Published: July 03, 2007 12:08 am
Did suspected UFO cover-up have
ties to Port?
Nick Pinto
NEWBURYPORT — Sixty years ago this week, a mysterious
craft crash-landed outside Roswell, N.M., leading to one of
the greatest suspected UFO cover-ups in history.
A central figure in the purported government suppression of
proof of alien life was Gordon Gray, a former secretary of
the Army whose curriculum vitae also included secret
government psychological warfare programs, top-secret
security consultations with the Oval Office, and — oddly
enough — the preservation of historic downtown Newburyport.
Gray was serving as assistant secretary of war for Harry
Truman when the Roswell crash occurred, but researchers of
unidentified flying objects believe he was also a member of
a secret group known as the Majestic 12, a mysterious
committee of scientists and military officials charged with
investigating and perhaps concealing evidence of alien
visitors to this planet. The authenticity of the documents
purporting to prove the existence of the group and Gray’s
membership in it is contested, but whether or not Gray was
actually in the business of hiding the existence of
extraterrestrials from the American public, the decades-long
myth of the Majestic 12 has forever linked his name to alien
mysteries.
The undisputed facts of Gray’s official career are almost as
intriguing. In 1951 and 1952, he served as the director of
the Psychological Strategy Board, a newly formed group that
plotted government “psychological operations.” From 1958 to
1961, he served as national security adviser before being
replaced by McGeorge Bundy, and he remained on the Foreign
Intelligence Advisory Board through the Ford administration.
But it was in his capacity as the chairman of the National
Trust for Historic Preservation in 1964 that Gray played an
instrumental role in preserving Newburyport’s historic
downtown. When city resident Dr. Robert Wilkins began his
campaign to preserve the downtown’s venerable buildings
rather than tearing them down, he sent a letter to Gray.
Gray and Wilkins had been classmates at the University of
North Carolina, and Wilkins asked his fellow Tarheel for
advice on how to prevent the complete teardown of the city
center.
Less than a week later, Gray sent a letter to the Urban
Renewal Commissioner of the U.S. Urban Renewal
Administration, gently urging the commissioner to push for
preservation alongside urban redevelopment in Newburyport.
“This community may provide another opportunity for us to
show that preservation and renewal can go hand in hand,”
Gray wrote. “There should be some way that urban improvement
and Newburyport’s heritage can be developed and maintained
jointly.”
The influence of Gray’s letter was critical, said Mary
Haslinger, Wilkins’ daughter.
“All of a sudden the people at Urban Renewal Administration
are hearing about Newburyport from the top down,” Haslinger
said. “It put Newburyport in a different light. The
influence of Gordon Gray was central to getting government
support behind historic preservation in the renewal effort.”
Sixty years after the Roswell incident, it may or may not be
appropriate to blame Gray for our continued ignorance of
what really happened in Roswell. But 43 years after the
beginning of Newburyport’s revitalization, it is probably
appropriate to credit him for the preservation of the city’s
historic downtown.
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