NARA
NARA Archive
◉ 33.3940° N · 104.5230° W · Brazel Ranch, NM · 5–8 Jul 1947

Roswell 1947

On 8 July 1947, the public information officer of the 509th Bomb Group, Roswell Army Airfield (RAAF), Lt. Walter Haut, issued a press release announcing that the Army had "come into possession of a Flying Disc through the cooperation of one of the local ranchers and the sheriff's office of Chaves County". The release was retracted the same afternoon by Brig. Gen. Roger Ramey, commander of the Eighth Air Force at Fort Worth, who said the recovered material was the remnants of a weather balloon. The story remained dormant until 1978–80, when a series of civilian researchers re-interviewed surviving witnesses; the U.S. Air Force then conducted formal reviews in 1994 (Project Mogul) and 1997 ("Case Closed"). The complete record is at NARA in Record Group 341 (HQ U.S. Air Force) and the GAO B-262046 records-search file.

Recovery: W.W. Brazel ranch · 75 mi N of Roswell
Initial press release: RAAF · 8 July 1947
Successor explanation: Project Mogul (USAF 1994)
NARA holdings: RG 341 · GAO B-262046
Read time: 3 min · 718 words

The press release sequence (4–8 July 1947)

14 June 1947 — rancher W.W. "Mac" Brazel discovers debris field on the Foster ranch ~75 miles north of Roswell. 4 July — Brazel reports to Chaves County Sheriff George Wilcox. 7 July — Maj. Jesse Marcel, 509th BG intelligence officer, accompanies Brazel to debris field, collects material. 8 July 09:30 — RAAF public-information officer Lt. Haut issues the 'flying disc' release. 8 July ~14:00 — Gen. Ramey at Fort Worth identifies the material to press as a weather balloon; reporters photographed with the displayed material. Most-cited photographs are the J. Bond Johnson images taken in Ramey's office on the afternoon of 8 July.

Project Mogul — 1994 Air Force review

Under congressional pressure, the U.S. Air Force commissioned an internal review led by Col. Richard L. Weaver and Lt. Jim McAndrew. Their 1994 report (The Roswell Report: Fact vs. Fiction in the New Mexico Desert) concluded that the debris was consistent with the radar reflectors + microphone arrays from Project Mogul — a classified Army Air Forces program that flew constant-altitude balloon trains to detect Soviet nuclear tests. The specific balloon — Flight 4 launched from Alamogordo on 4 June 1947 — went missing in the predicted recovery area. The report includes deposition transcripts, balloon-launch logs, and Mogul project documentation declassified for the purpose.

"Case Closed" — 1997 follow-up

Following continued civilian claims that survivors had described biological entities + non-conventional material, the Air Force in 1997 published a second report — The Roswell Report: Case Closed — addressing the alleged bodies. The 1997 report attributes those accounts to confused recollection of 1953–1959 high-altitude anthropomorphic-dummy drop tests (Project High Dive / Excelsior) conducted at White Sands and Holloman, and conflation with the 1956 KC-97 crash near Roswell. The report's primary author is again Capt. McAndrew.

The voice on the tape

The 509th Bomb Group of the Eighth Air Force, Roswell Army Air Field, was fortunate enough to gain possession of a disc through the cooperation of one of the local ranchers and the sheriff's office of Chaves County. — Lt. Walter G. Haut, RAAF PIO press release, 8 July 1947 · 09:30

Timeline

Linked evidence in this archive

Why this case still matters

Roswell is the foundational reference point for every subsequent USAF and DoD UAP investigation programme: NARA RG 341 holds the institutional memory that flows forward to Project Sign (1947–49), Project Grudge (1949–52), Project Blue Book (1952–69), and ultimately to AARO at 10 U.S.C. § 1683. Whatever one believes about the specific events of July 1947, the documentary trail that Roswell generated — three USAF / GAO reviews across half a century — is the most-cited file in U.S. UAP records history.

← Back to archive