UFO Scrapbook: Artistic Depictions from the First Month of Flying Saucers
The first flying saucer picture? It may have been the one shown below, a drawing in the Idaho Statesman, June 28, 1947, based on the testimony of Kenneth Arnold.
Idaho Statesman, June 28, 1947 |
Arnold later wrote up an account of his sighting sent it to the Air Force, who acknowledged receipt of it on July 10, 1947. The report included Arnold’s own illustration of the objects he saw.
In the early rush to cover the saucer mystery, you’d expect that newspaper articles would have featured witness sketches or artists’ renderings, but those were rare. Most of the artwork was by cartoonists and published on the editorial pages, frequently using the topic to satirize economic or political issues. Very few of the cartoons or illustrations dealt with theories of the origin of the UFOs, but there were a few interesting exceptions. Here’s our sampling of about twenty UFO drawings from the first month of saucers.
The Miami News, July 6, 1947, a gag about the economy.
Denver Post, July 6, 1947, featured an imaginative illustration of the interior of a flying saucer by Charles Schneeman, who had a long career before and after UFOs as a science fiction artist.
“If you're one of the unimaginative people who haven’t yet seen a flying disc, this artist’s drawing might help you see one the next time you're outdoors. The drawing, by Post staff artist Charles Schneeman, shows his conception of the interior of a flying disc, always providing that there are such things, and that they are man-made. Part of the problematic crew is shown peering through a porthole at another of the sailing saucers. The disc jockeys at the controls, from left to right, are NOT Flash Gordon, Buck Rogers and Superman.”
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 7, 1947, a gag suggesting the sightings were the product of imagination, "intoxication" due to the fear of atomic war.
These three address the economy, business, and politics.
Des Moines Tribune, July 8, 1947 |
At the time, few people were mentioning aliens in connections with saucers, and most of them were kooks or jokers. Denver Post, July 8, 1947, was one of the many newspapers featuring the satirical column by Hal Boyle, who claimed to have gone on a saucer voyage into space with a Martian cyclops. The Post’s version of the column included the illustration below, artist unknown.
The economy again and again:
Asbury Park Press, July 9, 1947 |
The Burlington Free Press, July 9, 1947 |
Press and Sun Bulletin (Binghamton, NY) July 10, 1947 |
The Morning News (Wilmington, DE) July 10, 1947 |
The Times Record (Troy, NY) July 10, 1947 |
The Gazette (Montreal, CA) July 12, 1947 |
The Marysville Advocate (KS) July 17, 1947 |
Arizona Republic, July 26, 1947 |
Now for something different, a collection showcasing the overuse of saucers in cartoons.
Florence Morning News (SC) July 20, 1947 |
In Life magazine July 21, 1947, “Speaking of Pictures” was a light-hearted illustrated article that compared the saucers to ancient apparitions and follies. The caption stated:
“The explanation of the flying disks drawn by Boris Artzybasheff shows residents of the planet Neptune gleefully bombarding the universe with stacks of crockery fired by atomic saucer-launchers. Neptunians thus far have aimed only saucers at the earth (top) but more favored planets have been shelled with teapots and dinner plates.”
Muggs and Skeeter by Wally Bishop may have been the first daily comic strip to use a flying saucer gag.
The Press Democrat, July 27, 1947. |
There's no date on this 1947 cartoon, but it’s worth including due to the ET Expedition gag. From the aviation cartoon series, “Plane Nonsense” by Floyd E. Hill.