Within Pembrokeshire UFOs

How Did a Local UFO Flap Become Folklore?

The Pembrokeshire flap endured because official files, press coverage and witness interviews kept an unresolved local story alive.

On this page

  • How reports reached the Ministry of Defence
  • The role of newspapers and television
  • What the case means for UK UFO history
Preview for How Did a Local UFO Flap Become Folklore?

Introduction

Pembrokeshire’s 1977 UFO flap became folklore not simply because children and adults said they saw strange craft, but because the story passed through three powerful amplifiers: Ministry of Defence paperwork, Welsh and national media coverage, and later anniversaries that kept returning to the same unresolved questions. The official files did not prove that an alien craft visited Broad Haven or Little Haven. They did show that reports from west Wales were recorded, discussed and, in at least one case, followed up through RAF channels rather than dismissed as village gossip. That paper trail gave the story a second life. Press and television then turned a local cluster of claims into the “Broad Haven Triangle” or “Dyfed Triangle”, a phrase that still shapes how the episode is remembered. [The National Archives+2Mystika]images.nationalarchives.gov.ukThe National ArchivesThe National Archives

Overview image for Files and Media This page focuses on the legacy of the records and reporting, not on retelling every sighting in the flap. The centre of gravity is historic Pembrokeshire: Broad Haven, Little Haven, St Brides Bay and nearby rural locations on the west Wales coast. The “Dyfed” label matters because Dyfed was the 1974–1996 administrative county, while the core locations sit in historic Pembrokeshire, one of the thirteen historic counties of Wales shown on the project’s county-map frame. [Wikimedia Commons]commons.wikimedia.orgFile:Wales Historic Counties map Pembrokeshire.svgFile:Wales Historic Counties map Pembrokeshire.svg

How reports reached the Ministry of Defence

The Ministry of Defence did not run a public “alien investigation” in the popular sense. Its UFO system was primarily concerned with whether reported objects suggested a defence, airspace or intelligence problem. The National Archives’ guide to MOD UFO records explains that sightings had been reported for decades, that MOD records are now held at Kew, and that many files contain letters, phone reports, replies and possible explanations such as Venus, aircraft, balloons or satellites. It also notes that most reports described lights rather than detailed craft, although some events attracted multiple reports. [The National Archives]nationalarchives.gov.ukThe National Archives UFO reportsThe National Archives UFO reports

That context is important for Pembrokeshire. The 1977 flap entered the official archive as part of the ordinary machinery of UFO correspondence, not as proof of extraordinary visitation. The National Archives image library separately catalogues a “Child’s drawing of UFO sighting” dated 1977, created by the Ministry of Defence, under reference DEFE 24/1206, with the catalogue context “UFO reports and correspondence: April-October 1977”. That single catalogue entry is modest, but it anchors the Broad Haven story in a recoverable official file rather than leaving it only in memory, local rumour or later television retellings. [The National Archives]images.nationalarchives.gov.ukThe National Archives

The files also show why the case has remained more interesting than a simple “children saw something” anecdote. David Clarke, who worked with The National Archives during the release of MOD UFO files, has described DEFE 24/1206 as part of a wider 1977 pattern of schoolchild UFO reports. His account places Broad Haven alongside other school cases, including Rhosybol in Anglesey and Upton Primary School in Macclesfield, where children were also separated and asked to draw what they had seen. In that comparison, Broad Haven stands out not because it was the only such report, but because it became the most publicly visible one. [Four Corners Books]fourcornersbooks.co.ukOpen source on fourcornersbooks.co.uk.

The official route was also shaped by local concern. Rosa Granville of the Haven Fort Hotel at Little Haven reportedly wrote to her MP Nicholas Edwards after her April 1977 experience. Clarke’s account says the MP’s intervention led to an RAF Brawdy officer visiting the hotel, while a later public ministerial reply stated that, apart from Granville’s report, the MOD had no record of unusual activity in the area. That contrast — a local interview on one hand, a guarded public reply on the other — helped later writers frame the flap as a case where official interest existed but remained limited and cautious. [Mystika]mystika.infoThe Welsh Triangle:: Mystika-infoThe Welsh Triangle:: Mystika-info

Files and Media illustration 1

What the MOD files strengthen — and what they do not

The MOD material strengthens the historical reality of the flap as a documented episode of public concern. It confirms that reports, drawings and correspondence existed; it shows that some material was retained; and it places Pembrokeshire within the broader late-1970s UFO workload of the British state. It does not establish the nature of the object or figures described by witnesses.

That distinction is easy to lose in popular retellings. A file reference can sound like a secret verdict, but in this case it is better understood as evidence of official receipt and limited follow-up. The National Archives’ general UFO records page is clear that MOD files often contain sightings and possible explanations, and that occasional multiple-report events entered the record because they generated public, press or parliamentary attention. Pembrokeshire fits that pattern: the case mattered administratively because people were alarmed, MPs and journalists asked questions, and the reports overlapped with military geography around RAF Brawdy, Aberporth and other west Wales defence sites. [The National Archives]nationalarchives.gov.ukThe National Archives UFO reportsThe National Archives UFO reports

The most revealing point is the alleged “discreet enquiry” by RAF Police. Clarke’s account says that on 14 June 1977 the head of S4 (Air), the MOD branch dealing with UFOs, asked the RAF Police Provost and Security Service to look into events in Wales. The wording he reports is strikingly practical: assess local interest or alarm, look for a rational explanation, and decide whether there was prima facie evidence for a more specialist enquiry. That sounds less like a dramatic cover-up than a bureaucratic attempt to manage a public-safety and defence-interest question without escalating it unnecessarily. [Mystika]mystika.infoThe Welsh Triangle:: Mystika-infoThe Welsh Triangle:: Mystika-info

The problem for certainty is that no final report on that RAF Police enquiry appears to survive. The same account notes that a December 1977 briefing on UFO policy referred to concern in Wales and said RAF Police thought some of the Welsh reports “could have been the work of a practical joker”. That weakens any claim that the official trail secretly confirmed something extraordinary. It also leaves the historian with a familiar UFO-record problem: enough documentation to show the case was taken seriously enough to check, but not enough to settle what happened. [Mystika]mystika.infoThe Welsh Triangle:: Mystika-infoThe Welsh Triangle:: Mystika-info

How newspapers and television turned a village story into the “Triangle”

The Broad Haven reports became famous because they were narratively simple and visually strong. Schoolchildren said they had seen a cigar-shaped object near their playground. Adults did not initially believe them. The headteacher separated the pupils and asked for drawings. Those drawings became the story’s most memorable artefacts: easy to photograph, easy to reproduce, and powerful because they appeared to show several children independently converging on the same basic image. [Four Corners Books]fourcornersbooks.co.ukOpen source on fourcornersbooks.co.uk.

Media coverage then did what official filing alone could not. It gave the events a name, a frame and a continuing audience. Clarke argues that early in February 1977 several groups of Welsh schoolchildren reported UFO sightings, but Broad Haven was the one widely covered by the media, with pupils interviewed live on national television at the scene. Once that happened, the case was no longer only a local school incident. It became a national UFO story that other witnesses, journalists and investigators could attach themselves to. [Four Corners Books]fourcornersbooks.co.ukOpen source on fourcornersbooks.co.uk.

The label “Welsh Triangle”, “Dyfed Triangle” or “Broad Haven Triangle” was especially important. It borrowed the mystery-language of the Bermuda Triangle and applied it to a stretch of rural and coastal west Wales. That label was catchy, but it also compressed different kinds of reports into one mythic zone: school sightings, hotel sightings, farm encounters, lights, figures and alleged physical traces. For readers, the label made the flap feel coherent. For sceptical analysis, it creates a risk: once a “triangle” exists in headlines, unrelated or weakly connected reports can start to look like parts of one hidden pattern. [Wales]wales.comNetflix premieres UFO documentary featuring Wales | WalesNetflix premieres UFO documentary featuring Wales | Wales

Television also shaped witness memory. Later accounts by former pupil David Davies describe the days after the school sighting as a media storm, making it difficult to settle down and think clearly about what had been seen. That point matters because media attention can cut both ways. It can preserve testimony before it disappears, but it can also intensify social pressure, encourage repetition of a simplified version, and make later memories harder to separate from the public story that grew around them. [Radio Times]radiotimes.comRadio Timestollbit.radiotimes.comRadio Timestollbit.radiotimes.com

Files and Media illustration 2

Why the drawings became the case’s lasting evidence

The Broad Haven drawings have lasted because they are more concrete than most UFO testimony. A written report says what someone claimed; a drawing shows how they pictured it. The National Archives catalogue entry for a child’s 1977 UFO drawing in DEFE 24/1206 is therefore one of the most important surviving anchors for the flap’s public legacy. It gives the reader something specific to evaluate rather than a vague claim that “many people saw something”. [The National Archives]images.nationalarchives.gov.ukThe National Archives

Even so, the drawings are not simple proof. Clarke’s account stresses a detail sometimes lost in anniversary coverage: although the children were interviewed separately on Monday 7 February, the drawings and notes were made three days after the Friday sighting, after a weekend in which the children could have talked to each other. That does not mean they invented the story. It does mean that “independent drawings” should be treated carefully. Similarity may indicate a shared observation, but it may also reflect discussion, expectation, local excitement or the normal way children influence one another’s memories. [Four Corners Books]fourcornersbooks.co.ukOpen source on fourcornersbooks.co.uk.

The headteacher Ralph Llewellyn’s recorded position sits in the middle. Clarke quotes the school diary account as saying that, after allowing for “variations and embellishments”, Llewellyn was reluctant to believe the children capable of a sustained sophisticated hoax, accepted that they had seen something unfamiliar, and still sought a natural explanation. That is arguably the most balanced contemporary stance: not ridicule, not certainty, but cautious acceptance that the pupils had experienced something they could not identify. [Four Corners Books]fourcornersbooks.co.ukOpen source on fourcornersbooks.co.uk.

The drawings also link Pembrokeshire to a wider British pattern in 1977. Other child-witness cases reached the MOD UFO desk that year, including the Rhosybol report in Anglesey and the Macclesfield report in Cheshire. Clarke notes that these school cases formed a cluster of similar experiences within months of each other. That comparison slightly reduces Broad Haven’s uniqueness, but it increases its historical value: it becomes a vivid local example of a broader British UFO moment in which children, teachers, police, the press and the MOD all became part of the same reporting chain. [Four Corners Books]fourcornersbooks.co.ukOpen source on fourcornersbooks.co.uk.

The sceptical afterlife: prank, panic or unresolved core?

The main sceptical challenge to the 1977 flap is not that every witness lied. It is that different parts of the story may have different explanations. Some reports could have been ordinary aircraft or lights. Some may have been influenced by press coverage. Some of the humanoid sightings may have been pranks. Others remain harder to pin down because the evidence is mainly testimony.

The strongest prank strand concerns the silver-suited figures reported after the school sighting. Clarke records a long-running local rumour that members of a Round Table club borrowed silver-lined asbestos suits from local oil refinery workers for fancy dress and later used them in practical jokes. In 1996, Glyn Edwards reportedly admitted to the Western Mail that he had walked around in such an outfit “for a bit of fun”, after “alien sightings were all the rage”. If true, that is highly relevant to some humanoid reports around Little Haven and nearby farms. [Mystika]mystika.infoThe Welsh Triangle:: Mystika-infoThe Welsh Triangle:: Mystika-info

But the prank explanation does not neatly dissolve the whole flap. It comes after the Broad Haven school report, not before it. It better explains some later “spaceman” encounters than the original school claim of a ground-level object behind trees. Clarke’s account ends with the important residue: despite attempts to persuade former pupils to confess, David Davies maintained that he had seen something unexplained and would stick to that story. That persistence does not prove an extraordinary object, but it does explain why the case has not collapsed into a simple hoax story. [Mystika]mystika.infoThe Welsh Triangle:: Mystika-infoThe Welsh Triangle:: Mystika-info

A second sceptical strand is media contagion. By “contagion”, sceptics do not mean disease; they mean that once a dramatic story is widely reported, other people may interpret ambiguous sights through the same frame. The 1977 timing is relevant. Clarke points out that Star Wars did not open in UK cinemas until December 1977 and Close Encounters of the Third Kind was still a year away from its UK cultural peak, but television UFO programming, science fiction and press coverage were already part of the children’s media world. Broad Haven may therefore have been both a sighting case and a media event that helped generate the conditions for further sightings. [Four Corners Books]fourcornersbooks.co.ukOpen source on fourcornersbooks.co.uk.

Files and Media illustration 3

Anniversary coverage kept the mystery alive

The 1977 flap might have faded into local memory if not for repeated rediscovery. The release and discussion of MOD files in the 2000s gave journalists a reason to revisit the case. The 40th anniversary in 2017 brought fresh interviews and local commemoration. In 2023, Netflix’s Encounters returned the Broad Haven Triangle to a global streaming audience, with Visit Wales noting that the documentary revived public interest in Pembrokeshire’s strange 1970s story. [Wales]wales.comNetflix premieres UFO documentary featuring Wales | WalesNetflix premieres UFO documentary featuring Wales | Wales

These later treatments did not simply repeat the old story; they changed its audience. A 1977 newspaper reader encountered Broad Haven as a current mystery. A 2017 reader encountered it as memory, folklore and unresolved local history. A 2023 streaming viewer encountered it as part of a global UFO documentary format, placed beside other international cases and framed through witness interviews, atmosphere and cultural interpretation. Each layer made the flap more durable, but also more mediated. [Wales Online]walesonline.co.ukOpen source on walesonline.co.uk.

The 450-reports figure, often repeated in modern coverage, shows both the power and danger of legacy numbers. It conveys scale and helps explain why the story attracted attention. But it can also blur categories: not every “report” is equal, and not every reported light, figure, noise or rumour carries the same evidential weight. A careful Pembrokeshire account should therefore treat the number as a marker of public excitement and report volume, not as 450 equally strong sightings of the same thing. [Wales]wales.comNetflix premieres UFO documentary featuring Wales | WalesNetflix premieres UFO documentary featuring Wales | Wales

Later media also revived the folklore angle. Some modern coverage has connected the Broad Haven Triangle with older Welsh stories of strange beings and trickster figures. That can be useful for understanding how communities narrate the uncanny, but it should not be confused with evidence about the 1977 events themselves. Folklore helps explain why the story travels; it does not identify what the children saw behind the school or what adults later reported near fields and farms. [Wales Online]walesonline.co.ukOpen source on walesonline.co.uk.

What the case means for UK UFO history

Within UK UFO history, Pembrokeshire matters because it sits at the intersection of local testimony, official paperwork and mass media. Many UFO cases have one of those elements. Broad Haven has all three. That combination explains why it remains more visible than many better-documented but less vivid reports in the MOD files.

Compared with a case such as Rendlesham Forest, which involved US personnel at RAF Woodbridge and became a parliamentary and defence-record issue, Broad Haven was less obviously a national-security case. The National Archives notes that Rendlesham continued to attract House of Commons, press and public enquiries, while the MOD maintained there was no threat to UK airspace or national security. Pembrokeshire’s significance is different: it shows how a civilian flap in a rural county could still draw MOD attention because of public alarm, local military geography and political pressure. [The National Archives]nationalarchives.gov.ukThe National Archives UFO reportsThe National Archives UFO reports

It also shows how official records can keep a mystery alive without endorsing the extraordinary interpretation. The DEFE 24/1206 material, the school drawings, and the reported RAF Police enquiry all give researchers something firmer than hearsay. Yet the same record base introduces limits: no confirmed radar track, no surviving conclusive investigation report, no verified physical trace, and no official finding that a craft of unknown origin landed in Pembrokeshire. [The National Archives]images.nationalarchives.gov.ukThe National Archives

The most useful legacy, then, is not “aliens came to Broad Haven” or “it was all nonsense”. It is a more interesting middle ground. The 1977 Pembrokeshire flap shows how people, institutions and media respond when a community reports something strange: children draw, parents complain, police and MPs become involved, the MOD records correspondence, journalists create a label, sceptics test prank and misidentification theories, and witnesses continue to defend what they remember.

How to read the 1977 legacy today

A fair reading of the Broad Haven legacy starts by separating three questions that are often collapsed into one. First, did a real flap happen? Yes: there was a documented surge of reports, local concern, press attention and MOD correspondence in 1977. Secondly, did the official files prove an extraordinary craft or non-human visitors? No: the surviving record supports official awareness and limited enquiry, not confirmation. Thirdly, is the case fully explained? Not quite: the prank explanation is important for some later humanoid reports, but it does not account cleanly for every witness claim or for the original school episode. [The National Archives+2The National Archives]nationalarchives.gov.ukThe National Archives UFO reportsThe National Archives UFO reports

That is why the case remains useful for a county-level UFO history. It is not the strongest because it has the hardest physical evidence. It is the strongest because it shows the whole lifecycle of a British UFO flap: a startling local report, rapid media escalation, official caution, sceptical counterclaims, archival survival and repeated cultural revival. For Pembrokeshire, the 1977 flap became folklore because it never belonged to one source alone. It belonged to the pupils and adult witnesses, to the newspapers and television crews, to the MOD files, to later researchers, and to a west Wales community that has spent decades living with a story neither proven nor comfortably dismissed.

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Endnotes

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  3. Source: wales.com
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  4. Source: commons.wikimedia.org
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Additional References

  1. Source: youtube.com
    Title: Every child drew the EXACT same thing. DID THEY SHUT THEM DOWN?
    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JdtJOOaoPY0
    Source snippet

    "It Was A Prankster Walking Around In A Silver Fire Suit" | Author DISMISSES UFO Sightings...

  2. Source: youtube.com
    Title: Episode 115 David Davies
    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tlcAHLs_bb4
    Source snippet

    The Welsh X Files: Wales' Most Significant UFO Sightings...

  3. Source: youtube.com
    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGm3S8biU78
    Source snippet

    MILFORD HAVEN 1978 - UFO HOLIDAY...

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