Within Nottinghamshire UFOs

Who Kept Nottingham's UFO Stories Alive?

Nottingham's UFO scene included newsletters, archives and sceptical follow-up that often turned strange lights into ordinary events.

On this page

  • NUFOIS and Nottingham's investigator network
  • Local archives, newsletters and correspondence
  • Cases weakened by follow up explanations
Preview for Who Kept Nottingham's UFO Stories Alive?

Introduction

Nottingham’s UFO history was kept alive less by one spectacular case than by a small culture of local investigators, newsletter editors, collectors and local-history writers. The key organisation was the Nottingham UFO Investigation Society, usually shortened to NUFOIS, associated with Robert W. Morrell at 443 Meadow Lane. Its importance lies in what it preserved: witness reports, correspondence, newsletters and sceptical follow-up at a time when most local UFO material could easily vanish into private cupboards or newspaper cuttings. NUFOIS also matters because it was not simply a “believers’ club”. Its publications and later recollections show a repeated effort to sort strange lights from ordinary causes such as satellites, floodlights, flares, camera effects and aircraft. That makes Nottinghamshire a useful county case study: local enthusiasm did not only amplify mystery; it also created a record that could weaken, clarify or sometimes preserve unresolved claims. [LeftLion+2ISSN Portal]leftlion.co.ukLeft Lion Area NG1: UFO Sightings in NottinghamLeft Lion Area NG1: UFO Sightings in Nottingham

Overview image for Local Archives

NUFOIS and Nottingham’s investigator network

NUFOIS appears in surviving bibliographic and periodical records as a serious local UFO group rather than a passing newspaper curiosity. The ISSN Portal records NUFOIS News as a UK print publication, with the title variant “Nottingham Unidentified Flying Object Investigation Society news”, while specialist bibliography entries trace a longer Nottingham sequence: NUFOIS Newsletter from the mid-1960s to 1974, UFO Research Review from 1974 into the early 1980s, and later NUFOIS News. The same bibliography names Robert Morrell as editor and places the society in Nottingham, giving the group a documented publishing footprint rather than merely oral local legend. [ISSN Portal]portal.issn.orgOpen source on issn.org.

The group’s culture seems to have mixed field investigation, correspondence and print exchange. A 2019 local history feature describes NUFOIS as chaired by local author, editor and historian Robert W. Morrell from Meadow Lane, and says its UFO documents were substantial enough to be preserved at Nottingham Central Library. The same account stresses that pre-internet UFO groups relied on newsletters and postal networks, linking Nottingham to correspondents and publications in Italy, Sweden, Germany and the United States. [LeftLion]leftlion.co.ukLeft Lion Area NG1: UFO Sightings in NottinghamLeft Lion Area NG1: UFO Sightings in Nottingham

This networked culture matters because it explains why Nottinghamshire’s UFO record is unusually rich in “paper trail” material. Many local sightings in Britain were reported once, discussed in a pub, printed in a short newspaper column and then forgotten. NUFOIS belonged to a different habit: note the witness, circulate the case, compare it with other reports, publish a comment, and sometimes revisit the explanation. That did not make the reports true in an extraordinary sense, but it gave later readers something to test.

A Midlands television archive listing also shows that the group reached regional media. MACE, the Media Archive for Central England, lists a January 1981 ATV Today item in which Terry Lloyd interviewed “Professor Moore of the Nottingham UFO Investigation Society” about unexplained sightings over Ashbourne in nearby Derbyshire. That is outside Nottinghamshire proper, but it shows how the Nottingham group operated across the wider East Midlands sky rather than being confined by county lines. [MACE Archive]macearchive.orgatv today 06011981 nottingham ufo investigation societyatv today 06011981 nottingham ufo investigation society

Local Archives illustration 1

Newsletters, correspondence and the habit of keeping evidence

The most distinctive feature of Nottingham’s UFO scene was its archive culture. NUFOIS did not only collect stories; it produced and exchanged printed material. The bibliography of UFO periodicals lists NUFOIS Magazine, NUFOIS News, NUFOIS Newsletter and UFO Research Review, with changes of title over time. That sequence suggests a continuing local publishing effort from the 1960s into the 1980s, not just a single short-lived society bulletin. [Academia]academia.eduPDF) UFOs and the extraterrestrial contact movement: a bibliographyPDF) UFOs and the extraterrestrial contact movement: a bibliography

Morrell’s local publishing activity also spilled beyond UFOs. A 1987 booklet, St. Ann’s Well and Other Medicinal and Holy Wells of Nottingham, was printed and published by APRA-NUFOIS Press at 443 Meadow Lane, Nottingham, with Morrell named on the cover. For UFO history, that detail is useful because it places NUFOIS within a broader Nottingham culture of small-press local research: folklore, wells, local archaeology, anomalies and sky reports shared some of the same people, printers and preservation habits. [The Sparrows' Nest]thesparrowsnest.org.ukThe Sparrows' Nest

That overlap can be both a strength and a weakness. It is a strength because local researchers often kept material that official bodies did not regard as worth detailed investigation. It is a weakness because UFO material can become tangled with folklore, speculative history and personal recollection. The best way to read the Nottingham archive is therefore not as a catalogue of confirmed events, but as a layered record of what people saw, how they described it, who followed it up, and how explanations changed over time.

The Nottingham Hidden History Team later continued part of this local memory. Frank Earp’s 2015 article treats UFOs as a subject for folklorists and social historians as much as for believers, explicitly separating an “unidentified flying object” from the claim that it must be an extraterrestrial spacecraft. He also notes that most UFO reports, after investigation, are usually found to have conventional causes such as aircraft, balloons, astronomical objects, meteors, weather effects or hoaxes. [Nottingham Hidden History Team]nottinghamhiddenhistoryteam.wordpress.comU.F.O’s Over Nottinghamshire | Nottingham Hidden History Team…

Why Nottingham’s investigators often weakened cases rather than strengthened them

The strongest evidence of a healthy local investigation culture is not a spectacular unsolved case. It is the number of stories that became less mysterious after follow-up. According to the LeftLion account of Nottingham UFO material, NUFOIS newsletters repeatedly noted that many reports arrived at night and could often be attributed to mundane causes such as satellites. One West Bridgford case involving bright white lights in the sky was later explained as floodlights from Nottingham Forest’s City Ground. Another involved police reports of a mysterious orange light over the Trent, later traced to a drunken barge pilot setting off flares. [LeftLion]leftlion.co.ukLeft Lion Area NG1: UFO Sightings in NottinghamLeft Lion Area NG1: UFO Sightings in Nottingham

Those explanations are important because they show the difference between “unexplained at first” and “unexplainable after inquiry”. A bright light seen from a street or riverside can feel uncanny to a witness, especially if it moves, flickers or appears against cloud. But a local investigator has tools the witness may not have: knowledge of football fixtures and floodlights, river activity, local police calls, aircraft routes, weather conditions and other witnesses’ viewing angles. In Nottingham, that local knowledge was often more useful than national speculation.

Morrell’s reputation also seems to have been more sceptical than credulous. LeftLion reports that a scan of the Nordic UFO Newsletter suggests Morrell’s questioning of other ufologists’ claims caused tension, and that a Northern UFO Network pamphlet criticised him after he described a conference as unscientific and warned against “paranormalism” entering UFO research. A separate UFO study source cites Morrell’s “Ufology and Rationality” in UFO Research Review as part of a debate over whether UFO research should include wider psychic or paranormal claims. [LeftLion]leftlion.co.ukLeft Lion Area NG1: UFO Sightings in NottinghamLeft Lion Area NG1: UFO Sightings in Nottingham

That sceptical streak is not a minor personality detail. It shaped what the Nottingham archive became. A purely promotional UFO group tends to preserve mystery by stripping away failed explanations. A more questioning group preserves process: the first report, the follow-up, the disappointment, the argument and the revised assessment. For Nottinghamshire’s UFO history, that process is often more valuable than the original sighting.

Local Archives illustration 2

The 1991 Nottingham triangle claim shows the archive problem clearly

The May 1991 Nottingham triangle story is a good example of why local investigation records and official records need to be read together. In a 2019 interview, a Nottingham UFO investigator recalled seeing at least two triangular craft over Nottingham in May 1991, moving from Carlton towards Ilkeston, and said he interviewed more than 100 witnesses, including police officers, nurses and householders. The claim is vivid, local and human, and it belongs to the same period when triangular UFO reports were prominent in British UFO culture. [LeftLion]leftlion.co.ukLeft Lion A UFO Investigator in NottsLeft Lion A UFO Investigator in Notts

The Ministry of Defence paper trail is more cautious. In a released MoD response to a Nottingham UFO enquiry, officials said they had checked their May 1991 UFO reports and correspondence files and found only a few reports for that month. Only one was from Nottingham, specifically Calverton at 23:40 on 22 May, and it did not describe “two triangular objects”; the visible text describes “two cross shaped orange lights”. The same MoD response explains that the department’s role was not to prove or disprove flying saucers, but to decide whether a report suggested defence significance, such as hostile or unauthorised air activity. [Scribd]scribd.comOpen source on scribd.com.

This does not automatically disprove every local witness memory. It does show the limits of each archive. A civilian investigator may have gathered interviews that never reached the MoD. The MoD may have received only a narrow subset of public reports. Memories can also become sharper, larger or more coherent over decades, especially when a sighting becomes part of a local UFO identity. The responsible reading is therefore neither “the MoD solved it” nor “the MoD covered it up”. The better conclusion is that the 1991 triangle claim remains locally significant but unevenly documented, with a mismatch between later witness-network claims and the surviving official summary. [Scribd]scribd.comOpen source on scribd.com.

Local archives fill gaps left by official UFO files

The MoD’s own records help explain why local archives matter. In the released correspondence, officials said older UFO records were kept on paper files in order of receipt and were not segregated by area or region; a full search for Nottingham reports from 1970 to 2004 would have required manual examination and exceeded the Freedom of Information cost limit. The same response noted that surviving records from 1970 to 1977 had gone to The National Archives, while later material was still being compiled into a database at that time. [Scribd]scribd.comOpen source on scribd.com.

This is exactly the sort of gap local investigators filled. The MoD was not set up as a county folklore archive, a witness-support service or a public explanation bureau. Its stated interest was defence significance, and it explicitly said it did not normally try to identify every reported sighting if there was no evidence of a threat. Local groups, by contrast, cared about the witness, the place, the local press cutting and the recurring pattern of reports. [Scribd]scribd.comOpen source on scribd.com.

Later public records show the same split continuing in a different form. A 2022 Freedom of Information request to Nottinghamshire Police asked for UFO, UAP, lights-in-the-sky, alien or extraterrestrial-related reports from 1 January to 5 December 2022; the request and response were then preserved on WhatDoTheyKnow. That kind of platform now performs part of the role once played by newsletters: it keeps a searchable public trace of odd local reports and official replies, even when the events themselves are not extraordinary. [WhatDoTheyKnow]whatdotheyknow.comWhat Do They KnowUFO/UAP sightings - a Freedom of Information request to Nottinghamshire Police - WhatDoTheyKnow…

The MoD’s published 2001 sighting table gives a useful comparison. A Nottingham entry on 30 July 2001 described a bright orange-red circular object moving in a regular figure-of-eight pattern. The table preserves the report, but it does not by itself provide the local follow-up that might ask whether the object was a lantern, aircraft, light effect, model, hoax or misread astronomical object. That is where local archive culture can add value, provided it records both the original claim and any later explanation. [GOV.UK Assets]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukUK AssetsUK Assets

Local Archives illustration 3

Nottingham’s UFO archive is also local folklore

A striking feature of Nottingham’s UFO scene is that it sits close to local folklore rather than apart from it. Frank Earp’s Nottingham Hidden History article places UFOs within social history, not simply as evidence of unknown craft. He argues that the observer’s belief that an object is extraterrestrial belongs to a wider social phenomenon, while the object itself may simply be unidentified at the time of observation. That distinction is central to reading Nottinghamshire’s material fairly. [Nottingham Hidden History Team]nottinghamhiddenhistoryteam.wordpress.comU.F.O’s Over Nottinghamshire | Nottingham Hidden History Team…

The same article preserves older local stories of Nottingham UFO groups, including accounts of former RAF personnel, local questionnaires, alleged “Men in Black” intimidation, schoolboy UFO clubs and a 1960s Wollaton Park photograph discovered only after film development. Some of these claims are difficult to verify independently and should be treated cautiously, but they are valuable as records of how Nottingham people remembered, organised and narrated UFO experience. [Nottingham Hidden History Team]nottinghamhiddenhistoryteam.wordpress.comU.F.O’s Over Nottinghamshire | Nottingham Hidden History Team…

This is where “archive culture” becomes more than filing. A local UFO archive preserves the social life of a mystery: who was trusted, who was mocked, who collected clippings, who wrote letters, who sought scientific explanations, and who folded UFO sightings into Nottingham’s broader landscape of hidden caves, holy wells, strange lights and local legends. That does not make every story evidentially strong. It does make the archive historically useful.

What readers should take from Nottingham’s investigator culture

The main lesson from Nottingham is that local UFO investigators were not just storytellers. At their best, they were informal archivists and practical debunkers. They kept records that official bodies often did not organise by county, and they sometimes explained sightings using local knowledge that national files lacked. NUFOIS, Morrell’s publications, Nottingham Central Library’s preserved UFO material, later local-history writing and modern FOI traces together form a county-level record that is messier but richer than a simple list of sightings. [LeftLion+2ISSN Portal]leftlion.co.ukLeft Lion Area NG1: UFO Sightings in NottinghamLeft Lion Area NG1: UFO Sightings in Nottingham

For Nottinghamshire UFO history, this means three things. First, a report’s survival in an archive is not proof that the event was extraordinary. Second, a mundane explanation found later can be just as important as an unresolved sighting, because it shows how local investigation actually worked. Third, the most valuable Nottingham material often lies between official and informal records: newsletters, correspondence, local press, FOI responses, witness interviews and small-press publications. Read together, they show a county UFO culture that was curious, argumentative, sometimes speculative, but often more evidence-aware than the stereotype of “UFO hunters” suggests.

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Endnotes

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Additional References

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    British UFO Files | Full UFO Documentary | Unseen Footage...

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