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IncidentKelly–Hopkinsville Encounter (21 August 1955)

aka Kelly–Hopkinsville Encounter (21 August 1955)

On the night of 21 August 1955, the Sutton family and visitor Billy Ray Taylor at a farmhouse near Kelly, Christian County, Kentucky reported a sustained encounter with multiple small, large-eyed, hairless humanoid figures appearing at windows and doors over a four-hour period; Hopkinsville Police Chief Russell Greenwell led a 22-person response team to the scene.

under-corroborated A single extended-family witness group; responding officers saw nothing but recorded the family's fear as genuine. The great-horned-owl hypothesis is the standing conventional account.
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status history (1)
2026-06-09 · unannotated → under-corroborated — initial annotation sweep (Epic J.F4)

Between approximately 19:00 on 21 August 1955 and 03:30 on 22 August, the Sutton family farmhouse on the Old Madisonville Road outside Kelly, Christian County, Kentucky was the locus of one of the most heavily witnessed close-encounter cases of the early UFO era. The Sutton family — Lucky Sutton, Vera Sutton, his mother Glennie Lankford, his brothers J. C. and Elmer “Lucky” Sutton, sister Mary Lankford Sutton, and several Sutton children — together with visiting friend Billy Ray Taylor and his wife June, reported that approximately 12 small humanoid figures (3–4 feet tall, with disproportionately large heads, large luminous eyes, claw-like hands, and “silvery” or metallic-appearing skin) repeatedly approached the farmhouse over a four-hour interval.

According to the witnesses’ accounts collected by Hopkinsville Police Chief Russell Greenwell at the scene the same night, Billy Ray Taylor had first stepped outside earlier in the evening to draw water from the well and reported seeing a luminous object descend in a nearby field. The figures began appearing at the farmhouse windows shortly after. The Sutton men fired shotguns and a .22 rifle at the figures repeatedly; the figures appeared to be struck but not injured, sometimes “floating” away rather than falling. The family fled to the Hopkinsville police station around 23:00.

Chief Greenwell, along with Christian County Sheriff Jay Solomon, Kentucky State Police troopers, and U.S. Army personnel from nearby Fort Campbell (Greenwell’s report mentions four military police), totaled approximately 22 responders at the scene. They arrived at the farmhouse at approximately 23:30 and conducted a search. No figures were found; no physical evidence was recovered. After the responders departed at approximately 02:00, the Sutton family reported a second wave of figures returning to the windows; they remained barricaded inside until daylight.

The case was investigated by Project Blue Book (which classified it as a psychological hoax) and by J. Allen Hynek for CUFOS in later years. The Sutton family’s accounts to interviewers in the subsequent decades remained substantially consistent. The case is unusual for the number of witnesses (at least 11 family members and friends), the duration (4+ hours), the professional response (22 responders), and the absence of any plausible motive for fabrication. The Kelly-Hopkinsville case is often cited as a foundational mid-20th-century CE3 (entity-visible) encounter and as one of the few cases where multiple armed witnesses reported direct visual contact with humanoid figures.

Notable & intriguing

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

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