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The '''Philadelphia Experiment''' allegedly was a secret experiment conducted by the [[United States Navy|U.S. Navy]] at the Philadelphia Naval Yards at [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]], on or before [[October 28]], [[1943]], which went horribly awry. It is also called "[[Project Rainbow]]" (a code name shared by an acknowledged radar stealth technology tested on the Lockheed U-2 (Sweetman 2001). No connection has however been proven between these two projects). |
The '''Philadelphia Experiment''' allegedly was a secret experiment conducted by the [[United States Navy|U.S. Navy]] at the Philadelphia Naval Yards at [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]], on or before [[October 28]], [[1943]], which went horribly awry. It is also called "[[Project Rainbow]]" (a code name shared by an acknowledged radar stealth technology tested on the Lockheed U-2 (Sweetman 2001). No connection has however been proven between these two projects). |
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Revision as of 21:56, 17 August 2006
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The Philadelphia Experiment allegedly was a secret experiment conducted by the U.S. Navy at the Philadelphia Naval Yards at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on or before October 28, 1943, which went horribly awry. It is also called "Project Rainbow" (a code name shared by an acknowledged radar stealth technology tested on the Lockheed U-2 (Sweetman 2001). No connection has however been proven between these two projects).
Every member of the ship's crew denies that any form of this event ever occurred, except for Al Bielek, who was nowhere near the ship on the date he claims to have witnessed the experiment. [1]
A number of people argue that the Philadelphia Experiment was genuine. The Philadelphia Experiment has had a major ripple effect on conspiracy theory, and elements of the Philadelphia Experiment feature in many other conspiracy tales.
The story of the experiment
- Note: This account has been widely criticized, and nearly every assertion regarding the Philadelphia Experiment has been challenged as unfounded, highly speculative or as a hoax. There are different versions of the story, and the account below describes the most common features.
The experiment was conducted by one Dr. Franklin Reno (or Rinehart) as a military application of Albert Einstein's unified field theory, or "generalized theory of gravitation". The theory, briefly, postulates the interrelatedness of the forces that comprise electromagnetic radiation and gravity. Through a special application of the theory, it was thought to be possible, with specialized equipment and enough energy, to bend light around an object, rendering it essentially invisible. The Navy considered this application to be of obvious value in wartime (as the United States was engaged in World War II at the time) and approved and sponsored the experiment. A Navy destroyer escort, USS Eldridge (DE-173), was fitted with the required generator equipment at the Naval Yards in Philadelphia.
Testing began in the summer of 1943, and was initially successful to a limited degree. One test, on July 22, 1943, resulted in Eldridge being rendered almost completely invisible, with some eyewitnesses reporting a "greenish fog" — however, crew members complained of serious nausea afterwards. At that point, the experiment was altered by the request of the Navy, with the new goal being invisible to radar only.
Equipment was not recalibrated, and the experiment was performed again on October 28. This time, Eldridge not only actually became almost entirely invisible to the naked eye, but actually vanished from the area entirely in a flash of blue light. Concurrent with this phenomenon, the U.S. Naval base at Norfolk, Virginia, just over 600 km (375 miles) away, reported sighting Eldridge offshore for several minutes, whereupon Eldridge vanished again and reappeared in Philadelphia, at the site it had originally occupied — a supposed case of accidental teleportation.
The physiological effects on the crew were profound. Almost all of the crew were violently ill. Some suffered from mental illness because of the experience — behavior conforming to schizophrenia is described in some accounts. Still other members were missing — supposedly "vanished" — and allegedly five of the crew were actually fused to the metal bulkhead or deck of the ship. Horrified, Navy officials immediately cancelled the experiment. All of the surviving crew involved were discharged; in some accounts, brainwashing was used to make some crew members forget about the details of their experience.
Publication of the story
The details of this experiment were revealed to the public in a roundabout way. The only source of this legend stems from Carl M. Allen (Carlos Allende) and the first details about the Philadelphia Experiment were mentioned in three letters that he wrote to astronomer Morris K. Jessup.
The story as it is now known stems from the fictional movie The Philadelphia Experiment directed by Stewart Rafill. As of 1990, an alleged eyewitness supported the version as it was portrayed in the movie, adding other details to the story which then was widely spread via the Internet and reappeared in several books written since then. The name of this eyewitness is Alfred Bielek. He was proven an impostor in 2003 [2].
Morris Jessup and Carlos Miguel Allende
In 1955, Morris K. Jessup, an amateur astronomer and former graduate-level researcher, published The Case for the UFO, an examination of the phenomenon of UFOs which contained some theorizing about the means of propulsion that flying saucer-style UFOs might use. Jessup speculated that anti-gravity and/or electromagnetism may have been responsible for the observed flight behavior of UFOs. He lamented, both in the book and the publicity tour which followed, that space flight research was concentrated in the area of rocketry, and that little attention was paid to these other theoretical means of flight, which he felt would ultimately be more fruitful.
On January 13, 1955, Jessup received a letter from a man identifying himself as Carlos Miguel Allende. In the letter, Allende informed Jessup of the Philadelphia Experiment, alluding to poorly sourced contemporary newspaper articles as proof. Allende also said that he had personally witnessed Eldridge disappear and reappear while serving aboard a merchant marine ship in its vicinity, SS Andrew Furuseth. He further named other crew with which he served aboard Andrew Furuseth, and claimed to know of the fates of some of the crew members of Eldridge after the experiment, including one whom he witnessed disappear during a chaotic fight in a bar. Jessup replied to Allende by postcard, asking for further evidence and corroboration for the story, such as dates and specific details of his fantastic story. The reply came months later; however, this time the correspondent identified himself as Carl M. Allen. Allen said that he could not provide the details for which Jessup was asking, but implied that he might be able to recall by means of hypnosis. Jessup decided to discontinue the correspondence.
The ONR and the Varo annotation
In the spring of 1957, Jessup was contacted by the Office of Naval Research in Washington, D.C. and requested to study the contents of a parcel that they had received. Upon arrival, a curious Jessup was astonished to find that a paperback copy of his book had been mailed to ONR in a manila envelope marked "HAPPY EASTER". Further, the book had been extensively annotated by hand in its margins, and an ONR officer asked Jessup if he had any idea as to who had done so.
The lengthy annotations were written in three different colors of ink, and appeared to detail a correspondence between three individuals, only one of which is given a name: "Jemi". The ONR labeled the other two "Mr. A" and "Mr. B". The annotators refer to each other as Gypsies, and discuss two different types of "people" living in space. Their text contained nonstandard use of capitalization and punctuation, and detailed a lengthy discussion of the merits of various suppositions that Jessup makes throughout his book, with oblique references to the Philadelphia Experiment, in a way that suggested prior or superior knowledge. (For example, "Mr. B" reassures his fellow annotators, who have highlighted a certain theory of Jessup's, "HE HAS NO KNOWLEDGE, HE COULD NOT HAVE. ONLY GUESSING." [sic])
Based on the handwriting style and subject matter, and in comparison to the earlier letters he had received, Jessup identified "Mr. A" as Carlos Allende/Carl Allen. Others have suggested that the three annotations are actually from the same person, using three pens.
Later, the ONR contacted Jessup, claiming that the return address on Allende's letter to Jessup was an abandoned farmhouse. They also informed Jessup that the Varo Corporation, a research firm, was preparing a print copy of the annotated version of The Case for the UFO, complete with both letters he had received. Numbers vary, but it appears that around 100 copies of the Varo Edition were printed and distributed within the Navy. Jessup was also sent three for his own use.
Jessup attempted to make a living writing on the topic, but his follow up book did not sell well and his publisher rejected several other manuscripts. In 1958 his wife left him, and friends described him as being somewhat unstable when he travelled to New York. After returning to Florida he was involved in a serious car accident and was slow to recover, apparently increasing his despondency. Morris Jessup committed suicide in 1959.
Later publications of the story
In 1965, Vincent Gaddis published Invisible Horizons: True Mysteries of the Sea, in which the story of the experiment from the Varo annotation is recounted.
In 1973 Thomas Pynchon published his novel Gravity's Rainbow which is set in World War II and involves both occult and scientific arcana. Many have been puzzled by the title of the work but it is speculated that even though the Philadelphia Experiment is never mentioned in the book the title of the novel comes from the formentioned project also known as "Project Rainbow".
Later, in 1977, Charles Berlitz, an author of several books on paranormal phenomena, included a chapter on the experiment in his book Without a Trace: New Information from the Triangle. (The Philadelphia Experiment did not take place within the so-called Bermuda Triangle).
In 1978, a novel Thin Air by George E. Simpson and Neal R. Burger was released. This was a dramatic fictional account, clearly inspired by the foregoing works, of a conspiracy to cover-up an horrendous experiment gone wrong on board the USS Eldridge in 1943. However, a year later, Berlitz and a co-author, William L. Moore, published The Philadelphia Experiment: Project Invisibility which, though it claims to be fact, as Berlitz's previous books do, plagiarizes Thin Air.
Two movies have been released on the subject: The Philadelphia Experiment (1984) and Philadelphia Experiment II (1993). They are best described as science fiction.
The Experiment has been the subject of several television shows dealing with the paranormal and conspiracy theories, including The Unexplained, a series produced by Bill Kurtis on the cable television network The Arts and Entertainment Network (A&E). One episode of The History Channel's History's Mysteries discusses the theory. A similar story also ran on the show Unsolved Mysteries on the cable TV network Lifetime.
Discussion and debate of the story
Detractors, skeptics, and other researchers have noted several serious issues and problems with the story of the Philadelphia Experiment.
It seems very difficult to put any credence in the story at all. The entirety of the story was told by a single person, and no corroborating evidence has ever been offered. All of the "research" on the story since Allende's version has consisted primarily of various authors re-telling the story with liberal doses of dramatic embellishment.
The best known account, Berlitz's, contains material copied from a science fiction book.
Writer Robert Goerman wrote an article for Fate Magazine in 1980, claiming that "Carlos Allende"/"Carl Allen" was in fact who he claimed to be in later letters, Carl Meredith Allen of New Kensington, Pennsylvania. Allen was a highly intelligent but nonetheless mentally ill itinerant who had likely fabricated the story of the Philadelphia Experiment as a result of his illness. Whether illness or simply a practical joke, it is difficult to consider any of his statements to be based in fact or reliable.
The science is even more debatable. Einstein never fully developed his Unified Field Theory (UFT) although he worked on variations of the theme until his death in 1955. A broader understanding of fundamental physics during this period and later has shown that the line of reasoning he was following simply could not work. Unfortunately the name "Unified Field Theory" is used to describe any number of theories that are completely different in nature from Einstein's work, which somewhat confuses the issue. Nevertheless, no consistent UFT or linkage of gravity and electromagnetism has come forth. There is no known mechanism by which an electric or magnetic field of any strength can "bend" or "deflect" light or radar, which are composed of uncharged photons. The idea that the Navy would be able to build an experiment based on a nonexistent theoretical basis is therefore highly suspect.
Present day scientists say that the generators rigged to the ship were not designed to warp in time or any complex concept similar to that nature ("The Philadelphia Project"). Instead these high frequency generators were designed to create a mirage, rendering the ship “invisible” to the human eye. This high frequency generator would heat up the air and water around the ship causing a mirage to form. This mirage would hide the ship from plain view and the only physically detectable circumstance would be the wake left behind by the mirage and the greenish colored fog so many claimed to see ("The Philadelphia Project").
It could be that the authors in question simply did not understand the science involved and are reporting it incorrectly. Several issues weigh against this interpretation too. The description of the system, which uses gravity to bend light around the ship, is theoretically possible, but would require a mass considerably greater than that of the Sun (which does bend light due to gravity, but only slightly — its mass does not warp space-time much).
The historical timeline of the story is equally suspect. The Eldridge was not commissioned until August 27, 1943, and remained in port in New York, until September. The October experiment took place while the ship was on its first shakedown cruise in the Bahamas. A reunion of veterans who served aboard the Eldridge told The Philadelphia Inquirer in April 1999 that the ship had never made port in Philadelphia [3]. (USS Eldridge's complete World War II action report, including the remarks section of the 1943 deck log is available on microfilm, item # NRS-1978-26, from the US Naval Historical Center, Washington Navy Yard, DC 20374-5060.)
The Navy has denied the entire story, of course, but this has only served to convince the conspiracy theorists that it must be true. Various reasons for a coverup are offered, everything from the technology being widely used and still top secret, to the concern that the victims' families would sue for damages.
Alternate explanations and stories
Researcher Jacques Vallee describes a procedure on board the USS Engstrom, which was docked alongside the Eldridge in 1943. The operation involved the generation of a powerful electromagnetic field on board the ship in order to degauss it, with the goal of rendering the ship undetectable — "invisible" — to magnetically triggered torpedoes and mines. This system was invented by the British, who used it widely during World War II, and British ships of the era often included such systems built-in on the upper decks (the conduits are still visible on the deck of the HMS Belfast in London). Degaussing is a known military technology still in use to protect against these torpedoes; however, it has no effect on visible light or radar. Vallee speculates that accounts of the Engstrom's degaussing may have been garbled in subsequent retellings, and these accounts may have influenced the story of the Philadelphia Experiment.
A veteran who served on board the Engstrom noted that the Eldridge could indeed have travelled from Philadelphia to Norfolk and back again in a single day at a time when merchant ships could not have — by use of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, which at the time was open only to Naval vessels. Use of this channel was kept quiet: German submarines had recently been ravaging east coast shipping during Operation Drumbeat, and thus military ships unable to protect themselves were secretly moved via canals to avoid this threat.
It should be noted that this same veteran claims to be the man whom Allende witnessed "disappear" at a bar. He claims that when the fight broke out, friendly barmaids whisked him out the back door of the bar before the police arrived, because he was underaged. They then covered for him by claiming that he "disappeared."
In a more speculative and strongly paranormal vein, Al Bielek and Duncan Cameron both claim to have leaped from the deck of the Eldridge while it was in "hyperspace" between Philadelphia and Norfolk, and ended up, after a period of severe disorientation, at the Air Force station Montauk Point, Long Island in the year 1983, having experienced not only teleportation but time travel. They claim John von Neumann met them there (although officially he died in 1957). This episode is a seminal event in another alleged secret and horrific U.S. Government experiment into the paranormal known as the Montauk Project.
Cultural references
The Philadelphia Experiment, its alleged results, and the potential of the experiment have been the subject of many books, films, soundtracks, and video games.
Audio/Visual Media
In the "Død Kalm" (2X19) episode of The X-Files, Mulder and Scully are tipped off to a U.S. Navy ship that had caused its crew to rapidly age; Mulder at first believed the aging had to do with the failed Philadelphia Experiment.
The Pegasus, an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation had a plot similar to the Philadelphia Experiment. Tests of an experimental type of cloaking device result in the deaths of most of the crew of the ship.
The 1997 science-fiction movie Event Horizon includes several plot elements which seem to be based on the Philadelphia Experiment.
On the Sci Fi Channel, the TV miniseries The Triangle, the Philadelphia Project was the origin of the Bermuda Triangle.
Many fans of the ABC T.V. show Lost, with the season two finale, believe that characters on the shows are either intentionally or unintentionally repeating this experiment.
Video Games
The Command & Conquer: Red Alert games involves a means of time travel/teleportation which was developed by Einstein as an evolution of the Philadelphia Experiment. He used it to eliminate Hitler before the rise of Nazi Germany, but in doing so inadvertedly caused an alternate Second World War to take place between the Allied powers, now including Germany, and Soviet Russia. The experiment led to two devices, based on its two variations. The Chronosphere, a potent but dangerous teleportation device for it teleports only mechanized units while killing any biological matter and, secondly, the Gap Generator, a building and vehicle mounted device that blocks radar and sight in a certain radius around the Gap unit. The game has a cutscene that briefly shows an Iowa class battleship disappearing, and mentions the "horrible aftermath" the sailors experienced.
In Red Alert 2 the United States has perfected the Chronosphere's technology to the point where certain infantry units and the Allied Chrono Miner can teleport across the map; additionally, this second generation Chronosphere allowed for the teleportation of up to 9 mechanized units at once. At the end of the game USA uses this device to make a surgical strike at Moscow and avoid fighting through the Iron Curtain nations.
Also in Command and Conquer Tiberian Sun, the sequel to the game Tiberian Dawn of which Red alert is the prequel, the command station of a certain general in the brotherhood of NOD one of the factions in the C&C tiberian series is called the Montauk.
In the 1998 PlayStation RPG Xenogears, the starship in the opening cinematic is named the Eldridge.
See also
External links
- Link catalogue for the Philadelphia Experiment and the Montauk Project
- Site debunking the claims of one Alfred Bielek, allegedly an eyewitness and survivor of the Philadelphia Experiment
- Excerpts from The Case for the UFO
- Transcription of the Varo Edition of The Case for the UFO
- 2 chapters of Gone Dark by "W.B. Smyth", supposed "document" of the experiment. 50 Years after Albert Einstein: The Failure of the Unified Field
- Naval Historical Center's entry for the "Philadelphia Experiment"
- Navweaps.com entry for the "Philadelphia Experiment"
- Skeptic's Dictionary entry for the "Philadelphia Experiment"
- The Philadelphia Experiment at IMDb
- The UFO and the Sailor
- Robert Goerman's Alias Carlos Allende: The Mystery Man Behind the Philadelphia Experiment
- Joe Turner's The Philadelphia Experiment: What They Don't Want You to Know
- Anatomy Of A Hoax: The Philadelphia Experiment 50 Years Later
- Straight Dope on the Philadelphia Experiment
- The Philadelphia Experiment and the Hutchison Effect How The Philadelphia Experiment and the Hutchison Effect are related, with links
- Recreation of the Philadelphia Experiment in 2006
References
- Sweetman, Bill. Lockheed Stealth, Zenith Press, 2001. ISBN 0-7603-1940-5
- "The Philadelphia Project-Project Rainbow and the USS Eldridge." Above Top-Secret. 8 Aug 2006 <http://www.abovetopsecret.com>