Within Lincolnshire UFOs

What the Mo D Files Say About Lincolnshire

Official sighting logs show repeated brief reports from Grimsby, Scunthorpe, Lincoln, Skegness, Boston, Spalding and the coast.

On this page

  • How the 1997 2009 Logs Work
  • Town by Town Sighting Patterns
  • Why Brief Records Need Caution
Preview for What the Mo D Files Say About Lincolnshire

Introduction

The Ministry of Defence files give Lincolnshire’s UFO history a useful anchor because they strip many sightings back to the bare report: date, time, town or village, county, sometimes the witness’s occupation, and a short description. For Lincolnshire, the 1997-2009 logs show repeated reports from Grimsby, Scunthorpe, Lincoln, Skegness, Boston, Spalding, Louth, Mablethorpe, Coningsby, Horncastle, Holbeach, Stamford, Grantham, Tattershall and other towns and villages. They do not prove exotic craft were present. What they do show is a pattern of brief, often night-time reports: orange lights, bright stars that seemed to move, triangular or V-shaped formations, fireballs, discs, cigar shapes and objects moving towards the North Sea. The value of the MoD records is comparative: they let readers see Lincolnshire’s sightings as a county-wide pattern rather than as isolated local legends. GOV.UK describes the released material as “UFO Reports 1997 to 2009 in the UK”, with dates, times, locations and brief descriptions of sightings. [GOV.UK]GOV.UKUF O reports in the UKUF O reports in the UK

Overview image for Mo D Reports

How the 1997-2009 Logs Work

The public MoD sighting logs are not full investigations in the dramatic sense. They are tabulated records of reports received by the department, arranged by year, with a short summary of what the witness said. This matters because a line in the spreadsheet is not the same thing as a confirmed unexplained aircraft. A report such as “large orange light with no noise” tells us what was reported, not what was physically in the sky.

The National Archives’ guide to the final tranche of UFO files explains the wider administrative setting. By the late 2000s, the MoD’s UFO desk was handling policy, correspondence, Freedom of Information requests and sighting reports. The guide says the files from late 2007 to November 2009 included reports, ministerial briefing material and correspondence, and that the UFO desk moved from the Directorate Air Staff in London to RAF Air Command at High Wycombe in December 2008. [National Archives]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukufo highlights guide 2013ufo highlights guide 2013

The closure of the UFO desk is especially important for reading Lincolnshire’s later reports. A November 2009 briefing for Defence Minister Bob Ainsworth concluded that UFO work was consuming increasing resources but producing “no valuable defence output”. The same National Archives guide summarises the MoD position: in more than 50 years, no sighting reported to the department had revealed evidence of an extra-terrestrial presence or a military threat to the UK, and there was no defence benefit in recording, collating, analysing or investigating sightings. [National Archives]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukufo highlights guide 2013ufo highlights guide 2013

That does not mean every Lincolnshire report was “explained”. It means the MoD was not treating these brief public reports as a route to deep case investigation unless there was a defence reason to do so. The logs therefore sit between folklore and formal air-defence evidence: stronger than later retellings because they are close to the original report, but weaker than radar tracks, photographs, pilot statements, police files or technical analysis.

Mo D Reports illustration 1

Town-by-Town Sighting Patterns

Lincolnshire’s entries are scattered across the county, but several patterns stand out. Northern Lincolnshire produces many entries around Grimsby, Scunthorpe, Immingham, Cleethorpes and the Humber-facing towns. The Lincoln area produces a mixture of bright-light, triangle and cigar-shaped reports. The coast and Fenland belt adds Skegness, Mablethorpe, Spalding, Boston, Holbeach and Gibraltar Point. RAF-linked places such as Coningsby and Waddington’s wider aviation landscape also shape how readers should approach the reports.

The opening of the 1997 log is striking because it places northern Lincolnshire in the records immediately. On 2 January 1997, Immingham was logged with “a large UFO” carrying different coloured lights, first stationary and then moving with small erratic movements. Later the same night, Scunthorpe was listed with an object that changed colour and had a normal star shape. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 1997ufo report 1997 These are not detailed case files, but they show how quickly colour-changing lights and apparently stationary objects entered the Lincolnshire record.

Grimsby appears repeatedly, especially in the northern Lincolnshire material. In 1997, a Grimsby entry described three amber triangular objects travelling quickly and overtaking each other before disappearing westwards. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 1997ufo report 1997 In 2001, Grimsby was logged twice: one report described an orange-red ball like a hot coal ember that dropped and then shot upwards, while another described a bright high light travelling faster than a jet. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. In 2009, Grimsby reappeared with a light “like a star or satellite”; the witness saw three within 20 minutes, moving from the south, changing speed and finally heading east over the North Sea. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009

Scunthorpe’s entries show a similar mixture of star-like lights, erratic movement and fireball descriptions. The 1997 log includes the colour-changing star-shaped object on 2 January, a fireball on 14 October, and nearby northern Lincolnshire/Humber reports in the same autumn cluster. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 1997ufo report 1997 Later logs include Scunthorpe reports in 1999 of bright white lights with a red tinge moving vertically and erratically, a 2000 report of strange lights, a 2001 white ball of light moving west to east and then vertically upwards, a 2008 oval weird light moving west, and a December 2008 flashing star-like fireball that repeatedly brightened and faded. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2008ufo report 2008

Lincoln and its nearby villages show a different mix. The 1998 log recorded a single black triangle over Lincoln, while 2001 recorded an object like a rocket with a white-orange glow. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. In 2003, Lincoln was associated with a cigar-shaped grey object with domed ends, described as silent and very slow. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. In 2008, Welton/Lincoln produced a white bright diamond or orb that appeared stationary several thousand feet up, and in 2009 Lincoln was logged with two coned yellow and white lights flickering randomly before disappearing into cloud. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2008ufo report 2008 [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009

The coast and south Lincolnshire entries are often brief but useful for comparison. Skegness appears in 1997 with a bright stationary light, in 1998 through Gibraltar Point/Skegness with a large silver cylindrical object said to shoot upwards, in 2007 with a low dark flat silhouette, and in 2009 with a large orange light with no noise. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 1997ufo report 1997 [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2007ufo report 2007 [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009 Spalding appears in 2006 with about ten orange lights moving in formation, and again in 2009 with “strange orange lights in the sky”. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009 Boston and nearby villages appear in 1999, 2005 and 2008: an orange light at Boston in 1999, straight-line amber lights at Boston in 2005, and a Kirton near Boston entry in 2008 describing twelve lights fading as two brighter lights approached. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2008ufo report 2008

What the Repeated Descriptions Suggest

The strongest county-level finding is not one spectacular case. It is repetition. Across the MoD logs, Lincolnshire witnesses repeatedly describe a small set of sky behaviours: lights that hover or appear stationary, orange lights moving silently in groups, bright objects that resemble stars or satellites, V or triangle formations, and fireball-like objects with tails or sudden changes in brightness.

Some entries naturally point towards familiar explanations. A bright stationary or slowly moving “star” can be a planet, aircraft light, satellite or distant light source. A fireball with a tail may be a meteor or re-entry fragment. Multiple orange lights moving silently in formation, especially in 2008 and 2009, strongly overlaps with the national Chinese lantern problem. The National Archives guide says many 2008-09 reports were generated by Chinese lanterns: orange lights filmed on mobile phones, often seen during summer social events, and sometimes reported by witnesses as controlled objects moving against the wind. [National Archives]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukufo highlights guide 2013ufo highlights guide 2013

Lincolnshire’s own 2008-09 entries fit that national pattern closely. Horncastle in July 2008 reported eight large yellow lights moving east-south-east at high speed and low level. Kirton near Boston in November 2008 reported twelve lights, with two brighter lights moving towards them. Spalding in March 2009 reported strange orange lights. Skegness in August 2009 reported a large orange light with no noise. Tattershall in September 2009 reported three orange lights with no sound, hovering for about 40 minutes before disappearing. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2008ufo report 2008 [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009 These reports remain “UFO” reports in the literal sense of being unidentified to the witness, but the colour, silence, grouping and late-2000s timing make lanterns a serious possibility in many cases.

Other entries are less easily reduced to one explanation from the log alone. The 1997 Crowle and Sandtoft Airfield reports, both on 7 October, describe red lights in semi-circle, triangle or delta formations over the north of the historic county and the Humber-side aviation landscape. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 1997ufo report 1997 The 1998 Coningsby entry describes a large green-lit oval-windowed object, while the 2005 RAF Coningsby/Lincoln entry describes five orange star-sized objects seen for four to five minutes. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. These entries are intriguing, but the public logs do not provide enough detail to decide whether they were aircraft, misperceived lights, local activity, astronomical objects, hoaxes, or genuinely unexplained aerial events.

Mo D Reports illustration 2

Why Lincolnshire’s Aviation Setting Matters

Lincolnshire is not an ordinary sky-watching county. RAF Coningsby is one of the RAF’s two Quick Reaction Alert stations protecting UK airspace and is also a Typhoon training station. The RAF says Coningsby is home to two frontline combat-ready squadrons, trains Typhoon pilots and has almost 3,000 service personnel, civil servants and contractors. [Royal Air Force]raf.mod.ukOpen source on mod.uk. RAF Waddington, south of Lincoln, is described by the RAF as one of its busiest stations and the hub of UK Intelligence, Surveillance, Target Acquisition and Reconnaissance, as well as the main operating base for airborne intelligence aircraft and systems. [Royal Air Force]raf.mod.ukOpen source on mod.uk.

This does not mean every Lincolnshire UFO report is “just the RAF”. It means the baseline is different. Aircraft lights, training routes, fast jets, distant engine noise, flares, approach patterns, low cloud, sonic events and unusual military activity are all more plausible here than in many less aviation-heavy counties. The MoD logs often contain only a witness’s visual impression, so the local aviation environment must be part of any cautious reading.

Coningsby also shows why place names can mislead. A report “near Coningsby” may be read by a UFO enthusiast as suggestive because of the RAF base, but it may be suggestive in the opposite direction too: there are simply more aircraft-related things to see, hear and misjudge. The 2009 Coningsby entry describing four wavering hovering lights captured on video and photographed sounds stronger than a one-line verbal report, but the public log still does not provide the actual imagery or a technical assessment in the summary. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009

Why Brief Records Need Caution

The MoD logs are strongest when used as a dataset, not as proof of any single extraordinary claim. They are useful because they preserve reports before decades of retelling, but they are thin by design. Many entries lack exact duration, direction, weather, witness distance, elevation, corroborating witnesses, aircraft checks, radar confirmation or photographs. Some also use older or overlapping geography: Grimsby and Cleethorpes may appear as North East Lincolnshire, Scunthorpe as North Lincolnshire, and older Humber-side labels may sit awkwardly beside the historic-county frame used for this project.

A useful way to read the Lincolnshire entries is to separate them into three broad evidence levels:

  • Brief but ordinary-looking reports: star-like lights, orange balls, bright flashes and stationary lights with no supporting detail. These are still part of the historical record, but they are weak as evidence for anything beyond a witness seeing something they could not identify.
  • Pattern-building reports: repeated orange lights, triangle formations, coastal sightings and North Sea directions. These matter because they show recurring witness language across towns and years.
  • Potentially stronger but still incomplete reports: entries mentioning pilots, police, video, photographs, RAF locations or multiple witnesses. These deserve more interest, but the public spreadsheet line is not enough to settle them.

This is why the 1997-2009 files are a starting point rather than a verdict. They help correct both overbelief and over-dismissal. They show that people across Lincolnshire repeatedly reported unusual lights and objects to the MoD. They also show that most reports were short, subjective and often consistent with common skywatching confusions. The MoD’s later position was not that nobody had seen anything, but that the material had not demonstrated a defence threat or extra-terrestrial presence after decades of reporting. [National Archives]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukufo highlights guide 2013ufo highlights guide 2013

Mo D Reports illustration 3

What the Lincolnshire Logs Add to the County’s UFO History

The MoD files make Lincolnshire’s UFO story more grounded and less dependent on folklore. They show that the county’s modern UFO record is spread across towns rather than concentrated in one famous incident. Grimsby and Scunthorpe stand out in the north; Lincoln and its surrounding villages provide central-county reports; Skegness, Mablethorpe, Spalding, Boston and Holbeach show the importance of the coast and Fens; and Coningsby and Waddington keep aviation close to the interpretation.

They also show how the story changed over time. The late 1990s include triangles, coloured lights, fireballs, discs and some more dramatic descriptions, including the 1997 cluster around Crowle, Sandtoft Airfield, Scunthorpe, Grimsby and Covenham Reservoir. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 1997ufo report 1997 The early 2000s include several Lincolnshire reports that sound like meteors, aircraft lights, stationary bright objects or unusual shapes, including Lincoln, Wrangle, Scunthorpe, Morton, North Kelsey, Ryhall, Whaplode and Grimsby in 2001. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk. By 2008-09, the national orange-light wave is unmistakable, and Lincolnshire’s entries sit inside that wider surge. The National Archives guide records that MoD sightings averaged about 150 a year between 2000 and 2007, doubled in 2008, and reached 643 reports by 30 November 2009. [National Archives]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukufo highlights guide 2013ufo highlights guide 2013

For Lincolnshire readers, the most honest conclusion is balanced. The MoD records confirm a persistent county-wide pattern of reported unidentified lights and objects across many towns. They do not confirm alien craft, secret aircraft or a single hidden explanation. Their real value is that they let the county’s UFO history be compared carefully: north against south, coast against inland, RAF-adjacent villages against market towns, and dramatic local memories against the spare wording of the official logs.

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Endnotes

  1. Source: GOV.UK
    Title: UF O reports in the UK
    Link: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/ufo-reports-in-the-uk

  2. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Title: ufo highlights guide 2013
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/ufo-highlights-guide-2013.pdf

  3. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Title: ufo report 1997
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a758d2fe5274a6faebebd11/ufo_report_1997.pdf

  4. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a79dfc9ed915d042206ba86/UFOReport2001.pdf

  5. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Title: ufo report 2009
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7582c440f0b6397f35efcb/ufo_report_2009.pdf

  6. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a79bcace5274a684690bbc2/UFOReport1999.pdf

  7. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a78cd1d40f0b6324769a45e/UFOReport2000.pdf

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    Title: ufo report 2008
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  9. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
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  10. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
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    Title: ufo report 2007
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  12. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
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  14. Source: raf.mod.uk
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    Title: new-chat Archives
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  20. Source: nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Title: Help with your research Archives
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  22. Source: nationalarchives.gov.uk
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    Title: annual report accounts national archives large print 2023 2024
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    Title: missing documents 2011.xls
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    Title: pubs csuk region 06
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  32. Source: raf.mod.uk
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    Title: raf protector test flight waddington
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  34. Source: news.sky.com
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  35. Source: scribd.com
    Title: ufo report 2009 pdf
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  36. Source: Wikipedia
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  38. Source: slideshare.net
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Additional References

  1. Source: wired-gov.net
    Link: https://www.wired-gov.net/wg/news.nsf/articles/Armed%2BForces%2BMinister%2Bpraises%2BQuick%2BReaction%2BAlert%2BForce%2Bon%2BRAF%2BConingsby%2Bvisit%2B26112018131500?open=

  2. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ConingsbySpottersGroup/

  3. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/bbclincolnshire/posts/raf-coningsby-is-an-raf-quick-reaction-alert-station-which-protects-uk-airspace-/1463375179128978/

  4. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/royalairforce/videos/raf-intelligence-surveillance-target-acquisition-and-reconnaissance-istar-rivet-/409213859813155/

  5. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/rafwaddington/?hl=en

  6. Source: thefourprop.com
    Link: https://thefourprop.com/blogs/the-briefing/raf-waddington-article

  7. Source: independent.co.uk
    Link: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/the-not-so-real-life-xfiles-chinese-lanterns-responsible-for-surge-of-ufo-sightings-files-from-mod-reveal-8667620.html

  8. Source: facebook.com
    Title: declassified mod files reveal dozens of ufo sightings over northern lincolnshire
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/grimsbylive/videos/declassified-mod-files-reveal-dozens-of-ufo-sightings-over-northern-lincolnshire/823250608396016/

  9. Source: facebook.com
    Title: it will support the istar intelligence surveillance target acquisition and recon
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/thelincolnite/posts/it-will-support-the-istar-intelligence-surveillance-target-acquisition-and-recon/5106113919428026/

  10. Source: spacecom.mil
    Title: us space command commander travels to the united kingdom to strengthen space co
    Link: https://www.spacecom.mil/Newsroom/News/Article-Display/Article/3025856/us-space-command-commander-travels-to-the-united-kingdom-to-strengthen-space-co/

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