Academia examines an alien encounter
By CLYNTON NAMUO
New Hampshire Union Leader Correspondent
Friday, Apr. 17, 2009 A
DISC-LIKE CRAFT, unearthly creatures with almond-shaped eyes and, some
time later, dormant memories of abduction coaxed forth via hypnosis.
This is not the synopsis of an "X-Files" episode,
though it very well could be. It is the story of Betty and Barney Hill, two of the most celebrated, and some say credible,
supposed alien abductees in history.
Staunch civil rights activists who campaigned for
Lyndon B. Johnson and sat at his inauguration as invited guests, the Hills' lives changed on Sept. 19, 1961, when they were
allegedly abducted and taken aboard an alien craft while driving home to Portsmouth from Montreal.
The alleged encounter eventually turned the Hills
into international celebrities as it hit the press. Although Barney died in 1969, Betty spent the next few decades immersed
in UFO culture until her death in 2004.
"It was amazing they had no interest in UFOs prior
to this event," Betty's niece, Kathleen Marden, said.
Now much of the Hills' belongings are on display,
warts and all, at the University of New Hampshire's Diamond Library in Durham. The school plans to host a forum on the couple's
lives today at the Memorial Union Building.
Betty and Barney Hill pose in an undated photo.
Artifacts available at the library include volume
after volume of diaries Betty Hill kept of her supposed UFO sightings throughout the years, a letter naming Barney to New
Hampshire's civil rights committee as well as the dress Betty wore the night of the alleged encounter.
That dress is considered a holy grail of sorts because
it is stained with an unknown substance that Betty believed to be alien material. To this day, scientists have not been able
to identify the substance.
"She really maintained confidence that if the dress
was preserved, one day science would catch up," said David Watters, director of UNH's Center for New England Culture.
One of the few stipulations Marden included when
she donated the collection to UNH was that the dress be made available for scientific testing. It is written into the gift
agreement.
The exhibition is simple, basic really, and includes
a single wall in the library's special collections section, but the real treasure trove is Betty's collected works.
There are diaries, star charts, transcripts, photos
and more, all related to UFOs.
Betty recorded every sighting in her diaries, from
blinking lights in the sky to unknown sounds. She seemed to see and hear UFOs everywhere.
This is the Betty Hill many people knew later in
her life: a woman consumed by UFOs.
David Watters, left, director of University
of New Hampshire's Center for New England Culture, shows photos Betty Hill took of what she believed to be UFOs. (CLYNTON
NAMUO)
"Over time, I think she started to associate with
some credulous individuals and they convinced her that UFOs disguised themselves as conventional aircraft," Marden said of
her aunt.
Marden said she once went with her aunt and some
friends to spot UFOs and they saw many in the night sky, all of which Marden believed to be planes.
"To me they were identified flying objects," she
said.
Marden said she became so concerned after Betty
Hill began speaking out about her new experiences that she finally took her aunt aside and told her it threatened to undermine
her credibility. After that, Betty quieted down, Marden said.
It is that initial encounter that has launched countless
science fiction stories, movies and TV shows, including a TV movie in which James Earl Jones played Barney and Estelle Parsons
played Betty.
Those who knew the Hills seem to fall into two camps:
those who believe their story and those who believe the couple believed the story.
"I do believe that Betty and Barney did have a close
encounter with an unidentified flying object," said Marden, who authored the book "Captured! The Betty and Barney Hill UFO
Experience: The True Story of the World's First Documented Alien Abduction."
Watters falls into the other camp.
"I don't believe in UFOs, but Betty Hill, I had
no reason to believe she's lying," he said, adding, "She seemed salt of the earth to me."
No matter what happened that night, the Hills' legacy
endures to this day.
Barney was a co-founder and the first executive
director of Rockingham Community Action, a leading nonprofit, and both were members of the NAACP. Barney even marched on Washington
with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
One thing few know of is the couples' sense of humor,
said Dudley Dudley, an old friend of the Hills who learned of their encounter before it became public in 1965.
"Among the things they said, Barney said, was that
he pictured in some galaxy far away some guy doing his PhD work who was relying on the information from their encounter,"
She said. "He's sitting there and thinking, 'Now the male of this species is black, the female of the species is white, their
offspring was brown and has four legs.'"
The Hills never had children together. The "child"
in question? Their dachshund.