
Since we'd already searched through
the lists of professional archaeologists who had been working
in New Mexico during the Summer of 1947, the
only thing left was to try to find the amateurs. These ranged
from pot hunters to untrained people with an interest in archaeology
They rarely, if ever, produced a written record, but professionals
often tapped into the amateur network as they conducted their
research. Often, when they finished their reports, the names
of the amateurs were appended to thank them for their assistance.
The Laboratory of Anthropology
library filed not only the monographs prepared by professionals,
but the surveys conducted at the request of the Bureau of
Land Management. Using those documents, it was possible to
learn the names of some of the amateurs.
There were a number of amateurs
who led back into Lincoln and Chaves counties. Lists of amateurs
working around the Fort Stanton area, north and south of Roswell,
and with the Museum and Art Center in Roswell were obtained.
There are a number of important sites in the area, especially
along the Hondo River valley leading to the west from Roswell.
Those who had worked the sites were identified
and, if still alive, contacted. It was another dead end. No
one had any first-hand knowledge of the events, and no one
was able to think of who it might have been.
Another amateur surfaced by the
name of Cactus Jack. After the "Unsolved Mysteries"
broadcast, Iris Foster called, telling of an old pot hunter
she knew only as Cactus Jack. He told Foster that he had seen
the "object which was round but not really big."
He claimed to have seen four bodies and said they were small.
Their blood, according to Cactus Jack, was like tar, thick
and black, and stained the silver uniforms they wore. (14)
Foster couldn't remember Cactus
Jack's real name, but her sister Peggy Sparks could. She said
it was Larry Campbell, an old-timer who had drifted through
parts of New Mexico, Texas, and Arizona his whole life. Campbell,
she believed, had been burned a number of years earlier in
a fire in Taos and lived at a nursing home in Las Vegas, New
Mexico. (15)
A search initiated at the Taos
News failed to reveal any information about a fire or Larry
Campbell. Carey tried to learn if Campbell had ever been in
the nursing home in Las Vegas, and the answer was no. (16)Campbell,
it seemed, was another dead end.
Interestingly, another Cactus Jack
was located. Unfortunately he was in prison in Anthony, New
Mexico. A quick check revealed that he was not old enough
to be the Cactus Jack of the Roswell crash. (17)
Long lists of archaeologists and
anthropologists had been located and many of the people were
interviewed. They included Joe Ben Wheat, Jesse Jennings,
William Pearce, Art Jelinek, Ridgely Whitman, John Speth,
Regge Wiseman, and many more. The lists ranged from people
who might have been involved to people who might have known
who was involved.
For two years it seemed that nothing
concrete could be learned. Had it not been for Gardner and
the unidentified archaeologist who called, who seemed to have
some inside knowledge, it would be simple to ignore this aspect
of the case. The long searches, the checks at universities
all over the United States, had failed to find a clue. With
few exceptions, all who were interviewed were friendly and
interested.
They wanted to help, but a point
was reached when the names being given were the same ones
already interviewed. There was nowhere to go.
Then Tom Carey received the break.
A friend of a new member of Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) told
Carey that her father, C. Bertram Schultz, had been telling
the story of a crashed flying saucer for years. Although he
wasn't an anthropologist, he was a vertebra paleontologist.
He had spent time in Roswell and he had spoken to a group
of archaeologists in Roswell who knew about the crash. He
did, however, see the military
cordon as he drove out of Roswell, speaking of guards on the
western side of the highway Since he didn't want to drive
off to the west, he was curious but unconcerned. (18)
The big question was: could Schultz
remember the names of any of those archaeologists. According
to him, W. Curry Holden was the leader of the group. (19)
Holden, at one time the chairman
of the Department of History and Anthropology at Texas Tech
in Lubbock, Texas, was ninety-six years old when he was discovered.
Holden, when interviewed in 1992, said that he had been there.
He could remember nothing about the event, other than that
he had been there and had seen it all. Each time the question
was asked during the short meeting, he confirmed that he had
seen it all. (20)
Later, both his wife and daughter
said that he was easily confused. Memories from his life were
jumbled and reordered, and he had never mentioned, to either
one, that he had been involved in a flying saucer crash. (21)
But Holden had been asked the question three separate times
in three separate ways, giving him the opportunity to answer
it differently, yet he always responded that he had been there.
Holden's papers, nearly a quarter
of a million sheets, had been given to Texas Tech and were
there for review. With luck, there would be something in the
papers to answer the questions one way or the other.
The weekend when the ship crashed
had been a three-day holiday. Holden's records revealed that
he had written a check in Lubbock on July 3, that he had been
invited to a wedding on July 8, and that he made a bank deposit
on July 9. There was no way to prove that he had been in Lubbock
on the critical Sunday when the archaeologists had been on
the impact site. (22) With Roswell only
two to three hours away, and given the history of the region,
there was no reason not to believe that he had been there.
Schultz was sure that Holden had
been one of the archaeologists. Schultz mentioned that he
had seen the cordon himself, (23) and his daughters confirmed
that he had been to Roswell many times, particularly to a
region south of Roswell. (24)
There are records of Schultz's
research as well. Schultz was in southern Nebraska before
and after the right date, collecting samples, but again, there
is no record of where he was on the critical dates. The field
notes, available at the University of Nebraska, were inconclusive,
and Schultz's personal diaries were not available. (25)
Interestingly, records from Texas
Tech did put Schultz and Holden together at the University
of New Mexico for the 46th Annual Meeting of the American
Anthropological Association, December 2~31, 1947. Holden attended
the meeting, and Schultz spoke about "The Lime Creek
Sites: New Evidence of Early Man in Southwestern Nebraska."
(26)
Here were two major finds, archaeologists
who had claimed to have knowledge of the events in Roswell,
one first hand and one who had both first- and second hand
information. But more important, both of them placed the site
of the event in the Roswell area and not anywhere near the
Plains of San Agustin.
The archaeologists had been found,
but there weren't the revelations that had been expected.
Holden, who died in April 1993, had been unable to share any
additional data, and his age prevented a detailed questioning.
Schultz, who could be interviewed, only related what he'd
heard from Holden, and the little he'd seen himself.
Without these clues, the search
would have been abandoned, but Carey couldn't let go. Without
the data from the anonymous source and without the new data,
the search would have to be ended. There would have been no
hope.
But Carey stayed after it, reinterviewing
those who had been found and rejected. He talked to Dr. George
Agogino, who finally admitted that he had heard the story
himself. He knew who had been there. When Carey read him the
notes from the conversation with the anonymous source, Agogino
said, "That's what he told me." (27)
Agogino didn't want to identify
the archaeologist, because the man had made him promise not
to tell. Fear of the government
seemed to be the reason. He didn't want to get into trouble.
But Agogino did tell, (28) providing a name as well as a corroborating
source.
The search for the archaeologists
has nearly ended. Their leader, Dr. W. Curry Holden, has been
identified, and he confirmed his involvement. Corroborating
witnesses have been found and interviewed. The story of archaeologists
on the impact site, just north of Roswell, is true. The details
provided by them have been sketchy, but we now have a better
understanding of what happened on that New Mexican desert
in July 1947. All that remains is to learn the names of the
other witnesses and add them to the growing list of people
who kept the greatest secret of the twentieth century.
Kevin D. Randle
Updated report, 11/27/98