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William Booth Gill

πŸ‡¦πŸ‡ΊAustraliaWitness1928 – 2007
Anglican MissionaryBoianai Witness
Type
Witness
Nation
πŸ‡¦πŸ‡Ί Australia
Born
1928 – 2007

William Booth Gill (1928–2007) was an Australian Anglican missionary stationed at Boianai, Papua New Guinea. On 26 and 27 June 1959, together with 37 other witnesses β€” including teachers and medical staff β€” he observed for more than four hours a large disc-shaped craft with humanoid figures on its upper surface; four figures waved back when Gill waved. The Boianai encounter, because of its many credible witnesses, its extremely long duration and its apparent interaction, counts among the strongest close-encounter cases of all.

  • Australian Anglican missionary (1928–2007)
  • Stationed at Boianai, Papua New Guinea
  • Sighting on 26/27 June 1959 with humanoid figures on the upper surface of the object
  • Observation lasted over four hours across two nights
  • Gill and 37 other witnesses, including teachers and medical staff
  • Four figures waved back when Gill waved
  • Investigation by the Royal Australian Air Force; significant through multiple witnesses, duration and interaction

For the UAP timeline, Gill is one of the strongest multi-witness close-encounter cases of the southern hemisphere: an Anglican missionary together with medical and teaching staff makes the Boianai sighting a standard entry against which any serious discussion about "interaction with UAP occupants" must be measured.

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