The Hornet "Spook Light" (HSL) is an intriguing enigma that appears in
s.w. Missouri and n.e. Oklahoma. I have visited the HSL site. But, I
was not able to stay until dark -- which is supposed to be the best
time to view the HSL.
One HSL-vicinity local-area area resident
told me that he had seen the light and "saw it move all over the road,
out into the nearby fields, and all over the place." When he "tried to
drive toward it, it just disappeared."
Another of the area's residents told me about
her encounter with the HSL: "It came all the way down the road,
hopping along like it was a swinging lantern light being carried by an
invisible ghost. It hopped right over our parked car! It was real
neat!"
Beverly
Trout, Iowa MUFON State Director, told me of her recent experience:
"It stayed way down the road." "It was very distinctive and very
active." She described the distant HSL "Like tubes of light; moving
all around; up and down; right to left, and back again." Sometimes
"two or three other lights split off from it [the main light]; later
to return to it." Trout said that she and her two companions watched
the HSL almost constantly for a full 3-hour period, with only short
breaks of HSL(s) inactivity. She noted that the light(s) were all
different colors.
Lastly, I spoke with a man who lives right at
the HSL site: "The Spook Light has come right down that gravel road
[the "stem" of the "T"-intersection where he lives] and right up to me
here at the house. The light varies in size from softball-size, to the
size of a basketball. It also change colors, from blue, to red, to
yellow, to green and to white. If you try to move toward it, or make
any sudden moves, it just immediately disappears."
The above descriptions of encounters are
similar to the following quote concerning the HSL from page 79 of the
1968 Dell paperback book, Mysterious Fires and Lights, (MFAL),
by Vincent H. Gaddis:
. . . . [The lights] change in size from
that of an apple to a bushel basket, expanding and contracting,
moving from left to right and back again, and from ground to
tree-top height. In color, they range from a golden-amber or yellow
to a reddish hue. Their intensity of light is sometimes so brilliant
that the glow is reflected from the surface of the road.
Movements of the lights appear to be at
random . . . . They appear and disappear, usually suddenly. When
approached, they seemingly recede, only to reappear behind the
observer. . . . .
No one can say for sure exactly what is the
HSL. Some have tried to explain away spook-light sightings and
encounters with more "down-to-earth" causation. Debunking explanations
include such things as swamp gas, ball lightning, mineral deposits,
headlights, etc. But, they all seem to have holes in them.
As mentioned on page 330 in the Missouri
Department of Natural Resources' 1990 book, Geologic Wonders and
Curiosities of Missouri, the HSL has been around many years before
autos and planes existed:
. . . . summarized theories regarding
its origin, stating that, some people think that the light at the
Devils Promenade is the ghost of an Osage Chief who was murdered
near this spot; others say that it is the spirit of a Quapaw maiden
who drowned herself in the river when her warrior was killed in
battle." Other theories . . . . are those of marsh gas, automobile
lights driving east on Highway 66, and Quapaw, Oklahoma airport
beacon lights. . . . .
But the old-timers laugh at all such
explanations, claiming that the Indian lights were seen at the same
spot in the deep wood, fifty years before the 'Devils Promenade'
road was built. Fred C. Reynolds of Kansas City says that his
grandfather, a pioneer doctor at Baxter, Kansas, observed these
lights long before there was any such thing as a motor car, adding
that he himself saw the jack-o-lantern as a boy. Bob Hill of Joplin,
Missouri, observes that the phantom was seen by many persons in this
vicinity before there was a Highway 66, and certainly long before
the airport was established at Quapaw, Oklahoma.
This issue is further addressed on page 80 of
Gaddis' MFAL:
Several investigators have proved that
on clear nights light is refracted into the area from automobile
headlights on U.S. 66, five miles to the west. . . . . The refracted
light, however, does not have the characteristics of the Ozark
light.
Moreover, [from] old Indian legends about
the light . . . . [the "Spook Light"] was known as the "Indian
light" to the grandfathers of the pioneer families in the vicinity,
and was attracting tourists long before the construction of U.S. 66.
Some, but, by no means all, sightings of the
HSL -- particularly during the time of the year when the leaves are
off the trees -- might be attributable to the distant-road,
auto-headlights hypothesis. The auto-headlight explanation certainly
flies in the face of credible close-encounter HSL reports, such as
this credible example regarding the HSL, taken from page 80 of Gaddis'
MFAL:
Dr. George W. Ward, formerly with the
Bureau of Standards, Washington, DC, and later associated with the
Midwest Research Institute, made an investigation in 1945. He wrote
that he observed a glow over the hills, followed by the appearance
of a greenish-yellow sphere of light about five feet in diameter.
This sphere advanced toward the doctor and his companions.
One of the men, a publicity director for
the institute, said he had seen all he cared to see. As the light
approached and enveloped the witnesses, he quickly locked himself in
their automobile.
The HSL is currently under
active investigation by UFO field-investigator, Ted Phillips. Phillips
is famous for his many years of investigating innumerable
"physical-trace" UFO cases. He presented a HSL update at the April
11-13, 1997, Ninth Annual Ozark UFO Conference in Eureka Springs,
Arkansas. [See Special
Note attached below.]
Distant sightings of, and close encounters
with, the HSL continue to be reported. For further information and
recountings of some of these numerous incidents, refer to these recent
articles about the Hornet "Spook light" in the following
publications.:
"Spooklight" -- by Suzanne J. Wilson; p.p.:
8-11, January, 1997, issue of the Missouri Conservationist
magazine; Freely available from the Missouri Department of
Conservation Internet Web site URL address:
http://www.conservation.state.mo.us/conmag/1997/01/2.html
"Old Faithful of the Ozarks" -- by Wann Smith
and William Equals; p.p.: 33-36, October, 1996, [Vol. 49, No. 10;
issue 559 of] FATE magazine; Web site:
http://www.llewellyn.com
"The Hornet-Joplin 'Spook light'" -- by Bob
Soetebier; p.p.: 10-12, July/August, 1996, [Vol. 11, No. 4] issue of
UFO magazine (P.O. Box 1053, Sunland, CA 91041).
Book references:
Geologic Wonders and Curiosities of
Missouri, by Thomas R. Beveridge; p.p.: 329-330. Revised and
published in 1990 by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Geology and Land Survey, P.O. Box 250, Rolla, MO 65401.
Telephone number: 314-364-1752.
Mysterious Fires and Lights, by
Vincent H. Gaddis; p.p.: 79-80. 1968 paperback. Dell Publishing.
Special Note:
Ted
Phillips is an internationally known and respected UFO researcher. He
refers to himself as a "nuts-and-bolts" UFO researcher. Ted's
business, Astronomical Systems: Astronomical Telescopes and
Astrophotography Equipment, gives him "license" to indulge his other
passion: Scanning the skies for UFOs.
His main field of expertise and interest is
"physical-trace" evidence left as a result of UFO sightings and/or
encounters. He has documented and reported upon literally thousands of
UFO-related physical-trace cases over the years.
Ted currently serves as an Assistant State
Director for Missouri MUFON. He and his wife now reside in southwest
Missouri, where he is actively investigating and documenting the
Hornet "Spook Light."
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