Mothman

Sketch of "Mothman" |
One of the most celebrated and strange cases in the history of
ufololigy is that of Mothman. The creature was first reported on
November 15, 1966 when a pair of young married couples drove past
a deserted TNT plant near Point Pleasant, West Virginia and saw
a large pair of red eyes. The group reported the eyes were on a
creature that stood about six or seven feet, had the basic shape
of biped and carried large wings folded against its back. The witnesses
later claimed the eyes were hypnotic. Suddenly the creature turned
and dashed towards the open door of the plant.
The driver quickly turned the car around and raced down the desolate
road to get back to Point Pleasant. Seconds later the creature was
seen standing on a hillside near the road. It spread its gigantic
wings, which resembled those of a bat, and rose into the air with
little effort. The monster began to follow the car as it sped nearly
one hundred miles an hour towards town. The sound of a "record
played at high speeds" was heard, which could account for the
flapping wings.
When the couples reached the city limits of Point Pleasant the
creature broke off the chase and turned back to the desert. The
group happened to notice a large dead dog on a hill near the road
as they entered town. Later that night when returning to the scene
with police investigators the group could not locate the dog's body.
On the same night, Newell Partridge was watching television at
about 10:30 PM on November 15 when the television screen disappeared.
Partridge, a building contractor, claimed the screen was then replaced
by a "fine herringbone pattern" and a "loud whining
noise." Partridge's dog Bandit began to howl on the porch.
After stepping onto his porch the dog ran towards his barn located
about four hundred and fifty feet away. Partridge claimed to have
shone a light in the direction of the barn and picked up two red
circle-like eyes.
Bandit was an experienced hunting dog and used to fighting and
fending for himself. Partridge ran inside, grabbed a loaded gun
and barricaded himself inside the small house. He slept the night
with his gun at his side. The next day when looking for Bandit Partridge
found tracks running in a circle- as if the dog had been chasing
something in the sky.
A reporter soon nicknamed the creature "Mothman," after
a once popular Batman character.
For the next twelve months a large number of sightings took place.
Perhaps the most infamous involves two adults and an infant on November
16, 1966. After visiting friends the trio stepped outside of the
house and began to walk to their cars when suddenly a large figure
rose from behind the vehicles. One of the women, Marcella Bennett,
was so frightened by the creature that she dropped her baby. As
the monster unfolded its gigantic wings Raymond Wamsley scooped
up the child and dragged the stunned women into the house. The trio
later claimed the creature was a "big gray thing" that
was "bigger then a man." The beast had no distinct head
but a large stump that rose from its shoulders. The creature then
followed them to the porch, where it emitted strange sounds and
looked inside the windows. By the time the police arrived, however,
the creature was gone.
More sightings flowed in, including a mass sighting of over one
hundred people.
Several theories have been created to explain the creature. The
most common is that witnesses mistook a Sandhill Crane or an owl
for Mothman. These known animals, combined with fear and wild imaginations,
could have created the biped. The study of Mothman is not over and
most likely never will be.
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