What Really Happened in Monmouthshire's UFO Files?
Monmouthshire’s UFO record is less a single famous mystery than a chain of small, unevenly documented reports: orange lights over Raglan, brief Ministry of Defence entries for Chepstow, Abergavenny, Newport and Blackwood, and a few Gwent-era police and press references that sit on the edge of wider South Wales sighting waves.
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Introduction
For this page, “Monmouthshire” is treated mainly as the historic county: not only today’s Monmouthshire council area, but also places historically associated with Monmouthshire such as Newport, Cwmbran, Blackwood and parts of the old Gwent policing area where the UFO records use “Gwent” or “Monmouthshire” labels.

Which Monmouthshire is meant?
Monmouthshire is unusually tricky for a county-based UFO project because its name has shifted across historic, administrative and modern boundaries. The historic county of Monmouthshire is one of the thirteen historic counties of Wales, shown as such on the Wikimedia Commons historic-counties map for Wales. That map marks the historic county in south-east Wales, distinct from the smaller modern council area that also bears the name Monmouthshire. [Wikimedia Commons]commons.wikimedia.orgOpen source on wikimedia.org.
This distinction matters because many UFO records do not use one consistent geography. Older Ministry of Defence sighting lists may refer to “Monmouthshire”, “Gwent”, “Newport”, “Chepstow” or “Abergavenny” depending on the date and the form of the report. Modern Monmouthshire council covers only part of the historic county; the historic county also reaches into areas now administered by Newport, Torfaen, Blaenau Gwent, Caerphilly and a small eastern part of Cardiff. Britannica describes the present county as lying wholly within the historic county, while the historic county also includes Newport, Torfaen, most of Blaenau Gwent and part of Caerphilly. [Encyclopedia Britannica]britannica.comEncyclopedia Britannica Monmouthshire | Wales, Map, History, & FactsEncyclopedia Britannica Monmouthshire | Wales, Map, History, & Facts
For UFO history, that means a sighting at Abergavenny, Chepstow or Raglan sits comfortably inside both the historic and modern Monmouthshire story. A report from Newport, Cwmbran, Blackwood or Caerleon is also relevant to the historic Monmouthshire/Gwent record, even though it may fall outside today’s Monmouthshire council area.
The strongest local pattern: orange lights and brief official entries
The clearest Monmouthshire pattern is not close encounters or landed craft, but lights: orange, red-orange, bright white, sometimes silent, sometimes in groups, often with limited detail. That pattern appears in both local press reporting and Ministry of Defence sighting logs.
A notable local example came in September 2008, when the Abergavenny Chronicle reported “orange balls of light” seen over Monmouthshire. One witness described about 20 lights near her home, saying they formed a “strange wave” and moved over Raglan; she was sufficiently unsettled to contact the police. [Abergavenny Chronicle]abergavennychronicle.comAbergavenny Chronicle UFO in Monmouthshire? | abergavennychronicle.comAbergavenny Chronicle UFO in Monmouthshire? | abergavennychronicle.com The report is valuable as a local witness account, but it is thin as evidence: the public article does not provide a detailed duration, altitude estimate, independent photographic analysis, air-traffic check, or later official conclusion.
The Ministry of Defence’s 2009 list gives several Monmouthshire/Gwent-area entries. On 22 February 2009 at Chepstow, the report describes a single object “the size of a large car”, silver, with flames flickering from underneath, which then moved up and away. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009 On 4 April 2009 at Abergavenny, the entry is much shorter: simply “Two UFOs.” [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009 On 19 July 2009 at Newport, a bright reddish light was reported travelling west to east below cloud level, silent, straight-moving, too slow for a meteorite and without navigation lights. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009 On 17 August 2009, another Newport entry records a “bright orange light” which the witness said was definitely not a plane. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009
These entries are useful because they show that reports were reaching the national system, not just circulating as pub talk or social media rumours. But the same entries also show the evidential limit. Most are short witness summaries rather than investigations. The wording often preserves what the witness believed or saw, not what the MoD established.
1997: the older Monmouthshire entries in the MoD lists
The 1997 Ministry of Defence sighting list contains two especially relevant entries for historic Monmouthshire. On 18 February 1997, a report from the A449/Llanwern/Newport area of Monmouthshire described a cream-coloured light. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 1997ufo report 1997 On 8 August 1997, an Abergavenny report described one white, very bright object, “bigger than a car”, which “came down the road”. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 1997ufo report 1997 A nearby Cwmbran entry on 12 August 1997, listed under Gwent, described a small triangular object with black wings and a sausage-shaped middle, moving very fast. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 1997ufo report 1997
Those entries matter because they pre-date the 2008–09 wave of orange-light reports that were widely associated nationally with sky lanterns and similar explanations. They show that Monmouthshire’s UFO record was not created solely by the late-2000s lantern trend. At the same time, the 1997 entries are extremely compressed. They do not provide named witnesses, exact viewing geometry, corroborating photographs, radar data, police logs or a later explanation.
A reader should therefore treat them as “recorded reports”, not as confirmed unexplained aerial events. They show that people in the county reported unusual things to the official UFO-reporting channel; they do not by themselves establish anything extraordinary.
Why 2008–09 became a noisy period
The late 2000s are important in Monmouthshire because local sightings coincided with a national peak in UFO reporting. The National Archives’ material on the final release of MoD UFO files says the UFO Desk received more than 600 sightings and reports in 2009, around three times the previous year’s number, and that the workload contributed to the conclusion that the desk served “no defence purpose”. [National Archives]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukOpen source on nationalarchives.gov.uk.
That national context changes how the Chepstow, Abergavenny, Newport and Raglan reports should be read. They were part of a much wider surge of similar reports across Britain, many involving orange lights, silent movement and formations. The 2008 MoD list, for example, includes a Gwent-area report from Abertillery of a glowing red ball with molten-metal-like material bursting from it, and a Caerleon/Newport report of two balls of fire hovering before elevating and shooting off. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2008ufo report 2008
This does not mean every Monmouthshire sighting was a lantern. It does mean that the burden of proof is higher for any claim that a local orange-light report was exceptional. In 2013, reporting on the released MoD files noted that a surge in UFO sightings had been linked to the popularity of Chinese lanterns at weddings and public holidays. [ITVX]itv.comufo sightings files mod the national archivesufo sightings files mod the national archives The MoD’s own national lists include many reports whose language sounds similar to lantern-type observations: orange lights, no sound, slow movement, fading or disappearing.
The Raglan report of 20 lights in a wave, the Newport orange-light entries, and the broader 2008–09 Gwent cluster all fit this kind of pattern well enough to make lanterns, drones, aircraft lights, balloons, flares, meteors or misperceived celestial objects plausible first checks. None of the accessible records found here shows the kind of follow-up that would confidently eliminate those explanations.
Police records: useful, but not a hidden archive of dramatic cases
Police contact often gives UFO stories extra weight in the public imagination. In Monmouthshire and Gwent, the police record is more cautious. Gwent Police disclosed in a 2025 Freedom of Information response that a keyword search of crimes recorded in the 2024 calendar year, using terms including UFO, UAP, UAV, lights in the sky, aliens, drones and orbs, returned no relevant results. The response stated that the data was accurate as of 7 February 2025. [WhatDoTheyKnow]whatdotheyknow.comWhat Do They KnowWhat Do They Know
That answer does not prove nobody in Monmouthshire saw anything unusual in 2024. It only says Gwent Police did not find relevant results in the searched crime-recording data. The request itself was limited by keyword matching and by how incidents were recorded. A sighting reported informally, logged under another category, or discussed on social media would not necessarily appear.
An earlier Gwent Police FOI page also records a request for UFO/UAP information from 1 January to 1 March 1983, asking for reports mentioning UFOs, lights in the sky, strange objects, triangles, aliens or extraterrestrial beings. [Gwent Police]gwent.police.uk202124485 ufo sightings202124485 ufo sightings The public page confirms the request and the existence of a response attachment, although the accessible page itself does not provide a detailed case list. It remains relevant because January 1983 is a known South Wales “triangle” period in UFO lore, with reported sightings extending through parts of South Wales and Gwent.
Police involvement should therefore be interpreted carefully. A call to police shows concern and a public report; it does not automatically mean a police investigation confirmed an unknown craft. Conversely, a “no relevant results” FOI answer may reflect recording practice rather than the absolute absence of sightings.
The 1983 South Wales triangle wave and Monmouthshire’s edge of the story
Monmouthshire’s most interesting cross-boundary connection is the January 1983 South Wales “triangle” wave. This is not primarily a Monmouthshire case: many accounts centre on Swansea, Port Talbot, Cardiff and the Vale of Glamorgan. But Gwent-area reports are part of the wider pattern, and historic Monmouthshire overlaps with parts of that old Gwent record.
A Swansea UFO Network page compiling the St Athan and South Wales material cites Gwent reports from 19 January 1983, including a Cwmbran sighting at about 6.35 pm, where a family reportedly saw a triangular shape with three lights over Garw Wood Drive, and a Risca sighting at about 7.45 pm of an object alternately blue and red. The page attributes those Gwent details to the South Wales Argus of 22 February 1983. [Swansea Ufo Network]sufon.co.ukst athan 2008st athan 2008
That is an example of a case where Monmouthshire is best understood as part of a regional sky event rather than as a self-contained county mystery. The important question is not “did a triangle fly over Monmouthshire?” but “were several South Wales reports describing similar large, slow, lighted objects, and were any of the Gwent accounts independently documented?” The available material suggests press-documented witness claims, but not a definitive official explanation or hard technical evidence.
This matters for internal linking in a county-based project: a Monmouthshire page should connect naturally to South Wales triangle reports, Glamorgan and Cardiff-area sightings, and St Athan-related material, while making clear that the centre of gravity for those cases often lies outside Monmouthshire itself.
The 2009 Chepstow report: why it is vivid but still weak
The Chepstow entry of 22 February 2009 is one of the most vivid Monmouthshire-area reports in the MoD lists. A silver object the size of a large car, with flames flickering from its underside, sounds more concrete than a vague “light in the sky”. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009
But vividness is not the same as strength. The MoD table does not show whether the witness was interviewed in depth, whether any other witness reported the same object, whether weather and wind direction were checked, whether aircraft activity was ruled out, or whether the “flames” might have been a lantern flame, flare, burning debris, reflection, firework or other terrestrial source. The wording also gives no reliable scale: at night, without distance, “car-sized” is an impression rather than a measurement.
The best assessment is therefore “unresolved in the public summary, but weakly evidenced”. It is a worthwhile local case because it is specific and officially logged. It is not a strong case for extraordinary interpretation because the public record stops at a short description.
Abergavenny as a recurring local focus
Abergavenny appears several times in the county’s UFO texture: the 1997 bright white object in the MoD list, the brief 2009 “Two UFOs” entry, the 2009 local press report of triangle-like lights over Cantref Road, and recent local reporting of strange lights over the town. [Abergavenny Chronicle+3GOV.UK+3GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 1997ufo report 1997
The Abergavenny Chronicle’s August 2009 report described footage of several unidentified objects over Abergavenny, apparently forming a triangular shape and launching red and white “beams of light”. [Abergavenny Chronicle]abergavennychronicle.comAbergavenny Chronicle UFOs in Abergavenny skies? | abergavennychronicle.comAbergavenny Chronicle UFOs in Abergavenny skies? | abergavennychronicle.com In June 2026, the same local paper reported that locals had been baffled by “orbs, pulsating lights” and erratic movements over Abergavenny. [Abergavenny Chronicle]abergavennychronicle.comStrange lights spotted in the skies over Abergavenny | abergavennychronicle.com…
The repetition is interesting, but it should not be overstated. Abergavenny is a visible sky-watching location with hills, roads, changing weather, aviation routes and a lively local news culture. Recurrence may reflect genuine repeated anomalies, but it may also reflect population, visibility, local interest, social media sharing and the tendency for ambiguous lights to be noticed more once a “UFO” frame is already in circulation.
Official records do not mean official endorsement
One common misunderstanding is that an MoD UFO list is an MoD validation of a sighting. It is not. The National Archives explains that official reporting, analysis and recording of UFO sightings began in the early 1950s, but many early files were destroyed under earlier retention policy; since 1970, most surviving MoD UFO files have been reviewed for release because of public interest. [The National Archives]nationalarchives.gov.ukOpen source on nationalarchives.gov.uk.
The MoD’s role was defence significance, not paranormal investigation. National Archives material on the released files states that the UFO Desk closed in November 2009, and that the final phase involved government policy, correspondence with ministers, and the handling of the largest number of sighting reports since 1978. [National Archives]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukOpen source on nationalarchives.gov.uk. The released-file commentary also says the desk was judged to serve no defence purpose. [National Archives]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukOpen source on nationalarchives.gov.uk.
That framework is essential for Monmouthshire. A sighting at Chepstow or Newport appearing in an MoD list means it was reported and recorded. It does not mean the MoD proved it was unknown technology, aircraft intrusion, or extraterrestrial activity. In many cases the MoD did not attempt to identify the precise cause once a defence threat was not evident.
What probably explains many reports?
The most likely explanations for many Monmouthshire reports are ordinary but not always provable after the fact. Orange lights in groups are often compatible with sky lanterns, balloons with lights, fireworks, flares or drones. Single bright lights may be aircraft, helicopters, satellites, planets, meteors, reflections or distant lights seen under unusual atmospheric conditions. Fast “impossible” movement can result from the observer’s lack of distance information, cloud movement, changing perspective, or the disappearance of a light behind haze or terrain.
The national 2008–09 context makes lantern-style explanations especially relevant. The MoD lists repeatedly include orange lights, silent movement and fading, while contemporary reporting on the final files linked the surge in sightings to Chinese lanterns. [ITVX]itv.comufo sightings files mod the national archivesufo sightings files mod the national archives Some local reports, such as the Raglan “wave” of lights or Newport’s bright orange lights, fit that family of explanations better than they fit a structured craft.
Still, a fair assessment should avoid pretending certainty. The public records often lack enough detail to solve each case. The strongest sceptical point is not “this was definitely a lantern”; it is “the evidence available is not strong enough to rule out common explanations”.
How strong is the Monmouthshire UFO record?
Monmouthshire’s UFO record is real in the sense that there are public, citable records of sightings: local newspaper reports, MoD sighting-list entries, Gwent Police FOI pages, and regional UFO archive material. It is not especially strong in the evidential sense. The main weaknesses are repeated across the cases:
- Brief official summaries: The MoD entries are usually one or two lines, with little investigation detail.
- Sparse corroboration: Many reports lack named independent witnesses, photographs, video analysis or technical checks.
- Ambiguous geography: “Gwent”, “Monmouthshire” and modern council boundaries do not always align.
- Common visual patterns: Orange lights, silent movement and formations often have plausible mundane explanations.
- Regional spillover: Some important South Wales cases touch historic Monmouthshire but are centred elsewhere.
The county’s best use in a UK UFO history project is therefore as a careful local index: a place where readers can trace reports from Abergavenny, Raglan, Chepstow, Newport, Cwmbran, Blackwood and Caerleon without inflating them into a single grand mystery.
What would change the assessment?
The Monmouthshire cases would become stronger if new material added independent corroboration: original police incident logs, multiple witness statements from separate locations, time-stamped photographs or video with metadata, weather and wind checks, aircraft and drone records, astronomical reconstruction, or radar/air-traffic data. The most promising candidates for deeper local work are the September 2008 Raglan lights, the February 2009 Chepstow object, the Abergavenny 1997 and 2009 reports, and the Gwent edge of the January 1983 South Wales triangle wave.
Until then, the balanced view is straightforward. Monmouthshire has a genuine UFO-reporting history, especially around bright lights and regional sighting waves, but the public evidence is fragmentary. Its cases are interesting as local testimony and official-record fragments, not as confirmed proof of extraordinary craft.
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Endnotes
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Additional References
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Title: This Welsh town is a UFO hotspot | Encounter UFO 106
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UFO sightings Wales history documentary UFO SIGHTINGS THE WELSH TRIANGLE - DOCUMENTARY 2016 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Юлиана Дорофеева...
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Title: UFO SIGHTINGS THE WELSH TRIANGLE
Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g3VwNRMSOP4Source snippet
UFO Documentary 2015 Britain's Closest UFO Encounters, The Welsh Triangle DOCUMENTARY 2015...
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Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-36p7MbcK2gSource snippet
This Welsh town is a UFO hotspot | Encounter UFO 106...
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Title: Ancient Aliens: UFO Crash Site in Wales (Season 12) | History
Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0p_zm4c-5ESource snippet
UFO SIGHTINGS THE WELSH TRIANGLE - DOCUMENTARY 2016 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC...
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Title: The Pentyrch UFO Incident | Documentary Special
Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJTGpxOqzjASource snippet
Ancient Aliens: UFO Crash Site in Wales (Season 12) | History...
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