Utah Lake, Utah, USA, on July 12, 1947:
ACUFO-1947-07-12-UTAHLAKE-1
In May 1962, the ufology bulletin APRO Bulletin, of the very large ufology groupe APRO in the USA, published the following report submitted via letter to ufologist Dr. Frank Salisbury by a friend of his, reporting the sighting of a formation of UFOs in 1947:
"I did not make a report. Those making reports were looked on as some sort of nut and even the few friends I mentioned it to seemed to think I had joined the "club." Beulah, Ron and I were flying from Los Vegas, Nevada to Salt Lake and while over Utah Lake saw the six or eight objects coming towards us and slightly to our right. They were at the same altitude as we. I did not notice them until we were practically to them. As they passed I banked the plane sharply and flew after them for a few minutes during which time they left us as if we were standing still.
"Size is difficult to estimate in the air but I would guess they were not over six feet in diameter. They were silver-white, oval top and bottom much like two saucers face to face. They were closely spaced. They fluttered as a group for a second or two and then stabilized for a second or two, alternately between these two modes. The incident happened on July 12, 1947, at approximately 2:30 p.m. P.S.T., according to my flying log."
In 1967, US ufologist Ted Bloecher added to the report that the witness was Earl Page, a relative of Frank Salisbury, and private pilot. In 1947, Earl Page, lived in Kennewick, Washington. Beulah was his wife and Ron was their son.
In 1997, the Utah newspaper Deseret News published a richer report about the sighting:
On the clear, sunlit afternoon of July 12, 1947, Earl Page, his wife, Beulah, and their 9-year-old son, Ronald, were flying a two-seater plane from Las Vegas to Salt Lake City, with Ronald squeezed in between his parents but having a good view of the sky, when at roughly 3:30 p.m., a group of silver-colored, disc-shaped objects zipped past the Pages' plane, coming within about 50 feet of the aircraft at the same altitude. It was a near-miss Beulah Page, 81, a Salt Lake native, and Ronald Page, 59, never forgot.
The article quoted Beulah Page interviewed by phone from her home in Olympia, Washington:
"At first we thought it was birds. We just saw the movement. My husband turned (the plane) to where they were going and they zoomed away like crazy."
"It got kind of scary when we turned toward their direction. They just disappeared."
The entire sighting lasted only a few seconds. The Pages didn't notice markings, windows or even how many objects were in the cluster. Beulah thinks there might have been three.
Ronald Page is quoted:
"There was definitely something there. Those were the days before we had jet airplanes or anything like that. I'd seen fighter aircraft in those days, but they weren't anything like what I saw."
Once arrived in Salt Lake City, the Pages told their story to family members and friends they had come to visit. The reaction was one of skepticism and ridicule. Within days the trio stopped talking about the event, although the story is well-known in the family.
Marilyn Pope, Beulah's niece, who lives in Wyoming, is quoted saying:
"I remember it made them nauseous because they didn't know what it was. It was just something completely new they'd never seen. It was kind of a shock."
The newspaper explained that by keeping the story to themselves, the Pages avoided the public scrutiny and grief experienced by Kenneth Arnold, the Boise pilot who had a similar sighting on June 24, 1947. Earl Page did tell the story to Frank Salisbury, who married into the family in 1949. Salisbury, who retired that summer of 1997 as a professor of plant physiology at Utah State University, had a keen interest in UFOs wrote "The Utah UFO Display" in 1974, the book contained the only previously published account of the Pages' near-miss. Salisbury is quoted in the article:
"It was apparently a tremendously moving experience for them. Apparently those objects zipped under his wing not very far away, so it was really very impressive."
The article explained that Earl Page was born in Bountiful in 1912, that he moved his family from Salt Lake City to Hanford, Washington in 1943 to work as an electrical engineer at the government's then-secret nuclear weapons facility. The plutonium production outpost was so isolated the family often took weekend plane trips. The July 1947 trek was a vacation journey to California, Nevada and finally to Utah.
The article explains that Earl Page later served as a maintenance supervisor at Hanford, and that he died of a heart attack at the age of 49.
The article explains that Beulah Page and her son cannot say for sure whether or not the objects were extraterrestrial, but Ronald Page, working at Hanford, said...
"Do I think they were real? Yeah, I think they were real. What they were I can't say, but in today's world I probably would have thought less of it than at that time."
| Date: | July 12, 1947 |
|---|---|
| Time: | 02:30 p.m. |
| Duration: | A few minutes. |
| First known report date: | May 1962 |
| Reporting delay: | 15 years. |
| Country: | USA |
|---|---|
| State/Department: | Utah |
| City or place: | Utah Lake |
| Number of alleged witnesses: | 3 |
|---|---|
| Number of known witnesses: | 3 |
| Number of named witnesses: | 3 |
| Reporting channel: | To relative ufologist. |
|---|---|
| Visibility conditions: | Day. |
| UFO observed: | Yes. |
| UFO arrival observed: | Yes. |
| UFO departure observed: | Yes. |
| UFO action: | Fly fast past plane. |
| Witnesses action: | Oberved, veered to try to better observe. |
| Photographs: | No. |
| Sketch(s) by witness(es): | No. |
| Sketch(es) approved by witness(es): | No. |
| Witness(es) feelings: | Puzzled. |
| Witnesses interpretation: | First birds, then not airplanes, unidentified. |
| Sensors: |
[X] Visual: 3.
[ ] Airborne radar: N/A. [ ] Directional ground radar: [ ] Height finder ground radar: [ ] Photo: [ ] Film/video: [ ] EM Effects: [ ] Failures: [ ] Damages: |
|---|---|
| Hynek: | DD |
| Armed / unarmed: | Unarmed. |
| Reliability 1-3: | 2 |
| Strangeness 1-3: | 3 |
| ACUFO: | Probable extraterrestrial craft. |
[Ref. apb1:] UFOLOGY BULLETIN "APRO BULLETIN:
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The following report was submitted via letter to Dr. Frank Salisbury (see article elsewhere in this issue) by a friend pertaining to the sighting of a formation of UAO's in 1947:
"I did not make a report. Those making reports were looked on as some sort of nut and even the few friends I mentioned it to seemed to think I had joined the "club." Beulah, Ron and I were flying from Los Vegas, Nevada to Salt Lake and while over Utah Lake saw the six or eight objects coming towards us and slightly to our right. They were at the same altitude as we. I did not notice them until we were practically to them. As they passed I banked the plane sharply and flew after them for a few minutes during which time they left us as if we were standing still.
"Size is difficult to estimate in the air but I would guess they were not over six feet in diameter. They were silver-white, oval top and bottom much like two saucers face to face. They were closely spaced. They fluttered as a group for a second or two and then stabilized for a second or two, alternately between these two modes. The incident happened on July 12, 1947, at approximately 2:30 p.m. P.S.T., according to my flying log."
[Ref. tbr1:] TED BLOECHER:
Ted Bloecher indicated that a report of a 1947 sighting was given to Dr. Frank Salisbury, botanist with Utah State University, by Earl Page, a relative and private pilot. The account was first published in the APRO Bulletin in May, 1962.
On July 12, 1947, Page, who lived in Kennewick, Washington, was flying from Las Vegas, Nevada, to Salt Lake City with his wife Beulah and their son Ron. When they were over Lake Utah, flying north, they saw...
"...six or eight objects coming towards us and slightly to our right. They were at the same altitude as we. I did not notice them until we were practically to them. As they passed I banked the plane sharply and flew after them for a few minutes, during which time they left us as if we were standing still."
"Size is difficult to estimate in the air, but I would guess they were not over six feet in diameter. They were silver-white, oval top and bottom, much like two saucers face to face. They were closely spaced. They fluttered as a group for a second or two and then stabilized for a second or two, alternately between these two modes."
Bloecher says that according to Page's log, the incident took place at 2:30 p.m. PST.
[Ref. den1:] NEWSPAPER "DESERET NEWS":
By Deseret News, Zack Van Eyck, Staff Writer
Roswell, N.M., is the UFO capital of the world this week, all because of an event the U.S. government says never happened.
Imagine what Utah would be like if a small plane piloted by Earl "Skip" Page had collided with a UFO in the skies above Utah Lake.According to Page's two passengers, it almost happened.
On the clear, sunlit afternoon of July 12, 1947, Page, his wife, Beulah, and their 9-year-old son, Ronald, were flying a two-seater from Las Vegas to Salt Lake City. UFO sightings and the alleged crash near Roswell were big news in America that summer, but the Pages had no idea what was about to take place.
At roughly 3:30 p.m., a group of silver-colored, disc-shaped objects zipped past the Pages' plane, coming within about 50 feet of the aircraft at the same altitude. It was a near-miss Beulah, now 81, and Ronald, 59, will never forget.
"At first we thought it was birds. We just saw the movement," Beulah, a Salt Lake native, said in a telephone interview from her home in Olympia, Wash. "My husband turned (the plane) to where they were going and they zoomed away like crazy.
"It got kind of scary when we turned toward their direction. They just disappeared."
The entire sighting lasted only a few seconds. The Pages didn't notice markings, windows or even how many objects were in the cluster. Beulah thinks there might have been three.
"There was definitely something there," said Ronald, who was squeezed in between his parents but had a good view of the sky. "Those were the days before we had jet airplanes or anything like that. I'd seen fighter aircraft in those days, but they weren't anything like what I saw."
Once they arrived in Salt Lake City, the Pages told their story to family members and friends they had come to visit. The reaction was one of skepticism and ridicule. Within days the trio stopped talking about the event, although the story is well-known in the family.
"I remember it made them nauseous because they didn't know what it was," said Marilyn Pope, Beulah's niece, who lives in Wyoming. "It was just something completely new they'd never seen. It was kind of a shock."
By keeping the story to themselves, the Pages avoided the public scrutiny and grief experienced by Kenneth Arnold, the Boise pilot who had a similar sighting on June 24, 1947.
Earl Page did tell the story to Frank Salisbury, who married into the family in 1949. Salisbury, who will retire this summer as a professor of plant physiology at Utah State University, had a keen interest in UFOs and would later write "The Utah UFO Display." His 1974 book contains the only previously published account of the Pages' near-miss.
"It was apparently a tremendously moving experience for them," Salisbury said. "Apparently those objects zipped under his wing not very far away, so it was really very impressive."
Dozens of UFO sightings were reported by the media during the now-famous "wave of '47," but hundreds of others were later uncovered by UFO researcher and author Ted Bloecher. In a 1967 book, Bloecher reported no less than 853 UFO sightings in the United States that summer, including 363 reports of multiple objects flying together. Most were spotted during the day and between July 4-8. According to Bloecher, 160 sightings were made on July 7 and very few occurred after July 13.
Earl Page was born in Bountiful in 1912. He moved his family fromm Salt Lake City to Hanford, Wash., in 1943 to work as an electrical engineer at the government's then-secret nuclear weapons facility. The plutonium production outpost was so isolated the family often took weekend plane trips. The July 1947 trek was a vacation journey to California, Nevada and finally to Utah.
Earl Page later served as a maintenance supervisor at Hanford. He died of a heart attack at the age of 49. To that day, he remained convinced he saw something extraordinary in Utah's skies. Whether or not it was extraterrestrial, Page's widow and son can't say for sure.
"Do I think they were real? Yeah, I think they were real," said Ronald, who lives near Richland, Wash., and works at Hanford. "What they were I can't say, but in today's world I probably would have thought less of it than at that time."
Earl Page's wife remarried and is now Beulah Ditto. She grew up in a Salt Lake home at 600 South and 700 East near the old streetcar barns. That house is now a parking lot, but she still has family in Utah - and the memory of an event that nearly changed history.
[Ref. lgs1:] LOREN GROSS:
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12 July. Over Utah Lake, Utah. (about 2:30p.m.)
Like two saucers face-to-face.
In a private letter a man named Earl described his encountered with a half dozen or so objects in the air over Utah Lake. Earl worked at the Plutorum Recycle Test Reactor at Kennewick, Washington.
On July 12, 1947 Earl was piloting a small private plane:
"Beulah, Ron and I were flying from Las Vegas, Nevada to Salt Lake and while over Utah Lake saw the six or eight objects coming towards us and slightly to our right. They were at the same altitude as we. I didn't notice them until we
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were practically to them. As they passed I banked the plane sharply and flew after them for a few minutes during which time they left us as if we were standing still. "Size is difficult to estimate in the air but I would guess they were not over six feet in diameter. They were silver-white, oval top and bottom much like two saucers face to face. They were closely spaced. They fluttered as a group for a second or two and then stabilized for a second or two, alternately between these two modes." (xx.).
(xx.) Letter: To: Frank. From: Earl. Kennewick, Washington. (no date) Coral Lorenzen's APRO files. Microfilm of APRO files in the author's collection. "Frank" is Frank B. Salisbury, a biologist who later wrote the book The Utah UFO Display (The Devin-Adair Company: Old Greenwich, Connecticut, 1974). "Earl" was Earl Page, Salisbury's wife's uncle. Salisbury includes the report in his book in the Preface (page xvii) and repeats the same information but adds, without going into detail: "The Pages experienced an overwhelming emotional reaction to this completely strange experience."
[Ref. dwn1:] DOMINIQUE WEINSTEIN:
French ufologist Dominique Weinstein compiled a catalog of the cases of UFOs observed from aircraft. This case appears in the February 2001 (6th edition) of his catalogue as:
| DATE | 47.07.12 |
|---|---|
| TIME | 15:30 |
| COUNTRY | USA |
| PLACE | Utah lake, Utah |
| P | |
| TYPE OF PLANE AND WITNESSES | pilot + 2 passengers |
| UFO DESCRIPTION | 6 or 8 silver white oval objects, looking like two saucers face to face |
| Radar | |
| G | |
| X | |
| E | |
| SOURCES | 365 |
The source "365" is referenced at the end of the catalog as:
report on the UFO wave of 1947, Ted Bloecher
[Ref. lhh1:] LARRY HATCH:
1134: 1947/07/12 15:30 2 111:47:40 W 40:14:40 N 3333 NAM USA UTA 6:6
ovr UTAH LAKE,UT: PVT PILOT: 6 SLVR DISKS FLUTTER + STABILIZE SVRL X:>SW:/r131#5p7
Ref #210 The APRO BULLETIN. (J & C Lorenzen) Year 62 Month 5: IN-FLIGHT
[Ref. gvo1:] GODELIEVE VAN OVERMEIRE:
1947, July 12
USA, lake Utah
At 15:30, a pilot and two passengers saw 6 to 8 oval objects resembling saucers joined face to face. (Project ACUFOE, catalogue 1999, Dominique Weinstein)
[Ref. uuh1:] "UTAH UFO HUNTERS" WEBISTE:
from the UFO Files...
1947: UFOs CHASE A SMALL PLANE OVER UTAH
"On the clear sunlit afternoon of July 12, 1947, Earl 'Skip' Page, his wife, Beulah, and their nine- year-old son, Ronald, were flying a two-seater (private plane) from Las Vegas (Nevada) to Salt Lake City" when they nearly collided with a squadron of UFOs high above Utah Lake.
"At roughly 3:30 p.m., a group of silver-colored, disc-shaped objects zipped past the Pages' plane, coming within 50 feet of the aircraft at the same altitude."
Fifty-one years later, Beulah, now 82, and Ronald, 60, vividly remember the encounter.
"'At first we thought it was birds. We just saw the movement,' Beulah, a Salt Lake native said in a telephone interview from her home in Olympia, Wash. 'My husband turned the plane to where they were going and they zoomed away like crazy. It got kind of scary when we turned toward their direction. They just disappeared.'"
"The entire sighting lasted only a few minutes. The Pages didn't notice markings, windows or even how many objects were in the cluster. Ronald thinks there might have been three."
"'There was definitely something there,' said Ronald, who was squeezed in between his parents but had a good view of the sky. 'Those were the days before we had jet airplanes or anything like that. I'd seen fighter aircraft in those days, but they weren't anything like what we saw.'"
Arriving in Salt Lake City, the Pages told their story to relatives and friends. But, fearing ridicule, they declined to share it with the media.
"'I remember it made them nauseous because they didn't know what it was,' said Marilyn Page, Beulah's niece, who lives in Wyoming. 'It was just something completely new they'd never seen. It was kind of a shock."
Earl Page was born in Bountiful, Utah in 1911. In 1943, he moved his family from Salt Lake City to Hanford, Washington to work as an electrical engineer at the USA's then-secret plutonium processing plant in Hanford, Washington state. Page was maintenance supervisor at Hanford when he died of a heart attack in 1960.
Interestingly, the Hanford plant itself was visited by two daylight disc UFOs in 1953. (See the Desert News of Salt Lake City for July 6, 1997, "Family saw silver discs zipping through Utah's skies" by Zack van Eyck. Many thanks to Lou Farrish of UFO NEWSCLIPPING SERVICE for this story.)
[Ref. wia1:] "WIKIPEDIA" (EN):
| Report publish date | Location | Date of claimed sighting | Names | Notes | Bloecher # |
| Utah lake, Utah | Jul 12 | Earl Page (584) | #831 |
The source is noted: "APRO Bulletin, May, 1962, p. 5"; which indicates the anonymous Wikipedia author used another source, as the witness name did not appear in this source.
The plane model is not know, but we know it was a civilian two-seater plane.
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The possibility of an invented story is weak, as the main witness obviously first reported the sighting to a ufologist in the family, to relatives, but not in the press, and only anonymously at first in the ARPO bulletin.
What was described resembles nothing like planes, birds, meteors. But once again, we have a case that does have similarities with other pilot reports of the time.
Probable extraterrestrial craft.
* = Source is available to me.
? = Source I am told about but could not get so far. Help needed.
| Main author: | Patrick Gross |
|---|---|
| Contributors: | None |
| Reviewers: | None |
| Editor: | Patrick Gross |
| Version: | Create/changed by: | Date: | Description: |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.1 | Patrick Gross | June 27, 2026 | Creation, [apb1], [tbr1], [den1], [lgs1], [dwn1], [lhh1], [gvo1], [wia1], [uuh1]. |
| 1.0 | Patrick Gross | June 27, 2026 | First published. |