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The Kelly-Hopkinsville Goblins

A family spent a night fighting off small creatures with glowing eyes and pointed ears in one of America's strangest close encounter cases.

August 21-22, 1955
Kelly, Kentucky, USA
11+ witnesses

The Kelly-Hopkinsville Goblins

On the night of August 21-22, 1955, the Sutton family and their friend Billy Ray Taylor reported being besieged by small, glowing creatures at their farmhouse near Kelly, Kentucky. The family fought the beings throughout the night with shotguns before fleeing to the police. The case became known as the Kelly-Hopkinsville encounter and remains one of the strangest incidents in UFO/encounter history.

The Witnesses

The farmhouse was home to Glennie Lankford, her sons Elmer and John Charley Sutton, their wives, and several children. Billy Ray Taylor and his wife were visiting. The group included eleven witnesses.

The Encounter Begins

At approximately 7:00 PM, Billy Ray Taylor went outside to get water and observed a bright object landing in a gully about a quarter mile from the house. He reported this to the others, who dismissed it.

About an hour later, the family dog began barking frantically. Taylor and Lucky Sutton went to investigate and saw a small creature approaching the house. The being was approximately three and a half feet tall, with a large round head, huge pointed ears, large glowing eyes, and long arms ending in clawed hands.

The Siege

Taylor and Sutton fired at the creature with a shotgun and rifle. They heard metallic sounds as if the shot bounced off metal. The creature flipped over and scurried away.

More creatures appeared. They climbed on the roof, looked in windows, and appeared at various points around the house. Every time the men shot at them, the creatures would flip or tumble away but seemed unharmed.

The siege continued for hours. The family described feeling terrorized by the small, glowing beings that seemed to be toying with them.

Flight to Town

At approximately 11:00 PM, the family fled the house in two cars and drove to the Hopkinsville police station. They were clearly terrified, and police found their panic genuine.

Officers, including state police, returned to the farmhouse and conducted a thorough search. They found spent shells and evidence of gunfire but no creatures. After police left, the family reported the creatures returned and continued the siege until near dawn.

Investigation

The case was investigated by the Air Force’s Project Blue Book, the local police, and civilian researchers. The witnesses were considered credible—hardworking rural people with no history of mental illness or attention-seeking.

Various explanations have been proposed, including owls (which can appear metallic and have large eyes when viewed at night), escaped circus monkeys, or deliberate hoax. None fully explain the details of the account.

Assessment

The Kelly-Hopkinsville encounter remains enigmatic. Eleven witnesses, including children, maintained consistent accounts of being terrorized by small creatures for an entire night. They gained nothing from the experience except ridicule.

Whether they encountered extraterrestrials, unknown creatures, or something their frightened minds created from more mundane stimuli, the Sutton family’s terror was genuine. Something visited Kelly, Kentucky that night—something that has never been adequately explained.