Background
Arnold was born in Sebeka, Minnesota, but grew up in Scobey, Montana.
Arnold was born in Sebeka, Minnesota, but grew up in Scobey, Montana.
He attended the University of Iowa.
He is best known for making what is generally considered the first widely reported unidentified flying object sighting in the United States, after claiming to have seen nine unusual objects flying in tandem near Mount Rainier, Washington on June 24, 1947. He was an avid swimmer and diver being good enough at the latter to try out for the United States. Diving team Arnold began Great Western Fire Control Supply in Boise, Idaho in 1940, a company that sold and installed fire suppression systems, a job that took him around the Pacific Northwest.
Arnold was regarded as a skilled and experienced pilot, with over 9,000 total flying hours, almost half of which were devoted to Search and Rescue Mercy Flyer efforts.
On June 24, 1947, while flying near Mountain. Rainier in Washington State, Arnold claimed to have seen nine unusual objects flying in the skies.
Arnold also claimed to have seen UFOs on several subsequent occasions. Arnold originally described the objects" shape as "flat like a pie pan", "shaped like a pie plate", "half-moon shaped, oval in front and convex in the rear", "something like a pie plate that was cut in half with a sort of a convex triangle in the rear", or simply "saucer-like" or "like a big flat disk" (see quotes), and also described their erratic motion being "like a fish flipping in the sun" or a saucer skipped across water.
From these, the press quickly coined the new terms "flying saucer" and "flying disc" to describe such objects, many of which were reported within days after Arnold"s sighting.
Later Arnold would add that one of the objects actually resembled a crescent or flying wing. The United States. Air Force formally listed the Arnold case as a mirage. This is one of many explanations that have been disputed by critics, and researchers Jerome Clark, author of The unidentified flying object Book (1998) and Ronald Story, editor of The Encyclopedia of UFOs (1980).
Both argue that there has never been an entirely persuasive conventional explanation of the Arnold sighting.
After his, Arnold became a minor celebrity, and for about a decade thereafter, he was somewhat involved in interviewing other unidentified flying object witnesses or contactees. Notably, he investigated the claims of Samuel Eaton Thompson, one of the first contactees.
Arnold wrote a book and several magazine articles about his and his subsequent research. By the 1960s, Arnold had little to do with UFOs, and eventually declined all interviews.
On June 24, 1977, however, he attended the First International unidentified flying object Congress in Chicago, curated by Fate to mark the 30th anniversary of the "birth" of the modern unidentified flying object age.
Some of his comments at the event reflected his displeasure at the general ignorance concerning the matter:.