UNRESOLVED
CF-BBK-1950S1950S2F-22 UNRESOLVED
Port Townsend Mystery Aircraft Incident
CASE FILE — CF-BBK-1950S1950S2F-22 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1952-05-31
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Port Townsend, Washington, United States
Duration Estimated duration of the observed phenomenon
Unknown
Object Type Classification of the observed object based on witness descriptions
unknown
Source Origin database or archive this case was sourced from
blue_book
Country Country where the incident took place
US
AI Confidence AI-generated credibility score based on source reliability, detail consistency, and corroboration
70%
A Project Blue Book case file from May 1952 involving an unidentified aerial phenomenon observed near Port Townsend, Washington. This incident occurred during a period of heightened UFO activity in the Pacific Northwest, just two months before the famous Washington D.C. UFO flap of July 1952. Port Townsend, located on the Olympic Peninsula with proximity to military installations including Naval facilities and air stations, was a strategic location during the early Cold War period.
The case file exists within the U.S. Air Force's official Project Blue Book archives, indicating it met the threshold for formal military investigation. The 1952 timeframe is particularly significant as this year saw the highest number of UFO reports in Project Blue Book's history, with over 1,500 documented cases. The concentration of sightings in the Pacific Northwest during this period has been noted by researchers as particularly anomalous.
Limited metadata is available for this specific case, as the source archive provides only the case identification number (9614389) and basic location data. The actual witness testimonies, investigator assessments, radar data, or photographic evidence that may exist within the original PDF file would provide crucial context for a complete analysis. The proximity to military installations and the era's geopolitical tensions add layers of complexity to evaluating this incident.
02 Timeline of Events
1952-05
Port Townsend Sighting Reported
Unidentified aerial phenomenon observed in the Port Townsend, Washington area. Incident formally reported and logged into Project Blue Book system.
1952-05
Air Force Investigation Initiated
U.S. Air Force assigns case number 9614389 and initiates official Project Blue Book investigation protocol for the Port Townsend incident.
1952-07
Context: Washington D.C. UFO Flap
Two months after Port Townsend incident, Washington D.C. experiences highly publicized UFO sightings with radar confirmation, intensifying national attention on aerial phenomena.
1952-1953
Case Filed in Blue Book Archives
Investigation concluded and case file archived within Project Blue Book collection, preserved through program termination in 1969.
03 Key Witnesses
Anonymous Witness(es)
Unknown - civilian or military personnel
unknown
Witness information not available in provided metadata. Port Townsend area in 1952 included military personnel, civilian defense workers, and local residents.
"No testimony available in metadata"
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This case presents significant analytical challenges due to sparse publicly available metadata. The case number (9614389) places it within Project Blue Book's systematic filing structure, confirming it received official Air Force attention. The May 1952 timing is noteworthy: this falls squarely within what UFO researchers call the '1952 wave,' a period when military and civilian sightings increased dramatically across the United States, prompting heightened Pentagon concern.
Port Townsend's geographic significance cannot be overlooked. The location sits near strategic military facilities including Fort Worden (former Coast Artillery installation), Whidbey Island Naval Air Station (approximately 30 miles south), and various radar installations established during the early Cold War. Many 1952 Pacific Northwest sightings were later attributed to secret military aircraft testing, atmospheric phenomena, or misidentification of conventional aircraft. However, without access to the complete case file contents—witness descriptions, object behavior, time of day, weather conditions, investigator conclusions—definitive assessment remains impossible. The case's medium priority reflects its documentation within official channels balanced against the lack of immediately available extraordinary evidence or multiple corroborating witnesses in the metadata.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Genuine Unidentified Craft
The 1952 wave represented an unprecedented concentration of aerial phenomena that challenged conventional explanations. Some researchers argue the sheer volume, consistency of descriptions across independent witnesses, and radar confirmations in related cases suggest genuinely anomalous craft. Port Townsend's strategic military location could make it a target for reconnaissance by unknown intelligence.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Conventional Military Aircraft Misidentification
Port Townsend's proximity to multiple naval installations (Whidbey Island NAS, Bremerton Naval Base) and the high volume of military flight operations in 1952 make conventional aircraft misidentification highly probable. Test flights, training exercises, or classified operations could easily be misidentified under certain atmospheric or lighting conditions. The Pacific Northwest hosted significant Cold War military aviation activity.
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
Without access to the complete case file documentation, this incident cannot be definitively resolved. The case warrants a classification of 'unresolved' pending review of the full Project Blue Book file contents. The historical context—May 1952's unprecedented UFO activity, proximity to military installations, and formal Air Force investigation—suggests this was taken seriously at the time. Most likely explanations include misidentification of conventional military aircraft (given the concentration of naval aviation activity in the region), atmospheric phenomena, or potentially classified military operations. The case holds moderate historical significance as part of the larger 1952 wave that ultimately led to the Robertson Panel and formalization of UFO investigation protocols. Full archival research of the original PDF file would be necessary to reach a confident conclusion about the nature of what was observed over Port Townsend.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
70%
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