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Why Oregon became a serious UFO state
Oregon’s role in modern UFO history begins just outside its borders but lands squarely in Oregon’s newspapers. On 24 June 1947, private pilot Kenneth Arnold reported seeing nine bright objects near Mount Rainier while flying towards an air show in Pendleton, Oregon. The Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum notes that Arnold’s account helped put “flying saucer” into public vocabulary, and that his destination was Pendleton. That detail matters because the early saucer story was not only a Washington mountain sighting; it entered public life through Pacific Northwest aviation routes, regional reporting and Oregon press attention. [National Air and Space Museum]airandspace.si.edu1947 year flying saucer1947 year flying saucer
The wider point is not that Oregon “started” the UFO age, but that it was present at the start. Within three years, Oregon had produced one of the most famous UFO photo cases in the United States. Within twelve years, it had a radar-and-interceptor case at Redmond. Later still, McMinnville turned a contested sighting into an annual public festival. That sequence gives Oregon a fuller UFO record than a simple list of sightings: it has photographs, aviation witnesses, official involvement, sceptical controversy and a continuing local memory culture. [files.ncas.org]files.ncas.orgCondon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59… [The Source -]bendsource.comThe SourceThe Source
The McMinnville photographs: Oregon’s landmark UFO case
The Trent photographs are the central Oregon UFO case because they combine a simple witness story with unusually durable physical evidence: two still photographs. According to the Condon Report’s Case 46, the sighting was dated 11 May 1950 near McMinnville, Oregon, and involved a woman who reportedly saw a metallic-looking, disc-shaped object, called her husband, and then watched as he photographed it before it disappeared. The local Telephone-Register initially treated the pictures as important, reporting that expert photographers had found no tampering with the negatives and that the paper believed the photographs authentic. [files.ncas.org]files.ncas.orgCondon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59…
The case became famous because it did not remain local. The photographs circulated nationally, and later discussions often called them the McMinnville UFO photographs even though the Trent farm was outside McMinnville, near Sheridan. That naming issue is more than trivia: it shows how a rural sighting can become attached to the nearest recognisable town once newspapers, magazines and later tourism adopt the story. [Wikipedia]WikipediaMc Minnville UFO photographsMc Minnville UFO photographs
What makes the case unusually interesting is that the main disagreement is not simply “real or fake”. The Condon photographic analysis set out a narrower choice: either a small asymmetric model suspended from an overhead wire, or an extraordinary flying object. The report rejected some explanations, such as double exposure and retouching, because the image characteristics did not fit them, but it did not make the photographs a clean proof of anything exotic. [files.ncas.org]files.ncas.orgCondon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59…
The strongest pro-authenticity argument rests on the photographs’ lighting and distance clues. William K. Hartmann’s Condon analysis used densitometry, a way of measuring brightness in the negatives, to ask whether the object looked close and small or distant and large. He noted that the pale underside of the object could suggest atmospheric scattering between camera and object, which would fit a more distant object. The report also found that the object appeared shiny, consistent with the witnesses’ description of a metallic-looking surface. [files.ncas.org]files.ncas.orgCondon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59…
The main sceptical argument is simpler and still powerful: the object appears below overhead wires visible in the scene, and a suspended model could in principle account for the object’s position and shape. The Condon analysis itself kept that possibility alive, explicitly listing a model suspended from a wire as an interpretation not rejected. Later sceptics have pressed that point harder, arguing that the photographs look staged; UFO advocates have countered that the geometry and brightness do not fit an easy model-hoax explanation. The result is a case that remains unresolved in public debate, but not because nobody looked at it. It remains unresolved because the surviving evidence can sustain more than one reading. [files.ncas.org]files.ncas.orgCondon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59…
For a reader assessing the Trent photographs today, the fairest conclusion is cautious. The case is stronger than many anecdotal UFO reports because it has photographs, named witnesses, early newspaper handling and later technical analysis. It is weaker than believers often imply because the photographs do not independently establish distance, size, speed or origin beyond dispute, and a hoax scenario was never eliminated. The Trent case is therefore best treated as Oregon’s most famous unresolved photographic UFO case, not as confirmed evidence of an alien craft. [files.ncas.org]files.ncas.orgCondon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59… [2files.ncas.org]files.ncas.orgCondon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59…
Redmond 1959: when Oregon’s UFO story reached radar and jets
If McMinnville is Oregon’s best-known photographic case, Redmond is its most important aviation-and-radar case. On 24 September 1959, Redmond police officer Robert Dickerson reportedly saw a glowing, mushroom-shaped object moving in the sky. Local reporting summarising the case says it glowed in several colours, was bright enough to illuminate nearby treetops, and appeared to hover for over an hour. The same account says the object was detected by Federal Aviation Administration radar and that six jet interceptors were deployed from Portland Air Base to search the skies. [The Source - Bend, Oregon]bendsource.comThe SourceThe Source
The Redmond case matters because it includes several features UFO researchers usually value: an official witness, an airport setting, radar involvement and an attempted aircraft response. Those features do not automatically make a case extraordinary, but they do raise the evidential stakes. A single person seeing a light in the sky is one kind of report; a report that involves police, airport personnel, radar and scrambled aircraft is another. [The Source - Bend, Oregon]bendsource.comThe SourceThe Source
The sceptical pressure point is the official explanation. The FAA and Air Force reportedly downplayed the incident soon afterwards, suggesting Venus as a likely cause. That explanation is plausible for many night-sky reports because Venus is bright, often misjudged as moving when seen through haze, trees or changing cloud, and regularly appears in UFO files. But in the Redmond story, the Venus explanation has always had a weakness: it does not obviously account for radar returns or for the full sequence of operational responses as later described. The Bend Source account notes that officials did not explain the radar “blips” in a way that satisfied later readers. [The Source - Bend, Oregon]bendsource.comThe SourceThe Source
The case is also a warning about later embellishment. NICAP’s Redmond page points out that some more sensational retellings, especially claims about jets being on a secret mission to capture the UFO, appeared later and were not present in the earliest accounts. That is an important distinction. The serious core of the case is the police-airport-radar-interceptor episode; the more cinematic versions of jets nearly colliding with a craft or chasing a crewed vehicle should be treated with much greater caution unless tied to primary documentation. [nicap.org]nicap.org590924redmond dir590924redmond dir
Redmond should therefore be classified as stronger than a routine light-in-the-sky report but not settled. Its best evidence is the cluster of official and aviation-linked claims. Its weakest area is the gap between dramatic later UFO literature and what can be securely tied to early records. It remains one of Oregon’s most valuable cases because it asks exactly the right historical question: when an official explanation is offered, does it explain all parts of the event, or only the easiest part? [The Source - Bend, Oregon]bendsource.comThe SourceThe Source [The Source - Bend, Oregon]bendsource.comThe SourceThe Source
Oregon’s military and aviation setting
Oregon’s UFO history is partly shaped by the fact that unusual sky reports often occur around aviation corridors, military aircraft, airports and radar coverage. The state has had a significant Air National Guard presence, including the 173rd Fighter Wing at Kingsley Field in Klamath Falls, whose official mission is to train fighter pilots, support combat operations and serve Oregon and the United States. Portland Air National Guard Base has also been home to fighter aircraft; in 2024, the Air National Guard reported that F-15EX Eagle II aircraft would be delivered to the 142nd Wing, with modern radars, sensors and software. [173rd Fighter Wing]173fw.ang.af.mil173rd Fighter Wing
This does not mean Oregon UFO reports are “really military aircraft” by default. It means the state’s skies contain a mix of civilian traffic, military training, satellites, drones, astronomical objects, coastal weather effects and high-altitude aircraft. Any serious case assessment has to test those possibilities before assigning a report to the unexplained category. The U.S. Air Force’s own Project Blue Book summary stated that, of 12,618 reports investigated from 1947 to 1969, 701 remained unidentified, but it also concluded that no investigated UFO represented a national-security threat, an unknown technological principle or an extraterrestrial vehicle. [Air Force]af.milUnidentified Flying Objects and Air Force Project Blue Book > Air Force > Fact Sheet Display…
For Oregon, this official stance cuts both ways. It supports scepticism about extraordinary claims, because most reports historically turned out to have conventional explanations. But it also shows why unresolved cases persisted: “unidentified” did not mean “alien”, yet it did mean that the available investigation had not pinned down a conventional answer. The National Archives confirms that Project Blue Book records were declassified and transferred for public examination, including case files arranged chronologically and indexes by date and location. That archival trail is crucial for separating Oregon cases with documentable official history from stories that only circulate in later retellings. [National Archives]archives.govNational Archives Project BLUE BOOKNational Archives Project BLUE BOOK
What modern Oregon reports add, and what they do not
Oregon still produces UFO and UAP reports, but modern reports have to be read differently from the classic cases. Today, witnesses may be seeing aircraft lights, drones, Starlink satellites, re-entering space debris, sky lanterns, astronomical objects or camera artefacts, as well as genuinely unidentified events. The National UFO Reporting Center lists Oregon reports by date, city, shape and summary, showing that public reporting is broad and continuous rather than confined to one famous hotspot. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgReports for State ORReports for State OR
Local investigators also continue to receive reports. In 2022, Oregon MUFON’s state director told The Source Weekly that the Oregon chapter investigated about 100 to 150 reports a year, with outcomes placed into categories such as explainable, insufficient data, information-only, hoaxes and unknown. He estimated that, for cases from January 2021 through February 2022, roughly 40% were unknown and about 50% were known. Those figures should not be treated as a scientific measure of alien probability; they are a useful window into how private UFO investigators sort reports after initial review. [The Source - Bend, Oregon]bendsource.comThe SourceThe Source
The December 2024 Oregon pilot reports show why modern cases can spread quickly. Newsweek reported that the FAA confirmed a pilot had reported unidentified lights while flying in Seattle Air Route Traffic Control Center airspace on 7 December 2024. Pilots described red circular lights, erratic movement towards the ocean and returns at different altitudes; one account described corkscrew-like movement and extreme speed. Those details are striking, but the public evidence remains limited: radio audio, witness descriptions and an FAA acknowledgement that a report was made, rather than a completed public investigation establishing what the objects were. [Newsweek]newsweek.comPilot Encountered Mystery Objects ‘Moving at Extreme Speed’: FAAPilot Encountered Mystery Objects ‘Moving at Extreme Speed’: FAA
The better way to understand modern Oregon sightings is as aviation-safety and data-quality problems first. NASA’s UAP independent study argued that aviation safety reporting could become a useful route for better UAP data, because pilots and controllers already report unusual or unexpected events through established systems. The FAA’s air-traffic manual now instructs controllers to inform supervisors of reported or observed UAP or unexplained-phenomena activity. That is a shift in seriousness, not a shift into certainty. It means the modern system is better placed to collect reports, but the reports still need corroboration, sensor data and careful elimination of ordinary causes. [NASA Science]science.nasa.govScience Independent Study Team ReportScience Independent Study Team Report
McMinnville’s UFO Festival and the afterlife of a sighting
Oregon’s UFO story is not only about evidence; it is also about memory. McMinnville’s UFO Festival began as a way to honour the 1950 Trent sighting, and the official festival history still presents the photographs as among the most credible UFO images. Downtown McMinnville describes the event as founded in 2000 at the historic McMenamins Hotel Oregon property and as drawing thousands of visitors to the Willamette Valley town. [UFO Festival]ufofest.comUFO Festival HistoryUFO Festival History
That festival can be read in two ways. For believers, it keeps alive one of the strongest photographic cases in UFO history. For sceptics, it shows how a disputed incident can become a local brand, complete with parades, costumes and tourism. Both readings are partly true. The festival does not make the Trent photographs more authentic, but it does show how deeply the case has entered Oregon’s public identity. [Mc Minnville]reddit.comMc Minnville
The cultural afterlife matters because UFO history is often shaped by repetition. A case that is retold every year becomes easier to remember, but also easier to simplify. McMinnville’s challenge is therefore the same as Oregon’s wider UFO challenge: to preserve the human story without flattening the evidence. The Trents may have been sincere; the photographs may show a real object; the object may still have been a staged model or something ordinary seen under unusual conditions. A good public account has room for all of those possibilities. [files.ncas.org]files.ncas.orgCondon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59…
How to judge Oregon UFO cases fairly
The strongest Oregon cases are not necessarily the strangest-sounding ones. They are the cases with early reporting, named witnesses, photographs or radar claims, aviation context, and records that can be checked against later retellings. On that basis, McMinnville and Redmond stand above most Oregon reports: one because of its photographs and technical analysis, the other because of its police, airport, radar and interceptor elements. [files.ncas.org]files.ncas.orgCondon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59…
A useful grading system for Oregon reports would look like this:
- Strong but unresolved: cases with multiple evidence channels, such as photographs plus witness testimony, or radar plus official aviation response. McMinnville and Redmond belong here, though each has major unresolved doubts.
- Interesting but incomplete: pilot, police or multiple-witness reports that lack enough sensor data, documents or independent confirmation to test the claim properly.
- Weakly sourced: stories that appear mainly in later UFO books, social media posts or retellings without early documentation.
- Likely explained: reports that fit Venus, satellites, aircraft, drones, re-entry debris, balloons, weather effects or camera artefacts after timing and location are checked.
This approach avoids two common mistakes. It does not dismiss witnesses simply because a report is unusual, and it does not treat “unidentified” as a synonym for extraterrestrial. That distinction is consistent with the Air Force’s historical position: some cases remained unidentified, but Project Blue Book did not find evidence that unidentified cases represented extraterrestrial vehicles. [Air Force]af.milUnidentified Flying Objects and Air Force Project Blue Book > Air Force > Fact Sheet Display…
What Oregon’s UFO record really shows
Oregon’s UFO history is best understood as a layered record, not a single mystery. The Trent photographs show how visual evidence can remain persuasive and ambiguous for decades. Redmond shows how official explanations can leave loose ends when radar and aircraft responses are part of the story. Modern pilot reports show that unidentified aerial observations remain an aviation concern, even when the likely explanations may be ordinary. McMinnville’s festival shows how a disputed case can become part of a town’s identity. [Mc Minnville]reddit.comMc Minnville Downtown Association [3files.ncas.org]files.ncas.orgCondon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59… [The Source -]bendsource.comThe SourceThe Source
The most evidence-led conclusion is neither debunking nor belief. Oregon has produced several UFO cases that deserve serious historical attention, especially McMinnville and Redmond. It has not produced public proof of extraterrestrial craft. Its real value is as a state-level case study in how UFO claims are born, investigated, challenged, archived and remembered: through witnesses looking up, officials trying to classify what was seen, sceptics testing weak points, advocates preserving anomalies, and communities deciding which stories become part of local history.
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Books and field guides related to Why Oregon Matters In UFO History. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
The UFO Experience
Broad overview that fits Oregon's mix of famous cases and reporting history.
The UFO Evidence
Useful background for major cases including radar and photographic reports.
The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects
Provides foundational context for official investigations.
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Endnotes
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Link: https://files.ncas.org/condon/text/case46.htmSource snippet
Condon Report, Photographic Case Studies: Cases 46 - 59...
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Source: bendsource.com
Title: The Source
Link: https://www.bendsource.com/news/uforegon-16707374/ -
Source: newsweek.com
Title: Pilot Encountered Mystery Objects ‘Moving at Extreme Speed’: FAA
Link: https://www.newsweek.com/pilot-encountered-mystery-objects-moving-extreme-speed-faa-ufo-drones-1999690 -
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Mc Minnville UFO photographs
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McMinnville_UFO_photographs -
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Mc Minnville, Oregon
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McMinnville%2C_Oregon -
Source: nicap.org
Title: 590924redmond dir
Link: https://www.nicap.org/590924redmond_dir.htm -
Source: nicap.org
Title: The Redman Oregon Case UFO History
Link: https://www.nicap.org/reports/oregon1.htm -
Source: 173fw.ang.af.mil
Title: 173rd Fighter Wing
Link: https://www.173fw.ang.af.mil/Home/Welcome/ -
Source: ang.af.mil
Title: Air National Guard
Link: https://www.ang.af.mil/Media/Article-Display/Article/3838592/f-15ex-eagle-ii-unveiled-at-portland-air-national-guard-base/Source snippet
F-15EX Eagle II Unveiled at Portland Air National Guard Base > Air National Guard > Article Display...
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Source: af.mil
Title: Air Force
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Unidentified Flying Objects and Air Force Project Blue Book > Air Force > Fact Sheet Display...
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Title: National Archives Project BLUE BOOK
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Title: Reports for State OR
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Title: Science Independent Study Team Report
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Source: newspapers.com
Title: Oregonian pg. 7
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Title: UFO sightings in the United States
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Title: UFO photographs
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Title: List of reported UFO sightings
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_reported_UFO_sightings -
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Title: Project Blue Book
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Blue_Book -
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Title: Kenneth Arnold UFO sighting
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Title: 1947 year flying saucer
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Title: the sighting
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Title: UFO Festival History
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Title: Mc Minnville Photo Case
Link: https://oregonmufon.com/PDFs/McMinnvillePhotoCase.pdf -
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Title: Mc Minnville
Link: https://www.reddit.com/r/UFOs/comments/10w8t21/mcminnville_may_11_1950/ -
Source: reddit.com
Link: https://www.reddit.com/r/UFOs/comments/rn86u9/mcminnville_oregon_ufo_photo_with_enhanced/ -
Source: britannica.com
Title: Project Blue Book
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Title: mcminnville oregon ufo festival in photos nth3crqrg
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Title: mcminnville holds annual ufo fest
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Title: mcminnville ufo festival mcmenamins
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Source: oregonencyclopedia.org
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Source: kids.kiddle.co
Title: Mc Minnville UFO photographs
Link: https://kids.kiddle.co/McMinnville_UFO_photographs
Additional References
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Source: newyorker.com
Link: https://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/the-enticing-mysteries-of-ufo-photographySource snippet
Historical and purportedly authentic U.F.O. photographs, such as Paul Trent’s 1950 images and a 1971 Costa Rica photo, continue to spark...
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Source: youtube.com
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ffYJukz62ASource snippet
Kenneth Arnold UFO Sighting The First UFOs - Jimmy Akin's Mysterious World...
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Source: youtube.com
Title: How the Mc Minnville UFO sighting inspired Oregon’s famous UFO festival
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I70VGsQ6ZVwSource snippet
The Famous McMinnville UFO. Flew Over Our 1917 Schoolhouse 76 Years Ago-Here's the Proof...
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Source: youtube.com
Title: Kenneth Arnold UFO Sighting The First UFOs
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xLuHgsXGpqcSource snippet
Kenneth Arnold and the First UFOs - Jimmy Akin's Mysterious World...
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Source: youtube.com
Title: Kenneth Arnold and the First UFOs
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qdXNAOxs6moSource snippet
UFO report. Multiple aircraft report unknown objects over Oregon. Real ATC...
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Source: war.gov
Title: department of defense releases the annual report on unidentified anomalous phen
Link: https://www.war.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/3964824/department-of-defense-releases-the-annual-report-on-unidentified-anomalous-phen/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/142WG/posts/the-acting-director-of-the-air-national-guard-spent-this-past-week-in-portland-w/1410039371165868/ -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/Boeing/posts/15-never-looked-this-goodf-15-ex15-has-officially-joined-the-142nd-wing-oregon-a/1294749399346325/ -
Source: pdxmonthly.com
Link: https://www.pdxmonthly.com/news-and-city-life/2012/04/oregon-ufo-guide-may-2012 -
Source: facebook.com
Link: https://www.facebook.com/foxsanantonio/posts/a-new-batch-of-declassified-pentagon-ufo-materials-is-sparking-renewed-public-in/1396808059161361/
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