Battle of Los Angeles
Anti-aircraft guns fired over 1,400 rounds at an unknown object over LA during WWII. Despite the massive barrage, nothing was shot down and the target was never identified.
The Battle of Los Angeles
In the early morning hours of February 25, 1942, anti-aircraft batteries across Los Angeles opened fire on an unidentified object in the sky. Over 1,400 rounds were fired. Despite the massive barrage, nothing was shot down, and the target was never officially identified. The incident remains unexplained.
Context
The United States was on edge:
- Pearl Harbor had been attacked less than 3 months earlier
- Japanese attack on the West Coast was feared
- Air raid defenses were on high alert
- Any aerial threat would trigger response
The Night
At approximately 2:25 AM:
- Air raid sirens sounded across Los Angeles
- A total blackout was ordered
- Searchlights began sweeping the sky
- Something was detected overhead
The Barrage
Anti-aircraft batteries opened fire:
- Over 1,400 shells fired
- The barrage lasted hours
- Shrapnel rained on the city
- Multiple civilians were killed by falling debris
What Was Seen
Witnesses reported:
- Searchlights converging on an object
- A large, slow-moving target
- The object apparently unaffected by fire
- Some saw multiple objects
The Famous Photograph
The LA Times published a photo showing:
- Searchlights converging on a point
- Shell bursts around an apparent target
- An object seemingly illuminated
- The image became iconic
Casualties
The incident caused:
- Several civilian deaths from shrapnel
- Heart attacks from stress
- Property damage from falling rounds
- Traffic accidents during blackout
Official Explanation
The military offered explanations:
- War nerves and false alarm
- Weather balloons
- Commercial aircraft
- Japanese planes that couldn’t be found
- None were satisfying
Problems with Explanations
Critics noted:
- Weather balloons don’t withstand 1,400 rounds
- No wreckage was found
- No aircraft were identified
- Multiple searchlight operators converged on same target
Japanese Denial
After the war:
- Japan confirmed no aircraft were over LA that night
- No Japanese submarine-launched planes
- The attackers—if any—weren’t Japanese
- The mystery deepened
The UFO Theory
UFO researchers propose:
- An unknown craft triggered the response
- It survived massive anti-aircraft fire
- It departed without being destroyed
- The military had no explanation
Secretary Knox Statement
Navy Secretary Frank Knox called it:
- “A false alarm”
- Due to “war nerves”
- But this didn’t explain what everyone saw
- Or why guns fired for hours
Significance
The Battle of Los Angeles is significant for:
- Massive military response to unknown target
- Over a million witnesses
- No wreckage despite 1,400 rounds
- Never officially explained
- Occurred before “flying saucer” era
Legacy
The Battle of Los Angeles demonstrates that unexplained aerial phenomena predate the modern UFO era. A million people watched as the military fired at something that couldn’t be identified—and couldn’t be shot down.