The index page for the 1954 French flap section of this website is here.
October 7, 1954, Saint-Etienne, Loire:
Reference for this case: 7-Oct-54-Saint-Etienne.
Please cite this reference in any correspondence with me regarding this case.
In the 1950s, Guy Quincy, a French archivist interested in the topic of the "mysterious celestial objects", compiled a catalog of observations, in which there was one of a "luminous object", noted for October 7, 1954, at an unknown time in Saint-Etienne in the Loire department. Quincy gave no details and no source.
All I have been able to find so far is the mention of Saint-Etienne as the location of an observation, in the national newspaper Le Figaro for October 8, 1954.
[Ref. fio1:] NEWSPAPER "LE FIGARO":
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Reports of flying saucers seem to be becoming more and more precise. Several people in the same region report the same phenomenon, and it can be said that in recent days there has been a true "rain" of flying saucers, cigars, or disks over the entire country.
A farmer from Chaleix (Dordogne), Mr. Garreau, solemnly declared that he had seen a "flying soup tureen" land on his property. Mr. Garreau stated that two perfectly normal men, wearing khaki suits, came out of it, shook his hand, and spoke to him in an unknown language. Stunned, Mr. Garreau did not respond. The two men petted his dog and climbed back into their craft, which took off silently at a dizzying speed.
A luminous sphere, 12 meters in diameter, was seen on the Ile de Ré by a mason, Mr. Simonetin. "The sphere," he said, "turned red; after hovering 50 meters above the ground, it changed to blue and rose very quickly vertically."
The craft was also observed by two other residents of the island, as well as by two Parisians on vacation.
Ms. Thérèse Fourmeret, 23, living in Poncey-sur-l'Ignon (Côte-d'Or), saw on Monday evening a craft land in a meadow not far from her home. She stated that, frightened, she refrained from observing the phenomenon any longer and took refuge at her neighbors' house.
The gendarmerie noted very clear marks on the ground at the indicated spot. Clods of turf had been uprooted and scattered within a radius of four meters.
In Duclair (Seine-Inférieure), Mr. Landrin, a water inspector, walking with his wife, was blinded by a beam of light. When he opened his eyes, he saw a sphere that disappeared a few minutes later.
A road worker from Mertrud (Haute-Marne), Mr. André Narcy, claimed to have approached to less than 100 meters a flying saucer resting in a field near Voillecomte. He saw nearby a small being, about 1.2 meters tall, wearing a hairy cloak. Mr. Narcy called to the strange figure, which did not respond, and it rushed into its craft, which took off vertically.
According to Mr. Narcy, the craft was spherical, about ten meters in diameter. Beneath the sphere was a sort of spindle, and the porthole through which the being entered was located between the spindle and the body of the craft. At the craft's departure, a sort of flame emerged from the spindle, while a large vaporous swirl occurred beneath the craft.
Mr. Narcy immediately went to work, where he recounted his adventure to his colleagues. With two of them, Messrs. Riel and Henry, he returned to the site, where they observed that the dew had disappeared from a certain area. The grass had a slightly milky tint and was flattened over a square of about three meters per side. In addition, twelve parallel marks resembling footprints were spread over a certain distance, suggesting that the craft had landed by a series of small jolts.
Finally, saucers, cigars, disks, crowns, spheres, glows, and luminous trails of various colors, as well as all other flying objects, were seen in Saint-Etienne, in several villages of Eure-et-Loir, at Heyrieux, Dieulanvollon (Côtes-du-Nord), at Jort (Calvados), and at Biarritz.
[Ref. gqy1:] GUY QUINCY:
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October 7 [, 1954]
[... other cases...]
? [= unknown hour]: Saint-Etienne (Loire): lumin. obj.
[... other cases...]
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Totally insufficient information.
(These keywords are only to help queries and are not implying anything.)
Saint-Etienne, Loire, object, luminous
[----] indicates sources that are not yet available to me.
| Version: | Created/Changed by: | Date: | Change Description: |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | Patrick Gross | May 5, 2022 | First published, [gqy1]. |
| 1.1 | Patrick Gross | March 20, 2026 | Addition [fio1]. In the Summary, addition of the information from [fio1]. |