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A BRIEF HISTORY OF UFO RESEARCH QUEENSLAND INCORPORATED
The UFO
Phenomenon became a matter of public concern in 1947, when
witnesses began to publicly declare their sightings and
experiences and the media began to report such accounts. As the
years passed it became apparent that, for whatever reason,
government authorities were doing all in their power to cover up
the UFO phenomenon and would not be disclosing information about
official UFO sightings, communications, photographs or physical
evidence.
It was in this
context that concerned citizens in many countries joined
themselves into voluntary associations for the purpose of
investigating UFO sighting reports and placing their findings on
record for posterity. These bodies typically established a
membership with an executive committee and public and member
meetings. It is probably fair to say that initially these
associations felt that ‘something’ should be done to place on
record the remarkable things that were happening, and only
gradually evolved the procedures and rationale we now use. The
‘Queensland Flying Saucer Bureau’ (now known as UFO Research
Queensland) was established in 1956 with its first constitution
being brought into effect in 1961.
Many of the
‘contacts’ with flying saucer occupants which we now regard as
classic were made and published in the 1950s. One well known
contactee was George Adamski. The Bureau invited Adamski to
visit Australia in 1959 and so initiated and organised the first
of his world tours, during which he lectured on his encounters
and displayed his photographs and films. These tours also served
to establish a world-wide network known as the ‘Get Acquainted
Programme’. During this time the membership of the Bureau rose
rapidly to about 200. Similar groups had also become established
in other Australian state capitals and for a period of years a
common publication, The Australian Flying Saucer Review,
reported on the activities and investigations of these bodies.
The 1950s saw
unprecedented UFO activity taking place in Papua New Guinea.
This was documented by the Reverend Father Gill, amongst others,
and published by the Reverend Canon Norman Crutwell. The
Brisbane Bureau became closely associated with this work and is
still today the body which prints this publication. The Gill
Report has been named one of the ten most significant UFO
reports of all time.
During the 1960s
the Bureau began publishing its own newsletter, now known as
UFO Encounter,
and continued its sightings and investigation activities. One of
the important events of this decade was the UFO sighting and
‘nest’ at Horseshoe lagoon near Tully, Northern Queensland. The
bureau also hosted Professor James MacDonald, an atmospheric
physicist and one of the few qualified scientists who studied
the UFO phenomenon seriously.
During the 1970s
the activities of the Bureau continued and included a visit by
Professor J. Allen Hynek. Professor Hynek encouraged the
establishment of a national body, ‘The Centre for UFO Studies’,
now known as the ‘Australian Centre for UFO Studies’ [ACUFOS].
In 1976 the Bureau changed its name to ‘UFO Research Queensland’
in keeping with similar name changes throughout Australia. The
investigation of sightings, public meetings, the publication of
its then Newsletter and occasional lectures by prominent
UFO personages continued to be the activities of the
association.
Meetings of
members of the various Australian UFO groups were organised by
means of UFO conferences, and UFO Research Queensland
participated in these events and also hosted them. Throughout,
many vexing questions relating to UFOs, the government cover-up,
contactees, the quality of UFO research, the keeping of records
etc. engaged the attention of many members. All of these and
also new ones are still part of the UFO ‘scene’.
During the 1980s
membership numbers declined and public meetings were
discontinued for a time. Many members had become discouraged by
the failure to find answers to endless questions, and by the
growing ‘strangeness’ of UFO related experiences, most notably
abductions. UFO
Encounter continued functioning, and began to attack the
many scientific puzzles which are entangled within the UFO
phenomenon. It also explored many of the key issues implicit in
contactee accounts, the Extraterrestrial Hypothesis and the
abduction phenomenon. Public meetings were once again
established, Branch and affiliated
associations came into being, the organisation became
incorporated, and by the early 1990s membership rose to over
300.
In the 1990s the
association hosted a number of guest speakers from the UFO
research field including Glen Steckling from the Adamski
Foundation, German researcher Michael Hesemann, well known crop
circle researcher Colin Andrews, UK crop circle researcher
Leonie Starr, Australian contactee Michel Desmarquet and author
of ‘Abduction to the Ninth Planet’. Our Sunshine Coast Branch
also hosted Robert Morningsky and Palden Jenkins. The 90s also
saw the institution of our Investigator Course which provides
investigators with the skills and knowledge required to
personally investigate a UFO sighting, close encounter or
abduction. The association’s Encounter Group was also
established soon after a visit to Brisbane by Budd Hopkins in
1992, and provides a regular forum for close encounter
experiencers to meet and discuss their experiences, as well as
providing coping mechanisms. A comprehensive lending library
including books, videos, audio tapes and publications was also
established to provide members with resources that may otherwise
be unavailable to them. UFORQ also entered the electronic age,
establishing its first website at www.briz.net/uforq before
moving on to its current domain at www.uforq.asn.au.
The year 2001 saw
the re-instigation of regular national conferences by UFO
Research Queensland, beginning with Brisbane and to be held
annually across the country, which brought together researchers
and UFO organisations, contactees and abductees from around
Australia. The 2000s have also seen the commencement of a
Contact Project, aimed at finally making contact with ET.
The year 2006 was
a watershed that saw UFORQ hosting its 50th Anniversary UFO
Conference in Brisbane. Guest speakers included international
researchers Timothy Good (UK), Glenn Steckling (USA), AJ Gevaerd
(Brazil), and Australians Rex Gilroy, John Auchettl, Martin and
Sheryl Gottschall, and the original witness to the Tully Nests,
Albert Pennisi.
UFO Research
Queensland Incorporated has striven to establish and maintain a
tradition of the highest competence and dedication to the
greater good of the people of Queensland, and we want to be
there when the great body of hidden information is finally
brought into the public domain, where it has always belonged. We
await the time when our efforts reach the point where our many
questions find the answers they must have.
A TRIP INTO THE
ANNALS OF UFORQ HISTORY
With the 50th anniversary
year just passed [2006], we at UFO Research Queensland Inc
have been doing a little digging into UFO history and
the times surrounding the emergence of UFORQ into the
global UFO picture.
We've discovered that
UFORQ was established amid a flurry of UFO groups that
popped up all over the globe some 50 plus years ago. It
was a busy time for many concerned citizens and thinking
people alike, no doubt spurred on by the rising level of
worldwide UFO sighting reports, contactee accounts, and
the knee-jerk response by the military and governments
to bury the subject as best they could.
Below we've listed
various organisations that burst onto the scene from the
1950s to 1970s, along with some of their founders where
they were listed. This is only a short but growing list
to date, and for language reasons does not include non-english
speaking countries. As you can see the 1950s was clearly
the decade when the 'UFO movement' was born. As far
as we've been able to ascertain, UFO Research Qld Inc
[Australia] and the Cleveland Ufology Project [USA] are the
two remaining groups that have been operating
continuously since they were established. Again, this is
only what we've discovered so far and if you know of
others we'd like to know about them so we can add them
to the list.
1951 Grand Rapids Flying
Saucer Club - U.S.A 1952 AFSB Australian Flying Saucer
Bureau - Edgar Jarrold 1952 Australian International UFO
Flying Saucer Research Inc. - Colin Norris 1952 Civilian
Saucer Investigations New Zealand - Sgt Harold Fulton
1952 International Flying Saucer Bureau - USA, Albert
Bender 1952 Civilian Saucer Intelligence of Los Angeles
- USA 1952 APRO Aerial Phenomena Research Organisation -
USA founders Jim and Coral Lorenzen 1953 AFSIC
Australian Flying Saucer Investigation Committee Donald
Thomson (journalist) 1953 AFSC Australian Flying Saucer
Club - Fred Stone 1953 BFSB British Flying Saucer Bureau
UK 1953 International Flying Saucer Bureau - USA
1953
Civilian Saucer Intelligence of New York - USA 1954 Adamski Correspondence Group (Timaru) - New Zealand,
Fred Dickeson - name changed to New Zealand Scientific
Space Research Group then to Scientific Approach to
Cosmic Understanding in 1961 1954 North Jersey UFO
Group - U.S.A. 1956 National Investigations Committee on
Aerial Phenomena - USA, T. Townsend Brown Came under the
directorship of Donald Keyhoe in 1957 1956 QFSRB
Queensland Flying Saucer Research Bureau (Aus) Now UFO
Research Queensland Inc. 1956 Cleveland Ufology Project
- U.S.A. Founded by Jerry and Arlene Bowers 1957 Adamski
Correspondence Group (Tauranga) - New Zealand, Harvey
Cooke Name changed to Tauranga UFO Investigation Group
in 1970 1957 Victorian Flying Saucer Research Society -
Australia, Peter Norris (now called the Victorian UFO
Research Society) 1959 Amalgamated Flying Saucer Clubs
of America - Gabriel Green 1962 BUFOA British UFO
Association - UK Changed to BUFORA in 1964 1969 MUFON
Mutual UFO Network - USA, Walt Andrus 1973 CUFOS Center
for UFO Studies – USA, Dr. J. Allen Hynek 1973 FUFORA
Finnish UFO Research Association 1974 Australian Centre
For UFO Studies 1974 NUFORC National UFO Reporting
Centre – USA, Peter Davenport
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UFORQ's original logo [above] reflected the decade of its origin and was replaced
in the late 1990s with [below] a logo that combined elements
of the old and the new.
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