William Booth Gill
William Booth Gill (1928β2007) 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 (1928β2007)
- 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.
Timeline
(2)References
More community notes about this entry
These are personal research notes that community members chose to publish. They are not an editorial publication by the platform.