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IncidentBattle of Los Angeles (24–25 February 1942)

aka Battle of Los Angeles (24–25 February 1942)

Beginning at approximately 03:00 local time on 25 February 1942, U.S. Army anti-aircraft batteries around Los Angeles fired approximately 1,400 12.8-pound shells over the city at unidentified objects; the iconic *Los Angeles Times* photograph of converging searchlight beams on a luminous object was published the same morning. Later officially attributed to 'war nerves' and weather balloons; the photograph and the official Air Force history both survive.

historically-pivotal-explained The Army's postwar assessment — war nerves plus a lost weather balloon, compounded by barrage fire — is substantially adequate. Pivotal as the first mass-witness institutional response: 1,400 shells over a blacked-out city.
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status history (1)
2026-06-09 · unannotated → historically-pivotal-explained — initial annotation sweep (Epic J.F4)

In the early morning hours of 25 February 1942, less than three months after the Pearl Harbor attack and one day after a Japanese submarine had shelled the Ellwood oil installation north of Santa Barbara, Los Angeles air defense sirens activated. Between approximately 03:00 and 04:14 local time, U.S. Army Coast Artillery Corps anti-aircraft batteries deployed around the city fired approximately 1,400 rounds of 12.8-pound (.50 cal. and 3-inch) shells at unidentified objects reportedly visible over the city. The blackout was lifted at 07:21. Five civilians died — three of cardiac events attributed to the barrage, two in a traffic incident in the blackout — and significant property damage was caused by unexploded ordnance falling back over the city.

The following morning, the Los Angeles Times ran a front-page photograph showing multiple searchlight beams converging on a small luminous object above the city. The photograph — credited to staff photographer (uncredited at the time, identified in later reprints) — became one of the most-cited “early UFO” images of the 20th century. The image has been the subject of decades of analysis; later digital re-examinations of the original negative indicate substantial darkroom retouching, with the central luminous shape enhanced for print reproducibility, though the photograph is undoubtedly of the actual event rather than a fabrication.

The U.S. Army’s initial assessment, issued by Secretary of War Henry Stimson on 25 February 1942, attributed the activity to as many as 15 enemy aircraft. The Navy’s contemporaneous assessment, issued by Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox the same day, attributed it to a “false alarm” caused by “war nerves.” Neither was formally consistent with the other. The Office of Air Force History’s official 1983 volume The Army Air Forces in World War II, Volume I, attributed the incident to a weather balloon released for an upper-air observation at 03:00 — the timing of the first reported visual contact — combined with the psychological aftermath of the Ellwood shelling and a series of cascading misidentifications by ground observers.

Whether the weather-balloon explanation accounts for the full 75-minute duration of the barrage and the multiple-witness reports of structured objects is part of the case’s continuing literature. What is documented: a real anti-aircraft barrage, a real photograph, real civilian deaths, and three successive official explanations across two services and forty years, none of which is fully consistent with the others. The Battle of Los Angeles is the founding U.S. mass-witness UAP event of the modern era; it predates Roswell by five years and Arnold by five and a half.

Notable & intriguing

Public-record items already documented about this subject. Folklore is labelled. Sources cited where the specificity warrants it.

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