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One of two photographs taken by Paul Trent, May 11, 1950

McMinnville UFO Photographs — Trent Farm

May 11, 1950

McMinnville, Oregon, USA

Cold War

One of two photographs taken by Paul Trent, May 11, 1950

Paul Trent / Public Domain

  • DateMay 11, 1950
  • LocationMcMinnville, Oregon, USA
  • Witnesses2
  • ShapeDisc
  • Credibility★★★☆☆
Same eraCold War
  1. 1949Elliptical Object Encounter — Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii, 1949
  2. 1950Mariana UFO Film
  3. 1950McMinnville UFO Photographs — Trent Farm
  4. 1951Chorwon E-Company UFO Encounter & Radiation Illness
  5. 1951New Delhi Flying Club Cigar UFO

Credibility Audit

3 factors
  1. Photo Evidence+2
  2. Multiple Witnesses+2
  3. Official Report+1
Raw total5
Final tier★★☆☆☆Low
Thresholds
  • ★0–3
  • ★★4–7
  • ★★★8–11
  • ★★★★12–16
  • ★★★★★17+

DoD Observables

1 of 5
  • Instantaneous Acceleration
  • Hypersonic Velocity
  • Low Observability
  • Trans-Medium Travel
  • Anti-Gravity Lift

Event Description

Observed Shape
Disc

Craft morphology

On the evening of May 11, 1950, Evelyn Trent was feeding rabbits on her farm near McMinnville, Oregon when she observed a large, metallic disc-shaped object slowly gliding across the sky. She called to her husband Paul, who retrieved his Rolleiflex camera and photographed the object twice before it accelerated and disappeared to the northwest. The two photographs show a clearly structured disc-shaped object against a partly cloudy sky, with the Trent farmhouse and outbuildings visible in the frame providing scale and context.

The photographs were published in the McMinnville Telephone-Register and subsequently by LIFE magazine in June 1950, bringing them to national attention. Unlike many UFO photographs of the era, the Trent images were not immediately dismissed — largely because the witnesses appeared as credible, unassuming farmers with no apparent motive for fabrication.

The images were examined by multiple organizations, most notably the Condon Committee. Analyst William K. Hartmann concluded: "This is one of the few UFO reports in which all factors investigated — geometric, psychological, and physical — appear to be consistent with the assertion that an extraordinary flying object, silvery, metallic, disc-shaped, tens of meters in diameter, and evidently artificial, flew within sight of two witnesses." Subsequent photogrammetric analysis by Bruce Maccabee in the 1990s consistently failed to find evidence of a model, string, or fabrication device. The McMinnville photographs are routinely cited alongside the Lubbock Lights and Mariana Film as the most credible photographic UAP evidence from the early Cold War period.

Sources

  1. [1]governmentCondon Committee Report — Case 46, University of Colorado, 1968
  2. [2]mediaLIFE Magazine, June 26, 1950