UNRESOLVED
CF-BBK-1940S6310280 UNRESOLVED

The Pullman, Washington Daylight Observation

CASE FILE — CF-BBK-1940S6310280 — CASEFILES CLASSIFIED ARCHIVE
Date Date when the incident was reported or occurred
1949-07-15
Location Reported location of the sighting or event
Pullman, 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%
This Project Blue Book case from July 1949 involves an unidentified aerial phenomenon observed in Pullman, Washington, a college town in the eastern part of the state. The incident occurred during the early years of Project Blue Book's predecessor programs (Project Sign and Project Grudge), when the U.S. Air Force was actively collecting and investigating reports of unusual aerial objects following the 1947 Kenneth Arnold sighting and subsequent wave of UFO reports. Pullman, home to Washington State College (now Washington State University), was a relatively small community in 1949, making any aerial anomaly particularly noticeable to local residents. The summer timing suggests good visibility conditions typical of eastern Washington's dry climate. The case was deemed significant enough to be cataloged in the official Project Blue Book archives and assigned case number 6310280, indicating it met the threshold criteria for formal documentation and investigation. The available metadata does not provide specific details about the nature of the sighting, witness testimony, or investigative conclusions. The substantial file size (532KB) suggests the case file may contain multiple pages of documentation, potentially including witness questionnaires, investigator notes, correspondence, or analytical assessments typical of Blue Book investigations from this period.
02 Timeline of Events
1949-07
Incident Occurs in Pullman
Unidentified aerial phenomenon observed in Pullman, Washington during July 1949. Specific date, time, and duration unknown from available metadata.
1949-07
Report Filed with Air Force
Sighting reported through official channels to U.S. Air Force, likely through local military installation or direct communication with Project Grudge headquarters at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
1949-07
Case Documentation Created
Air Force investigators created official case file including witness questionnaires, investigative notes, and analytical assessments. Case assigned number 6310280.
1949-1969
Case Archived in Project Blue Book
Case retained in official Air Force UFO investigation files through the duration of Project Blue Book program, indicating it met retention criteria.
2000s
Digital Preservation
Case file digitized and made publicly available through the Internet Archive as part of the declassified Project Blue Book collection.
03 Key Witnesses
Unknown Witness(es)
civilian
unknown
Witness information not available in provided metadata. Full case file review required to identify reporting individuals.
04 Analyst Notes -- AI Processed
This case falls within the critical early period of official U.S. Air Force UFO investigation, occurring just two years after the famous Kenneth Arnold sighting that sparked widespread public interest in "flying saucers." By July 1949, the Air Force was operating under Project Grudge, which had replaced Project Sign earlier that year and generally took a more skeptical approach to UFO reports. The absence of extracted text from the 532KB document limits our ability to assess specific details such as object description, flight characteristics, witness credibility, or official conclusions. Cases from this era typically included standardized questionnaires, weather data, astronomical checks, and assessments by Air Force intelligence officers. The geographic location in eastern Washington—an area with clear skies and minimal air traffic in 1949—would have made misidentification of conventional aircraft less likely than in more congested airspaces. The preservation and digitization of this case suggests it was retained as part of the permanent Blue Book archive, though this alone doesn't indicate unusual or unexplained characteristics.
05 Theory Comparison
BELIEVER ANALYSIS
Genuine Unknown Craft
The 1949 timeframe coincides with numerous reports of unconventional aerial objects across the Pacific Northwest and beyond. Proponents of the extraterrestrial hypothesis note that this period saw consistent reports of disc-shaped objects, unusual flight characteristics, and objects that defied known technological capabilities. Eastern Washington's proximity to sensitive nuclear facilities (Hanford Site) has led some researchers to suggest increased activity in the region during this era.
SKEPTIC ANALYSIS
Conventional Aircraft Misidentification
The most statistically likely explanation for Blue Book cases is misidentification of conventional aircraft, weather balloons, or atmospheric phenomena. In 1949, the Pullman area had limited commercial air traffic, but military aircraft from Fairchild Air Force Base (Spokane) or other regional installations occasionally transited the area. Unusual lighting conditions, cloud formations, or unfamiliarity with aircraft silhouettes could have led to a mundane sighting being reported as anomalous.
06 Verdict
ANALYST VERDICT
Without access to the full case file contents, a definitive assessment cannot be made. The case remains classified as unresolved pending detailed document review. What we can determine is that this sighting was credible enough to warrant official Air Force documentation and retention in the permanent Blue Book archive. The 1949 timeframe places it in an era when the military was genuinely uncertain about some aerial phenomena and before the establishment of standardized explanation categories. Most Blue Book cases from this period were eventually attributed to conventional explanations (aircraft, balloons, astronomical objects, or atmospheric phenomena), but a small percentage remained unexplained. This case requires full document analysis to determine which category it falls into and whether it contains any exceptional characteristics that would elevate its significance within the broader Blue Book catalog.
AI CONFIDENCE SCORE:
70%
07 Community Discussion
VIEW ALL >
// AUTHENTICATION REQUIRED
Sign in to contribute analysis on this case.
LOGIN
// NO COMMENTS YET
Be the first field agent to contribute analysis on this case.
08 Live Chat 1 ROOM
ENTER LIVE CHAT
Real-time discussion with other field agents analyzing this case.
OPEN LIVE CHAT 1
// SECURITY CLEARANCE NOTICE

This system uses cookies to maintain your session and operational preferences. Optional analytics cookies help us improve the archive. Privacy Policy