Source:
"Strange Skies – Pilot Encounters with UFOs" by Jerome Clark, pages 158-164
"Gone to Maser"
The 1950s was a
time of major UFO activity but it was also a time in UFO history known by a
group of persons known as "UFO contactees". These individuals claimed to
have made contact with the alien occupants of the flying saucers. For some
these contacts were face to face, for others the communications were
telepathic. Some claimed to have been given rides on alien spacecraft. Most
of the mainstream UFO organizations of the time gave little credence to the
contactees, and believed most to be hoaxers or people suffering from
delusions. These opinions are shared by most Ufologists today, although some
see the contactees as predecessors to the UFO abductees of the following
decades. Nonetheless, many of these contactees developed quite a following
through books and lectures. One of the most famous contactees was George
Adamski.
George Adamski
was born in Poland and immigrated to the US at a young age. By the 1930s, he
was living in California as a sort of guru practicing "Universal Progressive
Christianity". He set up a small observatory at a restaurant "Palomar
Gardens" below the famous Mount Palomar Observatory. By the early 1950s,
Adamski was taking photographs of flying saucers with his telescope and
writing science fiction and articles about the occult. On November 20, 1952,
Adamski reportedly met an angelic looking man named Orthon who emerged from
a landed flying saucer, claiming to be from Venus. During this encounter at
the base of the Coxcomb Mountains, not far from Desert Center, California,
Adamski was accompanied by six people who were told by Adamski to stay
behind while he made the contact with Orthon.
After this encounter, Adamski
attracted a small group of followers. One of these was Karl Hunrath, a
tempermental electrical engineer, who had invented "Bosco" a device which
was intended to bring down flying saucers. After a dispute with Adamski,
Hunrath moved away from Palomar Gardens and rented an apartment in Los
Angeles with Jerrold Baker, a handyman at Palomar Gardens who had also had a
falling out with Adamski.
Karl Hunrath was soon working as a
radio technician. In June 1953, a old friend of Hunrath's from Racine,
Wisconsin, Wilbur J. Wilkinson, arrived in Los Angeles with his wife and
three children. Wilkinson, a co-inventor of Bosco, had left his job as a
foreman at an electrical appliance plant, to join Hunrath in his efforts to
see a flying saucer and meet an alien.
The two men developed an interest in
channeling aliens, meeting other contactees and using psychic techniques and
mechanical contractions to communicate with the "Maserians", beings who
allegedly lived on the moon.
On or about November 10, 1953, Karl
Hunrath made phone calls to several associates telling them that some people
had left Earth for other planets and that no one should be surprised if this
might happen to him. On November 11, 1953, Hunrath and Wilkinson rented a
small plane at Gardina County Airport near Los Angeles. With three hours of
fuel, one hour paid rental, and no filed flight plan, Hunrath flew off with
his passenger Wilkinson with the likely intent to meet a grounded saucer
which they apparently presumed would take them to Maser, Venus or some other
off-Earth populated celestial body.
Apparently to this day, no trace of
the aircraft or the two men has been found. Most people presume that Hunrath,
an inexperienced pilot, probably crashed somewhere in the mountainous
terrain east of Los Angeles. If this is so, the aircraft wreckage may be out
there still.
I include this account as I find it
an interesting coincidence that Hunrath and Wilkinson's plane disappeared
about two weeks before the fateful Kinross Incident. I'll leave it for the
reader to judge the relevance of disappearance of two UFO contactees with
the disappearance of two Air Force pilots a few weeks later. I find it an
interesting coincidence that all men had recently been living in southern
Wisconsin.