1953 Canadian Military UFO account just as amazing as Tic Tac

OakFieldAlienz444

Senior Member
The oldest report from the Canadian military dated from April 12, 1952. At the former RCAF Station North Bay, Ontario, two cops noticed something “seemingly circular” that looked like a “amber traffic light.”




Rummaging through UFO accounts disclosed by the Canadian military dating back to the 1950s, along with additional accounts gleaned through a series of information requests, interviews, and publicly available records, the online publication Vice offered this account from the Canadian military dated April 12, 1952.

• At the former RCAF Station North Bay, Ontario, two police officers noticed something “circular” in the sky that looked like an “amber traffic light.” The UFO flew over at a high rate of speed – about twice the speed of a jet fighter, or around 1300mph. (Supersonic is considered faster than 760mph. This object was travelling at nearly twice the speed of sound.) According to the police witnesses, the UFO “skipped to a halt, reversed direction, and vanished… at a faster rate on reversal than on approach”. A Canadian military intelligence officer who debriefed the witnesses stated that the incident was “highly peculiar and deserved reporting.”





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According to the allegation, the UFO flew over at a “very high rate of speed – comparable to twice the speed of an F-86” jet fighter.

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Timothy Sayle
The retired warplane’s max speed was around 650 miles per hour.

When an object travels faster than 760 miles per hour, it is considered supersonic, implying that the UFO easily exceeded Mach 1 and was even approaching twice the speed of sound.

The UFO “skipped to a halt, reversed direction, and vanished… at a faster rate on reversal than on approach,” according to the cops.

The intelligence officer who debriefed the witnesses stated that the “abrupt reversal of direction witnessed conveyed the notion that it was highly peculiar and deserved reporting” after reviewing the occurrence.

Timothy Sayle, director of the University of Toronto’s International Relations school, stated of the early phenomenon, “What’s most surprising is that this is not a new occurrence.”
 

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