The Virginia–Tennessee fire-streak, night of May 12, 1949 — a red-nosed fiery "cigar" trailing smoke reported town by town from Kingsport to Roanoke; classified NL, status Explained as a probable fireball.
THINK ABOUTIT UFO | UAP SIGHTING REPORT
1949: “These Flying Discs Are At It Again” — Virginia & Tennessee
On the evening of May 12, 1949, telephones lit up across a long diagonal of the upper South. From Kingsport in Tennessee, up through Bristol, Pulaski, Christiansburg, and on into Roanoke, callers told their newspapers and the weather bureau the same thing: a long, fiery shape like a cigar with a glowing red nose had crossed the dusk sky, trailing smoke and flame. The first to phone it in, two Roanoke men just after eight o’clock, described a streak of fire that shot upward, then leveled and slid away to the east “like a snake wriggling on water.” Even the Civil Aeronautics Administration men, the article admitted, were stumped. The next day the Lynchburg Advance ran it under a weary, half-joking headline — “These Flying Discs Are At It Again” — and laid out the choices for its readers: spaceship, Martian, Russian rocket, or something nobody could name. Seventy-five years on, the description points fairly clearly in one direction, but the report is preserved here as the period press recorded it.
Date: Night of May 12, 1949 (reported in the Lynchburg Advance, May 13, 1949)
Sighting Time: Approximately 8:00 p.m. (dusk / early evening)
Day/Night: Night (twilight)
Location: Along a southwest-to-northeast line through northeast Tennessee and southwest Virginia — reports from Kingsport (TN), Bristol, Pulaski, Christiansburg, Roanoke, and points west of Roanoke
Urban or Rural: Mixed — multiple towns and rural stretches along the object’s track
No. of Entity(‘s): None reported
Entity Type: Not applicable
Entity Description: Not applicable — aerial light/object sightings, no occupants
Hynek Classification: NL (Nocturnal Lights) — observationally a luminous nocturnal object; assessed cause a probable fireball
Duration: Brief (a passing transit; seconds to perhaps a minute per observer)
No. of Object(s): 1
Description of Object(s): A long cigar- or streak-shaped luminous object with a bright red nose or red glow at the front, trailing fire and smoke; appeared to come up over the southwestern horizon “like a streak of fire,” seemed to climb steeply, then level off and move eastward, its trail described as wriggling “like a snake on water”
Shape: Elongated / cigar-like (a fiery streak with a trailing tail)
Size: Not established
Color: Bright red glow at the nose; fire and smoke trailing behind
Distance: Not established (high and distant; seen simultaneously across many miles)
Height & Speed: High altitude; rapid transit across a multi-state line of sight
No. of Witnesses: Multiple — J.S. Mays and W.F. Mullins of Roanoke first, plus numerous callers from Kingsport, Bristol, Pulaski, Christiansburg, and west of Roanoke
Special Features/Characteristics: Seen near-simultaneously along an almost direct line across two states; a reddish leading glow with a fire-and-smoke train; an apparent change of direction; CAA officials reported themselves puzzled, while Lynchburg control-tower men reported seeing nothing unusual
Case Status: Explained — probable fireball / bolide
Source: The Lynchburg Advance, May 13, 1949 (contemporaneous press report)
Summary/Description: On the night of May 12, 1949, residents across northeast Tennessee and southwest Virginia reported a long, fiery, cigar-shaped object with a bright red nose, trailing smoke and flame, crossing the dusk sky. The first report came around 8:00 p.m. from J.S. Mays and W.F. Mullins of Roanoke, who described a streak of fire that appeared to climb almost straight up before leveling off and heading east, its trail wriggling “like a snake on water.” Matching reports followed from Kingsport, Bristol, Pulaski, Christiansburg, and points west of Roanoke, lying along an almost direct southwest-to-northeast line. The Civil Aeronautics Administration had no explanation, and the chief aircraft communicator at Lynchburg’s Preston Glenn airport said none of the control-tower men had seen anything unusual. The Lynchburg Advance reported the event the following day.
Related Cases: 1948 — Chiles-Whitted encounter, Alabama (cigar-shaped, fiery, meteor-vs-craft debate) | 1948–1951 — the “green fireball” wave and LaPaz investigations | 1947 — Norfolk, Virginia flying-disc reports (regional context)
Full Report
This is a press account, not an investigated case, and it should be read as exactly that: a snapshot of how a striking aerial transient looked to ordinary people up and down a two-state corridor on one spring evening, filtered through a small-city newspaper’s deadline copy.
The reported facts are consistent and limited. Beginning around eight o’clock, as the sky was darkening, observers across a long line saw a luminous, elongated object — a “long cigar” with a “bright red nose” — cross the heavens trailing fire and smoke. The first call came from two Roanoke men, J.S. Mays and W.F. Mullins. By Mays’s account it looked like a streak of fire that seemed to shoot almost straight up before leveling off and moving away eastward, the trail behind it distorting like a snake on water. Within the same window, matching descriptions arrived from Kingsport in Tennessee, then Bristol, Pulaski, Christiansburg, and localities west of Roanoke — a set of points that fall along an almost straight southwest-to-northeast line.
That geographic line is the single most diagnostic detail in the whole report. When widely separated towns all describe the same fiery streaked object at nearly the same moment, along a straight ground track, the cause is almost always a single very high, very fast luminous transient — and the classic such transient is a bright fireball, or bolide: a large meteor burning low in the atmosphere. The reddish leading glow, the long trailing tail of “fire and smoke,” the entry over the horizon, and the persistent train that appeared to writhe as upper-atmosphere winds sheared it are all signature features of a fireball and its smoke trail. The Civil Aeronautics Administration’s puzzlement and the Lynchburg tower’s non-sighting fit the same picture: a fireball is over and gone in seconds, leaves nothing on any flight plan, and is easily missed by anyone not looking the right way at the right instant.
One detail sits slightly awkwardly with a pure meteor reading: Mays’s impression that the object climbed “almost straight up” before turning east. Meteors descend; they do not climb. But this is precisely the kind of impression a brief, startled, twilight observation produces — perspective against a darkening sky, the eye catching the object mid-arc, and the mind imposing a trajectory on a few seconds of motion. It is far weaker evidence than the multi-town straight-line track that points to a single high transient. The honest reading is that the corridor of simultaneous reports outweighs one observer’s sense of direction.
It is worth remembering the moment, too. The late 1940s saw a genuine wave of bright-fireball reports across the United States — including the celebrated “green fireballs” that prompted Air Force–backed study by astronomer Lincoln LaPaz in the Southwest. Fiery aerial transits were both common and closely watched in 1949, and the press, fresh off the 1947 “flying disc” craze, reliably reached for the saucer angle — as the Lynchburg headline’s tired “here we go again” makes plain.
RESEARCHER’S NOTES
The Virginia–Tennessee Fire-Streak — May 1949 and the Straight-Line Tell
- Classification. Observationally this is an NL (Nocturnal Lights) event — a luminous, structureless object seen against a twilight-to-night sky, with no occupants, no landing, and no instrumented detection. The Hynek label describes what was seen, not what it was; the assessed cause, a fireball, falls outside the “genuine unknown” spirit of the category, which is why the Case Status carries the explanation while the classification records the observation type. There is no basis for any close-encounter designation.
- Source chain. The provenance is a single contemporaneous newspaper, the Lynchburg Advance of May 13, 1949. That is a legitimate primary source for what was reported, and its same-day, multi-locality detail is useful. But it is journalism, not investigation: there was no follow-up inquiry, no astronomer consulted, no triangulation of the track, and the witness descriptions are brief and secondhand as printed. The case is well-documented as a press event and thinly documented as a physical one.
- Pattern context. The report sits inside the broad 1947–1951 era of fireball and “flying disc” reporting, and it rhymes closely with the meteor-versus-craft debates of the period. Its nearest famous cousin is the 1948 Chiles-Whitted encounter over Alabama — also a glowing, cigar-shaped, fire-trailing object seen at night, also argued by some as a structured craft and by others as a bright bolide. The “green fireball” flap then under study by Lincoln LaPaz is the same phenomenon’s better-documented relative. Multi-town, straight-line fire-streak reports are one of the most common raw materials of the early UFO record, and they resolve to meteors far more often than not.
- Physical / evidentiary weight. Low as anomaly, high as identification. There is no photograph, no instrument trace, and no recovered material, and the witness data are minimal. But the convergence of independent reports along a straight southwest-to-northeast line, describing a red-nosed fiery streak with a smoke train at dusk, is a strong and internally consistent fingerprint of a single high fireball. The one discrepant element — an apparent upward climb and turn — is readily explained as a perceptual artifact of a brief night observation and does not outweigh the geometry. The responsible disposition is Explained, as a probable fireball or bolide, while preserving the clipping intact as a representative artifact of the period’s reporting.
The Lynchburg Advance clipping is valuable less as a mystery than as a record of how the early saucer age actually sounded at ground level: a fiery streak over the Blue Ridge at dusk, a string of telephone calls from town to town, a puzzled airport official, and a newspaper that hedged every interpretation from Mars to Moscow. The thing the callers saw was almost certainly a bright fireball, betrayed by the straight multi-state line along which it was seen. It belongs in the chronological record as a well-attested, period-flavored sighting with a sound conventional explanation — catalogued honestly as a probable bolide, and kept for the texture it lends to the 1949 archive.
The Lynchburg Advance May 13th, 1949
Zounds! Here we go again! Interplanetary spaceship? Visitor from Mars? A new Russian rocket ship? Air Going submarine? Just take your choice, your guess is as good as the next one, according to reports of various sections of Virginia and Tennessee on last nights strange phenomenon. What it was , where it came from, and where it was going, no one knows, but even the Civil Aeronautics Administration officials were puzzled and had no answer. Whatever the thing was, it resembled along cigar, with a bright red nose, and trailing smoke. Reports coinciding with the description came from localities along an almost direct line through Tennessee and Virginia and seemed sufficient to convince even the most skeptical that what the callers had said they had seen was no figment of the imagination.
The descriptions generally indicated the object came over the southwest horizon and resembled a streak of fire. There seemed to be red lights or a powerful red glow in the nose of the object. Far back at the tail there was fire and smoke. The first report came from Roanoke about 8 o’clock when J. S. Mays and W.F. Mullins, both of that city said they noticed the object.
“It looked like a streak of fire,” said Mays, “and appeared to be going almost straight up and was stepping on it.” Suddenly, he said, it appeared to level off and head eastward, resembling “a snake wriggling on water.”
Other reports followed from Kingsport, Tenn., Bristol, Pulaski, Christiansburg, and points west of Roanoke. William C. Flanik, chief aircraft communicator, CAA, at Preston Glenn airport, said none of the Lynchburg tower men had sighted any unusual objects in the sky.







