IncidentMantell Incident (7 January 1948)
Kentucky Air National Guard Capt. Thomas Mantell was killed when his F-51 Mustang crashed during pursuit of an unidentified object reported over Godman Field — the first fatality of the modern UFO era.
What's documented
At 14:45 local time on 7 January 1948 the Kentucky State Patrol notified Godman Army Air Field of a ‘circular object’ visible over Maysville. Four F-51 Mustangs of the 165th Fighter Squadron diverted to investigate. Three broke off pursuit at 22,500 feet; Capt. Mantell continued the climb and radioed at 15:15 ‘It appears to be a metallic object… of tremendous size.’ Radio contact was lost at approximately 15:18. The wreckage was located near Franklin, Kentucky. Project Sign initially attributed the object to the planet Venus, then revised to a Skyhook research balloon — a classified Navy program Mantell would not have recognized. The Skyhook attribution remains the official conclusion.
Notable & intriguing
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Capt. Thomas F. Mantell's last radio transmission, at approximately 15:18 local on 7 January 1948 from F-51 NG-869, was 'It appears to be a metallic object… of tremendous size… directly ahead and slightly above. I am trying to close for a better look.'
Godman Field tower transcript, 7 January 1948, Project Sign file
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Mantell was a decorated combat pilot with 2,167 flight hours including the D-Day invasion. He climbed past 22,500 feet without supplemental oxygen — the cause of death was attributed to hypoxia-induced loss of consciousness.
Air National Guard accident report; Project Sign Special Report No. 13, 1949
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The Project Mogul/Skyhook attribution was not made public until 1952; in the intervening four years the incident was the most widely cited 'pilot killed by UFO' case in the American press.
Project Blue Book Special Report No. 14, 1955; Capt. Edward Ruppelt, *The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects*, 1956, ch. 4