Project Magnet
The genesis of Project Magnet can be largely traced back to a memorandum
of 21 November 1950 that Wilbert B. Smith, an official with the Canadian
Government’s Department of Communications (and who held a B.Sc. and
a M.Sc. in Electrical Engineering), wrote to the Department of Transport.
Smith, who had a personal interest in UFOs and had studied the subject,
stated in his proposal that (a) the Canadian Government should be prompted
to establish an official UFO investigation project; and (b) that he
was on the track of something that would lead to an understanding of
both how UFOs were powered and the development of new technological
advances on Earth.
According to Smith: "The existence of a different technology is borne
out by the investigations which are being carried on at the present
time in relation to flying saucers." Smith also advised the DoT that,
having made a number of discreet inquiries at the Canadian Embassy in
Washington, DC, he had learned the following from a Dr. Robert Sarbacher:
A. The matter is the most highly classified subject in the United States government,
rating higher even than the H-bomb.
B. Flying saucers exist.
C. Their modus operandi is unknown but concentrated effort
is being made by a small group headed by Dr. Vannevar Bush.
D. The entire matter is considered by the United States authorities
to be of tremendous significance.
On receipt of the memorandum, the Canadian Department of Transport quickly
approved Smith's proposal to officially investigate UFO reports; and
on 2 December 1950, Project Magnet — a classified Canadian government
project — swung into action and a number of high-quality UFO reports
caught the attention of Magnet staff. On 10 August 1953, Smith submitted
the following report: "It appears then, that we are faced with a substantial
probability of the real existence of extraterrestrial vehicles, regardless
of whether they fit into our scheme of things. It is therefore submitted
that the next step in this investigation should be a substantial effort
toward the acquisition of as much as possible of this technology."
Three months later, at Shirleys Bay, Ontario, a station for investigating
and detecting UFOs was established; and on 8 August 1954, the equipment
"went wild," recalled Smith later. All of the available evidence suggested
that a UFO had flown in close proximity of the station. Regrettably
the entire vicinity was bathed in clouds and no visual sighting was
made; the instrumentation, however, did record a major disturbance.
Two days later, the DOT announced that Project Magnet was being shut
down. The speed with which the project was shut down has led to allegations
that a decision was taken to continue studies at a far more covert level.
It is intriguing to note, too, that in the early 1980s Dr. Robert Sarbacher
reaffirmed his knowledge of secret U.S. Government UFO investigations
overseen by Vannevar Bush and admitted that he was aware that the U.S.
had in its possession both crashed UFOs and alien bodies. Wilbert Brockhouse
Smith died on 27 December 1961, at the age of 52.