What Makes Vermont's UFO Stories Endure?

Vermont’s UFO history is not built around one spectacular government-confirmed mystery. It is a patchwork of old newspaper reports, Project Blue Book files, Lake Champlain stories, Cold War radar lore, abduction claims, local journalism, modern NUFORC reports and a recent attempt by a Vermont legislator to create a state-level UAP task force.

Preview for What Makes Vermont's UFO Stories Endure?

Introduction

The strongest Vermont cases are not all strong in the same way. The 1952 Bellevue Hill case matters because it sits inside the official US Air Force Project Blue Book record. The 1968 Buff Ledge case matters because it became Vermont’s best-known abduction story, but it depends heavily on later recollection and hypnotic-regression material. The 1961 North Concord radar-base story matters because it links Vermont to the wider Betty and Barney Hill legend, although its evidential status is much less firm than its folklore value. Recent reports, meanwhile, often show how satellites, drones, aircraft, balloons and atmospheric effects can turn a real sighting into an unresolved story when the original data are thin. [Seven Days]sevendaysvt.comSource details in endnotes. [Project Blue Book Archive]bluebookfiles.orgSource details in endnotes. [Internet Archive]archive.orgSource details in endnotes.

Overview image for What Makes Vermont's UFO Stories Endure?

Why Vermont keeps appearing in UFO lists

Vermont is a small state, so even a modest number of reports can look striking when ranked per head of population. Local reporting has noted that Vermont has appeared high in per-capita UFO sighting lists derived from the National UFO Reporting Center, while also warning that the methodology behind such rankings deserves caution. A high rate of reports does not mean a high rate of extraordinary craft; it may also reflect dark rural skies, a population that spends time outdoors, and a local culture less embarrassed about reporting strange observations. [Seven Days]sevendaysvt.comSource details in endnotes.

That combination is important. Vermont has mountains, lakes, isolated roads, limited light pollution in many areas and long sightlines across open water or valleys. Those are good conditions for seeing meteors, planets, satellites, aircraft, re-entering debris, drones and unusual cloud or light effects. They are also good conditions for misjudging distance, speed and size. A light moving silently over Lake Champlain may be close and small, far and large, or not in the atmosphere at all.

The state’s UFO story therefore works best as a layered record:

  • Officially filed cases, such as the 1952 Bellevue Hill Project Blue Book report. [nicap.org]nicap.orgSource details in endnotes. * Local landmark stories, especially Buff Ledge and the North Concord radar-base lore. [books.google.com]books.google.comEncounter at Buff LedgeEncounter at Buff Ledge
  • Regional flap patterns, including Lake Champlain, Burlington, Rutland, Bennington, East Fairfield and East Richford accounts.
  • Modern UAP framing, where airspace safety, drones and better reporting systems matter as much as the older “flying saucer” language.
  • Sceptical explanations, especially Starlink satellite trains, aircraft, balloons, birds, meteors and perception errors.

What Makes Vermont's UFO Stories Endure? illustration 1

The 1952 Bellevue Hill case: Vermont’s clearest official-file anchor

The most substantial Vermont case in the official Cold War record is the Bellevue Hill sighting of 24 April 1952. The Blue Book Archive lists it as a 12-page Project Blue Book document from Bellevue Hill, Vermont, case number 28941533. The OCR text identifies the date, location, observation time of about 5 a.m., and a USAF C-124 crew as witnesses. [Project Blue Book Archive]bluebookfiles.orgSource details in endnotes.

The short case summary repeated in UFO research catalogues says the C-124 transport crew saw three circular bluish objects in a loose “fingertip” formation, with objects twice flying parallel to the aircraft during a three- to four-minute period. NICAP’s list of Project Blue Book “unknowns” includes the Bellevue Hill case among the 701 unexplained Blue Book cases, which is why it has remained a recurring Vermont reference point. [NICAP]nicap.orgThe Project Bluebook "UnknownsThe Project Bluebook "Unknowns

Its importance is not that it proves an exotic explanation. It matters because it has several features that make a UFO report harder to dismiss casually: trained military aircrew, an airborne setting, a multi-minute observation and a surviving official file. At the same time, the public material is still limited. We do not have, in the commonly cited summaries, modern sensor data, imagery, radar reconstruction or a detailed chain of analysis that would allow a confident identification or a confident extraordinary conclusion.

That is the central tension of many better UFO cases: “unidentified” is a real status, but it is not the same as “unidentifiable”, and it is certainly not the same as “extraterrestrial”. The US Air Force’s own Project Blue Book fact sheet says the programme investigated UFOs from 1947 to 1969, received 12,618 reports and left 701 as “unidentified”; it also says Blue Book ended after review of the University of Colorado study, National Academy of Sciences review and earlier Air Force experience. [National Security Agency]nsa.govNational Security Agency

Buff Ledge: Vermont’s famous abduction story, and why it is difficult evidence

Buff Ledge is the Vermont UFO case most likely to appear in books, podcasts and New England folklore. The claim centres on 7 August 1968 at Buff Ledge Camp on Lake Champlain, in the Colchester or Malletts Bay area. Walter N. Webb’s 1994 book Encounter at Buff Ledge: A UFO Case History, published by the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies, is the main case-length treatment. The Internet Archive catalogue describes it as a 306-page work on UFO sightings and encounters in Vermont’s Malletts Bay region. [Internet Archive]archive.orgSource details in endnotes.

The basic story is that two young camp staff members, Michael Lapp and Janet Cornell, were left at the camp while others went to a swim meet in Burlington. A later review in the Journal of Scientific Exploration summarises Webb’s account: at about 8 p.m., the two saw a distant UFO over Lake Champlain; smaller objects separated from it; one object allegedly approached, entered and left the lake, came towards the dock, hovered above them and shone down a beam of light. The witnesses then had a gap in conscious memory until the rest of the group returned around 9 p.m.; Lapp and others reportedly saw the departing object. [journalofscientificexploration.org]journalofscientificexploration.orgJS E 282 online.inddJS E 282 online.indd

The case has several features that appeal to UFO researchers: two central witnesses, a specific location, alleged missing time, later claims of corroborating lights, and an investigator with astronomical and planetarium credentials. The same review notes that Webb was a professional astronomer, a senior lecturer and assistant director at the Charles Hayden Planetarium, and had written the first NICAP report on the Betty and Barney Hill case. [journalofscientificexploration.org]journalofscientificexploration.orgJS E 282 online.inddJS E 282 online.indd

But Buff Ledge is also a good example of why abduction cases need careful handling. The most dramatic parts of the story depend on memories recovered or expanded later, including material associated with regression. The original event was not publicly documented with photographs, radar data, medical evidence or a contemporaneous official investigation of the sort that would allow independent testing. The strongest fair assessment is that Buff Ledge is culturally important in Vermont UFO history and unusually well developed as a narrative case, but evidentially vulnerable because its central claims rest on delayed testimony and interpretive methods that sceptics dispute.

The North Concord radar-base story: Cold War setting, strong atmosphere, thinner proof

Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom adds a different kind of UFO texture: military infrastructure. The former North Concord Air Force Station, later Lyndonville Air Force Station, sat on East Mountain and was part of the Cold War air-defence landscape. A Vermont environmental remedial investigation report states that the site was used by the Air Force as an aircraft control and warning radar between 1956 and August 1963, was initially known as North Concord Air Force Station, and was renamed Lyndonville Air Force Station around March 1962. [ANR Web]anrweb.vt.govANR Web

That setting gives the 1961 North Concord UFO story its force. Local-history and folklore treatments connect the station to a reported UFO sighting on 19 September 1961, just hours before the famous Betty and Barney Hill encounter in neighbouring New Hampshire. New England Legends describes the site as a Cold War radar base where a UFO was spotted on that date; other Vermont history pieces repeat that the reported sighting lasted around 18 minutes. [New England Legends]facebook.comNew England Legends

The reason it matters within Vermont is not that it turns the Hill case into a Vermont case. The Hills’ main alleged encounter belongs primarily to New Hampshire UFO history. Vermont’s role is more specific: the North Concord story shows how regional UFO narratives can become linked through timing, geography and military infrastructure. A radar station on a mountain, a major abduction claim across the border, and a Cold War atmosphere of secrecy make a powerful narrative cluster.

The evidential caution is equally important. The North Concord claim is often repeated in secondary accounts, but it is harder to pin down in a readily accessible primary Blue Book file than Bellevue Hill. That does not make it worthless, but it does mean it should be treated as a historically interesting associated report rather than one of Vermont’s strongest documented cases.

Lake Champlain, Burlington and older local reports

Lake Champlain is one of Vermont’s recurring UFO settings. It supplies broad horizons, reflective water, weather effects and a long local tradition of unusual stories. Seven Days’ timeline of notable Vermont sightings includes a 1907 Burlington report involving Bishop John S. Michaud, former governor Urban Woodbury and A.A. Buell; a 1947 Rutland “flying saucer” report by Mrs Albert Steele; a 1958 East Fairfield “Lost Nation” light-in-the-woods account; a 1965 Route 12 sighting by Dr Richard Woodruff and a Vermont state trooper; a 1966 Bennington-area report near the Battle Monument; the 1968 Buff Ledge case; and a 1980 sighting at Burlington International Airport by air traffic controller Donald Kernan. [Seven Days]sevendaysvt.comSource details in endnotes.

This timeline is useful because it shows that Vermont’s UFO history is not only a post-1970s abduction subculture story. It includes pre-saucer-era and early-saucer-era reports, aviation settings, law-enforcement references and place-based clusters. But it also demonstrates the limits of local chronologies: many entries are brief, rely on old press accounts or retellings, and are not accompanied by the kind of data needed for confident reconstruction.

The Burlington airport reference is especially interesting because air-traffic and aviation witnesses are often treated as more reliable than casual observers. That should not be overstated. Aviation experience can improve recognition of aircraft, lights and flight behaviour, but it does not remove the basic problems of night observation: unknown distance, unknown size, limited viewing time and incomplete context. A short sighting by a skilled observer can remain unexplained without becoming extraordinary.

What Makes Vermont's UFO Stories Endure? illustration 2

East Richford and regional flaps: when many reports still need hard sorting

Vermont also has flap-style episodes: periods in which multiple people in a region report strange objects or lights. East Richford in 1982 is one example that has gained renewed attention through New England folklore media. Podcast descriptions of the case refer to a wave of sightings involving black triangles, glowing orbs and saucer-shaped craft, with witnesses described as including police officers, firefighters and local residents. [Apple Podcasts]podcasts.apple.comPodcasts Vermont's UFO InvasionPodcasts Vermont's UFO Invasion

Flap cases can be compelling because they suggest more than one isolated mistake. If many people in different places report similar objects over a short period, the case becomes socially and geographically interesting. But flaps are also difficult to analyse because reports can influence one another once rumours, local news and word of mouth begin circulating. A cluster may contain several different causes: aircraft in formation, astronomical objects, meteors, sky lanterns, military activity, drones, hoaxes, and a few genuinely unresolved observations.

For Vermont, East Richford’s value is therefore partly archival. It points to a need for local newspaper digging, witness chronology, weather records, aircraft activity and any surviving police or fire-service notes. Without those, the episode remains a notable regional story rather than a securely analysed case.

One of the most important recent changes in UFO reporting is that the sky itself has changed. Satellite constellations, drone activity and brighter public awareness of UAP have created new opportunities for sincere misidentification. Seven Days opens its 2022 Vermont UFO article with a vivid account of a line of lights crossing the sky in the Champlain Islands, then frames the episode through Starlink and other ordinary explanations rather than jumping to alien craft. [Seven Days]sevendaysvt.comSource details in endnotes.

This matters because Starlink trains can look deeply unnatural to people who have never seen them before: a glowing chain, moving silently, sometimes fading as it enters Earth’s shadow. Academic work on aviation misidentification has also noted that Starlink satellites have been mistaken for UAP by pilots and lay observers, and that satellite deployment patterns and reflection angles can create confusing appearances. [arXiv]arxiv.orgSource details in endnotes.

Modern official UAP work points in the same direction. AARO’s public imagery page includes cases resolved as balloons, birds and non-anomalous aircraft, alongside unresolved cases where the available data are insufficient for a firm attribution. That is a useful model for Vermont: a case can be sincere, puzzling and unresolved while still fitting within a landscape where many reports eventually turn out to be ordinary objects seen under unusual conditions. [AARO]aaro.milOfficial UAP ImageryAARO UAP Imagery…

NASA’s 2023 independent UAP study also emphasised the need for better data, transparent reporting and reduced stigma. Its report argued that stigma leads to data loss and that scientific treatment of UAP requires rigorous analysis rather than ridicule or credulity. For a rural state such as Vermont, that lesson is practical: a good sighting report needs time, location, direction, duration, weather, aircraft checks, satellite checks, photographs or video if available, and a willingness to accept mundane explanations. [NASA Science]science.nasa.govSource details in endnotes.

Vermont’s 2026 UAP bill: from folklore to airspace safety

In January 2026, Vermont entered the modern UAP policy conversation when H.654 was introduced by Rep. Troy Headrick of Burlington. The bill proposed a Vermont Airspace Safety and Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Task Force to evaluate reports, assess airspace and public-safety risks, coordinate with academic institutions and federal agencies, and recommend improvements to reporting, response and analysis. [legislature.vermont.gov]legislature.vermont.govH 0654 As IntroducedH 0654 As Introduced

The legislature’s own status page shows H.654 was read first on 13 January 2026 and referred to the House Committee on Government Operations and Military Affairs. It also records a committee introduction and discussion on 16 January 2026, with legislative counsel Tucker Anderson and Rep. Headrick listed as witnesses. As of the status information visible in the bill record, there was no act information listed for H.654. [legislature.vermont.gov]legislature.vermont.govBill Status H.654Bill Status H.654

That is a notable shift in language. The bill does not simply ask whether flying saucers are real. It defines UAP broadly enough to include unknown aircraft, drones, balloons and anomalous objects, and places the topic in the context of airspace and public safety. That framing mirrors the federal turn from “UFO” as a pop-culture term to “UAP” as an airspace, sensor and reporting problem.

The bill’s existence does not validate any specific Vermont sighting. It does show that UFO history in the state is no longer only a matter of old stories and local legend. The modern question is whether Vermont should have a cleaner way to collect reports, filter out known causes and escalate genuinely concerning incidents.

What is strong, weak and still unresolved in Vermont’s UFO record

The most balanced reading of Vermont’s UFO history separates cases by evidence quality rather than by how dramatic they sound.

Stronger historical anchor: Bellevue Hill, 1952. It is in the Project Blue Book archive, involves a military aircrew and appears in lists of Blue Book unknowns. It is still not proof of anything exotic, because the surviving public summaries do not provide enough modern-quality data for a firm conclusion. [Project Blue Book Archive]bluebookfiles.orgSource details in endnotes.

Culturally important but evidentially contested: Buff Ledge, 1968. It is Vermont’s landmark abduction narrative and has a full case-history book by Walter Webb, but the most extraordinary claims rely on delayed testimony and methods many sceptics regard as unreliable. [Internet Archive]archive.orgSource details in endnotes.

Important regional folklore with military atmosphere: North Concord Air Force Station, 1961. The Cold War radar setting is real, and the station’s history is well documented, but the UFO link is more often encountered in secondary retellings than in easily checked primary case material. [ANR Web]anrweb.vt.govANR Web

Potentially valuable but under-documented clusters: East Richford, Burlington airport, East Fairfield, Rutland, Bennington and Lake Champlain reports. These help map Vermont’s UFO geography, but most need deeper archival work before they can carry much evidential weight. [Seven Days]sevendaysvt.comSource details in endnotes.

Often explainable modern sightings: strings of lights, bright moving points and sudden social-media flurries. Starlink, drones, aircraft, balloons and atmospheric effects now account for many reports that feel extraordinary in the moment. [arXiv]arxiv.orgSource details in endnotes.

What Makes Vermont's UFO Stories Endure? illustration 3

What Vermont’s UFO history really shows

Vermont’s UFO record is most interesting when treated as a serious but mixed historical file. It contains one clear official Blue Book anchor, one famous abduction narrative, a Cold War radar-site legend, repeated Lake Champlain and rural-sky reports, and a modern political effort to treat UAP as an airspace-safety question. That is enough to make Vermont a meaningful state-level UFO subject, but not enough to justify claims that the state has confirmed evidence of alien visitation.

The pattern that emerges is more human, and in some ways more useful. Vermonters have repeatedly seen things they could not immediately identify. Some witnesses were casual observers; others were aircrew, officials, police-linked witnesses or aviation professionals. Some reports probably had ordinary explanations. Some remain unresolved because too little data survived. A few, especially Bellevue Hill, deserve a place in any careful account of US UFO history because they entered official files and were not cleanly explained at the time.

The best conclusion is neither debunking-by-default nor belief-by-default. Vermont’s UFO history asks for patient sorting: preserve the reports, respect sincere witnesses, check mundane causes first, distinguish folklore from documentation, and reserve “unresolved” for cases where the evidence really has earned that label.

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Endnotes

  1. Source: archive.org
    Link: https://archive.org/details/encounteratbuffl0000webb

  2. Source: journalofscientificexploration.org
    Title: JS E 282 online.indd
    Link: https://journalofscientificexploration.org/index.php/jse/article/view/724/528

  3. Source: nicap.org
    Title: The Project Bluebook “Unknowns”
    Link: https://www.nicap.org/bluebook/unknowns.htm

  4. Source: nicap.org
    Link: https://www.nicap.org/bluebook/bluelist.htm

  5. Source: nsa.gov
    Title: National Security Agency
    Link: https://www.nsa.gov/portals/75/documents/news-features/declassified-documents/ufo/usaf_fact_sheet_95_03.pdf

  6. Source: anrweb.vt.gov
    Title: ANR Web
    Link: https://anrweb.vt.gov/PubDocs/DEC/Hazsites/911152.Remedial.Investigation%2C.Final.pdf

  7. Source: podcasts.apple.com
    Title: Podcasts Vermont’s UFO Invasion
    Link: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/vermonts-ufo-invasion-a-new-england-legends-podcast/id1614480816?i=1000688429348

  8. Source: arxiv.org
    Link: https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.08155

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    Title: Official UAP Imagery
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    Link: https://science.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/uap-independent-study-team-final-report.pdf

  11. Source: legislature.vermont.gov
    Title: H 0654 As Introduced
    Link: https://legislature.vermont.gov/Documents/2026/Docs/BILLS/H-0654/H-0654%20As%20Introduced.pdf

  12. Source: legislature.vermont.gov
    Title: Bill Status H.654
    Link: https://legislature.vermont.gov/bill/status/2026/H.654?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template

  13. Source: aaro.mil
    Title: AARO Historical Record Report Vol 1 2024
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  21. Source: legislature.vermont.gov
    Link: https://legislature.vermont.gov/committee/document/2026/16/Bill/612871

  22. Source: legislature.vermont.gov
    Title: ACT011 As Enacted
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  23. Source: legislature.vermont.gov
    Title: H 0095 As Introduced
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  24. Source: legislature.vermont.gov
    Title: W~none~25 P037 Risk Retention Group Holding Company Systems~12 10 2025
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  25. Source: legislature.vermont.gov
    Title: S 0030 As Passed by the Senate Unofficial
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  26. Source: legislature.vermont.gov
    Title: W~none~Email Comments Received by Agency~4 21 2026
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    New England Legends Podcast 423 - The Buff Ledge UFO Abduction...

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    Title: vermont lawmaker proposes establishing a ufo panel
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  40. Source: sevendaysvt.com
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  43. Source: facebook.com
    Title: New England Legends Episode 378
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Additional References

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    The First Historically True Alien Encounter? | Berkshire UFO Incident...

  2. Source: youtube.com
    Title: The First Historically True Alien Encounter? | Berkshire UFO Incident
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    Project Blue Book Exposed (2020) [Documentary]...

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