Fifty years on and the people of Warminster still want answers over the mysterious outbreak of UFO sightings that propelled the country town in the south-west of England onto the national stage in the 1960s.
The Warminster case is one of the strangest cases of mass paranormal sightings cases registered in the UK.
Although strange phenomena were recorded in the area prior to 1965, it was in that year that the frequency of reports of mystery noises and sightings intensified.
On August 17, 1965, a "detonation noise" rocked houses on the town's Boreham Field housing estate before a "monstrous orange flame was seen in the sky, crackling and hissing".
There were also reports of strange sounds killing flocks of pigeons that year, as had also been claimed 12 months previously in 1964.
The phenomena then became known as the 'Warminster Thing' after scores of townspeople reported in late 1965 seeing an array of inexplicable sights in the sky, accompanies by noises and odd occurrences.
Most of the sightings were around the Cradle Hill and Clay Hill areas surrounding the town next to military land on the edge of Salisbury Plain.
Claims of paranormal activities in Warminster go as far back as the 1950s, but it was the sudden flood of reports around Christmas 1965 that a led to a public meeting being held in the town hall.
It was hoped the meeting would lead to answers from authorities about what was happening in the local area, but no explanation was forthcoming and the case remains unresolved today.
After the 1965 public meeting received national then international media interest the town became a gathering point for UFO hunters and investigators, with a series of books also written about the mystery.
The interest - and mass sightings - continued into the 1970s and up to 1980.
They included metallic orbs, lights, cigar and saucer-shaped UFOs, plus droning and whizzing noises.
Half-a-century on from the bizarre year of 1965, a conference was held in Warminster on Saturday at the Old Bell Hotel to mark 50 years of the mystery.
Several seasoned UFO researchers, who descended on Warminster throughout the 1960s and 70s, spoke at the conference.
UFO investigator Matt Lyons described how many motorists in the Warminster area had reported their cars failing following a UFO sighting or hearing strange noises.
He claimed that evidence of unexplained noises, particularly if caught on tape or camera, were as important as the UFO sightings themselves in solving the Warminster riddle.
Mr Lyons claimed ultrasound and infrared sounds may not be audible to all humans, but could cause animals to react oddly.
He revealed previously unseen files documenting the accounts of witnesses whose cars were affected in and around Warminster.
These included:
*August 20 1965: A couple on a motorcycle felt it stall as two white spheres of light hovered overhead, changing colour
*Oct 8, 1965, 12.25am; A woman driving towards Warminster felt her car lose power after seeing a bright orange ball before the vehicle stopped. She then saw a dark object rise from a nearby field, sparking red and blue, before the engine started up again.
*September 7 1965, 8pm: Major William Hill's car cut out and was "shaken by air vibrations". He got out and heard a whining, crackling noise.
*Approx. 1967: A businessman driving past Clay Hill felt his car become hot and heard a high-pitched noise before the engine failed. He got out and saw a glowing white disc overhead before it sped off.
*August 25 1975: A serviceman driving near Warminster reported to a police patrol that his car malfunctioned after seeing a bright-red light in the sky.
Kevin Goodman, another UFO enthusiast who spent prolonged periods in the 1970s investigating the Warminster mystery, later wrote the book 'Cradle of Contact' about his and other researchers' experiences.
At Cradle Hill in Easter 1977 he saw something that left his jaw hanging.
He said: "These four red lights, evenly spaced apart.
“They flew over the top of the hill and Battlesbury Barracks where they stopped and hung there for about a minute.
“Then one shot out of the sky at a 90 degree angle at great speed before it was followed a minute or two later by the other three."
He also described recording noises like a "thudding heartbeat" on tapes, although they have since been lost.
Tape recordings made at Cradle Hill picked up the noise, which some later dismissed as just electromagnetic energy being caught.
But he told the conference the same noise was recorded inside a 16-feet deep concrete grain silo nearby, which had concrete walls of three-feet deep, meaning "such energies would not have been able to penetrate it."
Another of those hoping they would finally get an answer for the outbreak of unexplained events in Warminster was army veteran Doug Stewart.
Breaking his near 40-year silence on the matter, he produced a painting at the conference that he claims records his UFO experience in the town in the mid-1970s.
He said: "I had been working nights and was coming home about 2am when there was this bright sphere almost above my head and it moved with me."
Mr Stewart said he ran to get his wife so she could also see the object that he claimed moved with him, but it was gone by the time he got her.
He added: "I told my colleagues at work and they just laughed at me, so I never told anyone else and I was never interviewed about it."
Whatever happened, the conference revealed there is still interest within Warminster over solving the mystery.
A group are now planning more "sky watches" from Cradle Hill in the hope of finally discovering the identity of the 'Warminster Thing'.
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