George Adamski: The Story of A UFO Contactee

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George Adamski

The Story of a
UFO Contactee

by Professor Solomon
George Adamski
The Story of a UFO
Contactee

by Professor Solomon

Illustrated by Steve Solomon

Copyright © 2009 by Top Hat Press


Professor Solomon is the author of a comprehensive
study of the UFO phenomenon (from which this has
been taken). His book may be downloaded free at:
http://www.professorsolomon.com/ufobookpage.html
During the 1950s the Earth was visited by the Space
People. Unlike today’s aliens, the Space People were tall and
attractive, high-minded and benevolent. And they were
wise. To share with us their wisdom, they made contact
with selected individuals. The most celebrated of these was
George Adamski.
Adamski was a philosopher who dwelt on a mountain-
top in California. In 1953 he was taken aboard a flying
saucer, flown to a mother ship, and entrusted with a mis-
sion. He was to communicate to Mankind the wisdom of
the Space People.
Let us examine his life story, his encounters with the
Space People, and his writings. And let us learn from him.

  


Early Years

Adamski was born in 1891 in Poland, to parents who


“possessed an unusual and deeply religious approach to the
wonders of creation,” we are told in a biographical sketch
(by Charlotte Blodget) appended to Inside the Space Ships.
Two years later the family emigrated to America; and
George was raised in Dunkirk, New York, in modest cir-
cumstances.
At an early age he dropped out of school. Yet Adamski
had begun a regimen of self-education that would continue
throughout his life. Already he knew that to learn about
nature’s laws would be “the enduring quest of his life,” and
that his aim in acquiring that knowledge would be to serve
Mankind. No doubt he was a familiar figure at the public
library in Dunkirk, and in subsequent places of residence.*
At 22 Adamski joined the Army, serving with a cavalry
regiment on the Mexican border. And towards the end of
his enlistment, in 1917, he married.
What little is known of his activities during the next
decade comes from his FBI file.† During this period Adam-
ski moved about the Western states in search of work. He
served as a maintenance worker in Yellowstone National
Park; a laborer in an Oregon flour mill; a concrete contrac-
tor in Los Angeles. According to that biographical sketch,
his travels and variety of jobs gave Adamski an insight into
the ways and problems of his fellow man. Adamski worked
hard on these jobs. Yet his mind was always active. He was
an eager and energetic student, in “the university of the
world.”
Finally, the teacher emerged; and in1926 Professor Adam-
ski (as he billed himself in his pre-contactee days) began to
teach philosophy in Los Angeles. His students were anyone
* A number of flying saucer contactees have been self-educated.
Daniel Fry, author of Alan’s Message: To Men of Earth, tells of
spending his evenings in “a night school class of one” in the ref-
erence room of the Pasadena Public Library.
† He was investigated in 1953 after claiming that the material
in a talk he had given on UFOs had been “cleared” by the FBI
and the Air Force.

who cared to listen to the impromptu lectures of a sidewalk
philosopher. A few years later, in nearby Laguna Beach, he
founded the Royal Order of Tibet. The Royal Order met
in a building called the Temple of Scientific Philosophy.
There the professor expounded upon the mysteries of Uni-
versal Law, to seekers of esoteric knowledge. And he trav-
eled about California, New Mexico, and Arizona, giving
lectures in behalf of the Royal Order. These early lectures
Adamski would describe as “philosophical talks on the laws
of life from a universal concept.”
What were his qualifications for this lofty calling? Adam-
ski would claim to have lived and studied in Tibet. In any
event, he had mastered (from whatever sources, in that
“university of the world”) a vague body of generic wisdom
and philosophy. (His teachings contain little that is specif-
ically Eastern.) This knowledge he communicated via lec-
tures, informal discussions, and self-published tracts and
booklets. One of the booklets, published in 1936, was
Questions and Answers by the Royal Order of Tibet, as “com-
piled” by Professor G. Adamski. The work was intended,
declared its author, “to enlighten the student or seeker of
truth,” and to aid him in “awakening from the dream-life
to the reality which leads to Mastery.”*
One day a student presented him with a six-inch reflect-
ing telescope; and Adamski began to explore—and to pho-
tograph—the heavens.

Amateur Astronomer

In 1940 Adamski and a few of his closest students—


wishing to separate themselves from the travails of the

* Here is a sampling from Questions and Answers:


“What is conscious consciousness?
Consciousness as a Totality of Being is merely a state of passive
awareness.…”
“What is the law of cosmic brotherhood?
Universal love, harmony, unity, the oneness of all things.…”
“What is man’s greatest enemy?
HIMSELF!”

world and devote themselves to philosophy—moved to a
ranch near Mount Palomar. There they farmed and studied.
Four years later the group acquired a 20-acre property on
the mountain itself, with funds provided by Mrs. Alice
Wells, one of the students. They cleared the land, built
simple dwellings, and dubbed their new retreat Palomar
Gardens. They also built a restaurant, which became a
gathering place for the group. Called the Palomar Gardens
Cafe and run by Mrs. Wells, it catered to both tourists on
the mountain and visitors to the retreat. Adamski served as
its handyman and all-around helper; but in the evenings he
gave informal talks in the dining room.
At the top of the mountain was the Hale Observatory. In
his opening remarks in Flying Saucers Have Landed, Adam-
ski would seek to dispel the confusion that had resulted
from his sharing an address with the Observatory:
I am George Adamski, philosopher, student, teacher, sau-
cer researcher. My home is Palomar Gardens, on the south-
ern slopes of Mount Palomar, California, eleven miles from
the big Hale Observatory, home of the 200-inch telescope
—the world’s largest. And to correct a wide-spread error let
me say here, I am not and never have been associated with
the staff of the Observatory. I am friendly with some of the
staff members, but I do not work at the Observatory.*

Yet Adamski was an amateur astronomer. He had acquired


by now a larger telescope: a fifteen-inch reflector. When
night came to the mountain, he would head over to the
dome in which the telescope was housed—to scan the heav-
ens and ponder their mysteries.
One night in 1947, he watched as a series of lights moved
across the sky. When one of them stopped abruptly and
reversed its course, he said to himself: “This must be what
they call a flying saucer.”
It was a notion Adamski was able readily to accept. His
years of studying and teaching philosophy, he explains, had

* Desmond Leslie and George Adamski, Flying Saucers Have


Landed (Werner Laurie, 1953)—my source for most of the infor-
mation on this phase of Adamski’s career.

 , . , ©
  
convinced him that beings similar to Man must inhabit
countless planets of the Universe, and that some of them
would have developed the means of interplanetary travel.
Adamski began to scan the sky in earnest, looking for space-
craft. And it was not long before he had spotted, and pho-
tographed, a number of them.
The local Rotary Club heard about the photos and invit-
ed him to give a talk on his sightings. A seasoned lecturer,
Adamski was pleased to comply. The talk was well received
by the Rotarians, and was given newspaper coverage.
Adamski applied himself now to obtaining more detailed
photos of the spacecraft. In all kinds of weather, he scanned
the sky through his telescope. And he began to entertain a
hope—that one of the ships would land. That its occupants
would emerge and speak with him—and maybe even give
him a ride!
For the observations and photography that had become


his obsession, Palomar Gardens was the perfect site. Its
3000-foot elevation afforded a clear view in every direction.
The view was inspiring as well: mountains, sea, distant San
Diego. Night after night the philosopher spent with his
telescope, often napping beside it in a hammock. In winter
months the stars shone with an icy brilliance; and as the
wind roared, not even the hot coffee that his wife (or a
female follower) brought out to him could allay the cold.
But on spring and summer nights the breeze whispered
through the trees—owls hooted—coyotes yapped at the
moon. These were “nights of magic to recompense for those
of discomfort as I continued my watch for the mysterious
saucers.”
The saucers were increasingly visible (they were moving
in closer to the Earth, he believed); and by 1952 Adamski
had obtained a large quantity of photos, some of which
showed “well outlined forms—but not much detail.” Many
of the craft he sighted were in the vicinity of the Moon.
Word of the photos spread; and Adamski—an unpol-
ished yet oddly compelling public speaker—became in
demand in Southern California as a lecturer. In his talks he
displayed blow-ups of his best photos—proof of the reality
of flying saucers—photographic evidence! He also pub-
lished an article in Fate magazine. Titled “I Photographed
Space Ships,” it created a stir and brought in requests for
copies of the photos (which Adamski supplied for a dollar
each). As he became a figure of note in UFO circles, enthu-
siasts began to appear on his doorstep, often having driven
a great distance to meet him.
Adamski knew, of course, that the response to the pho-
tos was mixed. Many people were scoffing and accusing
him of fakery. But his lectures—however received—were
serving a purpose, he insisted. They were causing people to
take an interest in flying saucers, and to keep an eye out for
the mysterious craft.
He continued to lecture, and to observe the sky at night,
camera at the ready. And he was still holding forth at the
Cafe. His subject, as before, was Cosmic Consciousness or
the like—but with added reference now to our fellow inhab-
itants of the Universe.


Then, in 1952, Adamski began to hear “reports of sau-
cers apparently landing in various desert areas not a great
drive from Mount Palomar.”
At last. They were landing.

Contactee

On the afternoon of November 20, 1952 (he tells us in


Flying Saucers Have Landed ), Adamski had his first encoun-
ter—face-to-face contact—with a man from Space.
During the previous year he had journeyed on several
occasions into the Mojave Desert, to areas where saucers
were said to be landing. Nothing had come of those excur-
sions. On this day he was trying again. Accompanying him
were Alice Wells; his secretary Lucy McGinnis; and four
UFO enthusiasts, including Alfred Bailey and George
Hunt Williamson.*
They drove about in the desert, watching the sky and fol-
lowing Adamski’s hunches as to a possible landing site.
Finally, he ordered that they stop and get out of the car.
They roamed on foot now, in the rocky desert terrain.
Mountains loomed about them, deceptively close. A strong
wind was blowing; and the women tied scarfs around their
heads. After a half-hour the party returned to the car for a
picnic lunch. But the saucer watch continued as they
scanned the sky and ate.
Suddenly, everyone turned to look over a ridge—and
gaped. As Adamski describes it in Flying Saucers Have Landed :
Riding high, and without sound, there was a gigantic cigar-
shaped silvery ship, without wings or appendages of any
kind. Slowly, almost as if it was drifting, it came in our
direction; then seemed to stop, hovering motionless.

Like a long, narrow cloud, the object hung there in the


sky.
* Bailey (a railway conductor) and Williamson (an amateur
anthropologist) had recently exchanged radio messages—in
Morse code—with the occupants of a flying saucer. See their
book The Saucers Speak! (New Age, 1954).

Voices trembling with excitement, they debated the iden-
tity of the object. George Hunt Williamson was sure it was
a spaceship. Lucy McGinnis deemed it an airplane; but un-
able to discern any wings, she suddenly changed her mind.
Yes, a spaceship!
They stared in amazement at the long, narrow craft—not
a flying saucer, but a mother ship.
It began to move off.
“Someone take me down to the road—quick!” said Adam-
ski. “That ship has come looking for me and I don’t want to
keep them waiting!”
Adamski, McGinnis, and Bailey hopped into the car and
drove a half-mile down the road. The ship seemed to be fol-
lowing them. Turning onto a dirt road, they drove along a
shallow canyon. Adamski pointed to the base of a hill—
that was where he wanted to set up his telescope and cam-
era. As they arrived at the spot, the ship was directly over-
head.
Adamski leapt from the car and unpacked his equip-
ment. He told McGinnis and Bailey to leave him and rejoin
the others—he wanted to be alone. They should return for
him in an hour.
The car sped away with a trail of dust. Meanwhile, the
silver ship was drifting off, like a cloud in the wind. Soon it
had disappeared over the mountains.
Adamski was alone with his equipment and thoughts. He
attached camera to telescope, adjusted the eyepiece.
Then his attention was caught by a flash in the sky. And
he saw something—“a beautiful small craft”—drifting be-
tween two mountain peaks and settling into a cove.
A flying saucer!
He began to take pictures. With another flash the saucer
moved out of sight.
Adamski stood there, camera in hand, awed by the prox-
imity of the saucer. He wondered if its occupants knew he
had been taking pictures. And he fell into a reverie.
His thoughts were interrupted. Someone was standing
about a quarter of a mile away, motioning for Adamski to
come over.
As his companions (who would later sign an affidavit


attesting to having witnessed the encounter) watched from
a distance, Adamski walked toward the man. Strangely, he
felt no fear. Hands thrust into the pockets of his wind-
breaker, he walked confidently and expectantly, as if
approaching an old and trusted friend.
The man was wearing a jumpsuit. His long, blond hair
was blowing in the wind. He was smiling.
Adamski halted an arm’s length from the stranger.
Now, for the first time I fully realised that I was in the pres-
ence of a man from space—A HUMAN BEING FROM
ANOTHER WORLD!…The beauty of his form sur-
passed anything I had ever seen. And the pleasantness of
his face freed me of all thought of my personal self. I felt
like a little child in the presence of one with great wisdom
and much love, and I became very humble within myself
…for from him was radiating a feeling of infinite under-
standing and kindness, with supreme humility.

The spaceman extended his hand. It was slender, with


fingers like those of “an artistic woman.” Adamski reached
out to shake it. But the spaceman shook his head, and gen-
tly placed his palm against Adamski’s.
Adamski regarded the man with awe. He was clean-
shaven and youthful in appearance. He had a high fore-
head, green eyes, and a smile that revealed glistening
teeth. His jumpsuit was brown, with a radiant sheen. He
wore no jewelry, carried no weapon.
The two men began to communicate, via a combination
of telepathy, gestures, and facial expressions. The spaceman
was from Venus, he informed Adamski. His visit was friend-
ly, but serious in purpose. For he had come to warn us of
the dangers of nuclear explosions—dangers for both the
Earth and its neighbors in the Solar System.
Adamski noticed now the saucer in which he had
arrived. Bell-shaped and translucent, it was hovering just
off the ground in a cove. A scout ship, explained the space-
man, that had emerged from the mother ship seen earlier.
As the wind blew their hair and ruffled the bushes
around them, Adamski put questions to the spaceman.
How did his ship operate? Did the Venusians believe in

a Deity? Did they experience death? The spaceman ans-
wered the questions. But when Adamski asked to take his
picture, he shook his head.
He led Adamski over to the saucer. It wobbled in the
wind; and prismatic colors flashed on its surface. Adamski
found himself speechless, overcome with joy.
Could he go for a ride? The spaceman shook his head.
Could he just step inside and take a look around? No, not
at this time.
Then the spaceman said goodbye and reboarded his ship.
It rose, glided over the mountains, and disappeared from
view.
Adamski was soon rejoining his party and filling them in
on what had happened. He and the others returned to the
site, to examine the spaceman’s footprints and to look for
traces of the saucer. Then they drove into town for dinner.


Two days later an Arizona newspaper ran a story about
the encounter. More newspaper coverage followed; and it
was not long before Adamski himself was writing a full
account of his experience.
The manuscript found its way to the desk of Waveney
Girvan, editor-in-chief of a British publishing house. A
UFO enthusiast, Girvan says that it “made an immediate
appeal to me: I felt I was handling dynamite.” Though fear-
ing the book might bring ridicule upon his imprint, he
decided to publish it.*
And in the fall of 1953, Flying Saucers Have Landed
appeared in bookstores. Coauthored by Adamski and Des-
mond Leslie (a British ufologist who wrote the historical
portion of the book), it describes in detail the encounter in
the desert. It also included the latest—and most sensational
—photos of spacecraft that Adamski had taken through his
telescope. In its concluding chapter we are told:
Now I am hoping that the spaceman will return again, and
that then I will be granted more time to visit with him.
Believe me, I am saving up questions. And many of my
friends are also accumulating questions. Couldn’t it be pos-
sible that he might actually let me have a ride in his ship of
the Great Ethers? He would not have to invite me twice.

Aboard the Ships

The book sold well; and Adamski’s fame spread. News-


papers ran features on him—the amateur astronomer who
claimed to have photographed spaceships and to have chat-
ted with a spaceman! He began to receive lecture invita-
tions from around the country, in particular from the UFO
clubs that were springing up. And increasingly, people were
appearing on his doorstep—saucer enthusiasts, the curious,
and the just plain batty.
Meanwhile, his contacts with the Space People (or Space

* One of his reasons for doing so, explains Girvan in Flying


Saucers and Common Sense (Citadel Press, 1956), was to elucidate
saucers to members of his club who had been looking at him
askance.

Brothers, as he liked to call them) continued, and grew
more spectacular.*
And in 1955 he published (with Abelard-Schuman) an-
other book, to describe these further encounters. It was
titled Inside the Space Ships.†
If Flying Saucers Have Landed strained his credibility
with many readers, Inside the Space Ships (which included
additional photos) stretched it to its limits. Desmond Les-
lie, in a foreword to the book, puts his finger on the prob-
lem. This “amazing document,” says Leslie, may be taken
in one of two ways. It may be either believed or disbelieved.
The reader must make up his own mind on this funda-
mental question.
Inside the Space Ships takes up the tale three months after
the desert encounter. In his home on Palomar Adamski was
feeling restless. And he found welling up inside him an
inexplicable urge to visit Los Angeles.
Taking a bus into the city and checking into his usual
hotel, he recalled a certain student of his—a young woman.
Unable to get away to Palomar, she had asked Adamski to
telephone her the next time he was in town.
He did so; and the student was soon joining him at the
hotel. They talked; and he advised her in regard to some
personal matters. She expressed her gratitude, and said she
had been thinking of him and hoping he would show up to
help her.

* His wife Mary is said to have fallen to her knees on one occa-
sion, begging him to stop meeting with the spacemen and dis-
continue his writing on the subject. But Adamski replied that a
mission had been thrust upon him; not even for the sake of his
family could he desist.
† Inside the Space Ships was ghostwritten by Charlotte Blodget,
to whom Adamski expresses his appreciation for “framing my
experiences in the written words of this book.” His other major
works, Flying Saucers Have Landed and Flying Saucers Farewell,
were also ghostwritten. (The serviceable prose of these books
contrasts sharply with the ungainly style of his philosophical
works, which were written apparently by Adamski himself.) And
his secretary, Lucy McGinnis, is said to have been responsible for
the “clear formulation of his thoughts” in Adamski’s letters.


Walking her back to the trolley, Adamski wondered if a
telepathic message from the student had brought him into
the city. But upon returning to the hotel, he found that
inexplicable urge to be with him still.
He stood there in the lobby, beset with restlessness and
a sense of anticipation.
Suddenly, two men in suits walked up to him. One of
them smiled, addressed Adamski by name, and extended
his hand. Adamski did likewise, and received a familiar
greeting: a pressing of palms.
These strangers, he realized, were not of the Earth.
The smiling man asked if he was available to come with
them. Adamski said he was. They led him outside to a black
sedan. The three got in and drove off into the night.
As the sedan headed out of the city, the pair revealed
their identity. They were “contact men,” living secretly
among the people of Earth. One was from Mars, the other
from Saturn.
The three men traveled on in silence. Urban sprawl gave
way to desert. Stars began to be visible in the sky.
Leaving the highway, they drove along a rough road.
“We have a surprise for you,” said the Martian. In the dis-
tance Adamski could see something glowing on the ground.
His heart beat faster as they approached it.
The sedan pulled up beside a flying saucer. It resembled
the one he had gazed upon in the desert.
And standing beside it was the very Venusian with whom
he had chatted that day. With a radiant smile, the jump-
suited figure greeted Adamski.
Adamski was escorted aboard by the three spacemen—
by Firkon, Ramu, and Orthon (the Venusian). Passing
through a curved passageway, they entered the main cabin.
It was circular with a domed ceiling. On the wall were
graphs and charts. At the center of the cabin—connecting
lenses in the floor and ceiling—was a column: the magnetic
pole (he would learn) that propelled the saucer.
Firkon and Ramu invited Adamski to join them on a
curved bench beside the column. Orthon, meanwhile, had
approached the control panel. Adamski felt an indescrib-
able joy. It was dawning on him that his dream was about


to be realized. He was being taken on a journey into Space.
With almost no sensation of movement, the ship took
off. Adamski looked down into the lens and saw rooftops
skimming by. Through the lens in the ceiling he saw myri-
ads of stars.
As the saucer rose, Adamski was briefed on a few of its
features. Then he was told to prepare for a landing—in the
mother ship. The same one that had passed over the desert,
and that was now floating eight miles above the Earth. He
looked out a porthole and caught his breath. There it was—
half a mile long.
“The spectacle of that gigantic cigar-shaped carrier ship
hanging there motionless in the stratosphere,” he writes,
“will never dim in my memory.”
The saucer passed through an opening in the great ship
and docked inside. The four men disembarked; and Adam-
ski was led through the forbidding interior of a mother
ship. He was shown tiers of platforms filled with instru-
ments, and a control room.
Then they entered a lounge. Adamski’s attention “in-
stantly was absorbed by two incredibly lovely young
women” who rose from a divan and came toward him. One
of the women kissed Adamski on the cheek; the other
brought him a goblet of clear liquid. Both were tall; had
long, wavy hair; and wore gossamer robes and golden san-

  


dals. They looked at him with merry eyes; and he had the
feeling these women could read his innermost thoughts.
Adamski was motioned onto a divan. He sipped on his
beverage as one of the women—Kalna—explained to him
the purpose of a mother ship. It cruised about Space, she
said, for the pleasure and edification of its occupants. Every
citizen of the Universe got to spend part of the year visit-
ing and learning about other planets. The inhabitants of
such planets were always friendly—with the sole exception
of Earth. That was why the mother ships never landed on
Earth.
Adamski was taken to the pilot room, for a spectacular
view of Space. Through the window he gazed upon millions
of colored lights that flickered in the blackness. And amidst
this “celestial fireworks display” was the Earth: a ball of
light shrouded in clouds. (By now the ship had risen to an
altitude of 50,000 miles.)
They rejoined Ramu in the lounge. The Saturnian was
seated with a man in loose, comfortable-looking clothing.
(The Space People wear jumpsuits only while working,
Adamski would learn.) The man appeared to be about the
same age as Adamski—the first person he had encountered
on the ship who was not youthful in appearance. The gob-
lets were refilled. Adamski sipped on the beverage, finding
it “delicately sweet with an elusiveness that was tantaliz-

  


ing.” The nectar of the gods!
About an hour had elapsed since his departure from
Earth. Yet in that short space of time, he tells us, “my whole
life and understanding had opened to a far greater concept
of the Universe than I had gained during the sixty-one years
of my total life on Earth.”
But more understanding was about to come his way. For
Adamski was addressed now by that older-looking man—
who turned out to be a highly-evolved, thousand-year-old
Master.
The Master began to speak; and Adamski and the oth-
ers listened, attentively and humbly. “My son…” he said,
looking Adamski in the eye.
And he launched into a discourse on the philosophy, wis-
dom, and ways of the Space People. He revealed to Adamski
that the entire Universe is populated by human beings.
Each planet, however, is at a different stage of development.
Indeed, the purpose of human life is to develop. And how
does a human develop? By adhering to Universal Law. The
Space People, said the Master, wanted to help us under-
stand Universal Law—wanted to share their wisdom with
us. And why had they arrived at this moment in our his-


tory? To warn us of the perils of nuclear testing.
The Master spoke on and on. He touched on perfection
…paths that led upward…nonviolence…tolerance. Occa-
sionally, Adamski would think of a question—and the
Master would read his mind and answer it.
The lecture concluded with an injunction. Adamski was
to return to Earth with a “message of hope” for his fellow
man. The Space People were giving him a mission—an
urgent one. He was to convey their wisdom to the human
race.
The Master rose and gazed deeply into Adamski’s eyes;
and the philosopher felt a new sense of strength. The
Master gestured farewell and departed the lounge.
Everyone was silent for a moment. Then Kalna remarked
that it was always a privilege to listen to the Master.
Adamski chatted with his hosts. They commended him
for standing up to the ridicule that had been heaped upon
him, and for his refusal to use his contact for self-aggran-
dizement or commercialism. “In the face of all derision, dis-
belief—even when the validity of your photographs was
challenged—we saw how staunch you remained to that
which, within yourself, you knew to be true.”
More drinking of the nectarlike beverage followed. Then
Ramu announced it was time to return to Earth. Adamski
was led back to the saucer.
He was flown back to Earth and driven to his hotel. Few
words were exchanged during the drive. Adamski was
absorbed in his thoughts; and Firkon, at the wheel of the
sedan, left him alone.
In his hotel room he sat on the edge of the bed, reflect-
ing on his meeting with the Space People. And he realized
that—unbelievable as it was—he must speak of it to Man-
kind. For the Space People had made him their messenger.
Adamski slept for a few hours, then took the bus back to
Mount Palomar.
He was soon at work on Inside the Space Ships. It would
relate the events of that memorable night; describe the
Space People and their philosophy; and tell of subsequent
journeys into Space. During one of these, he was flown
around the Moon (more than a decade before the astronauts


of Apollo 8) in a saucer. During another, he was shown an
awesome scene on a television screen: the surge and swirl of
interstellar dust and energy—the basic force of the Uni-
verse.
And in the book’s most inspiring passage, Adamski
describes his return to Earth after one of those rides aboard
a saucer:
I returned to my room in the hotel, but not to sleep. My
experiences of the night had so strengthened and invigor-
ated me that I felt like a new man, my mind awake and
alert with thoughts more vivid and swift than ever before!
My heart sang with joy, and my body was freshened as
though from a long rest. There was much to be done this
day, and tomorrow I must return to my home on the moun-
tain; but from now on I would, to the best of my ability,
live each moment as it came, complete in its fullness, serv-
ing the One Intelligence as man is intended to do, and for
which purpose he was created.

Truly, the philosopher had benefited profoundly from


his encounters with the Space People.

Pinnacle of Success

And he would continue to benefit from them—as author,


lecturer, and celebrity. His books were selling, and drawing
national attention to Adamski—the man who had traveled
in flying saucers! Who had photographed them! Not only
was he in demand as a speaker (in 1958 he and C. A. Honey,
his chief assistant, completed a 4000-mile lecture tour), but
as a guest on radio and television shows.
He and his followers had sold Palomar Gardens, and
purchased a property further up the mountain. Among the
buildings they raised on the new site were accommodations
for a growing number of visitors. These included persons
who came to study Cosmic Law (some of them widows
with large bank accounts), and also a longhaired, bearded
contingent: West Coast beatniks who “dug” the outra-
geousness of Adamski. Other marginal types were also
showing up. Lamented Lucy McGinnis: “You would be

surprised to learn how many mediums come with ‘special
messages’ for G.A. People of all branches of religion and
metaphysics drive up to enlighten and save him. Some are
very difficult to talk to, but we do our best to be patient and
friendly at all times.”*
And visiting from time to time was Adamski’s brother, a
Catholic priest. He and George would engage in long dis-
cussions. No doubt they touched upon organized religion,
of which Adamski seems to have strongly disapproved.†
For some time now Adamski had been coordinating a
network of correspondents. These devoted followers—
known as “co-workers”—received from Mount Palomar a
newsletter, the Cosmic Bulletin, that kept them posted on
the activities of the Space People. They corresponded with
one another and organized study groups. The network
extended beyond the borders of the U.S., and was to prove
useful in 1959—when George Adamski embarked upon a
world tour.
The tour had been prompted, he insisted, by the Space
People, who had told him to go forth and explain the rea-
sons for their coming. It began in New Zealand, in January,
then moved on to Australia, England, Holland, and Swit-
zerland. Co-workers in each country had arranged meet-
ings, lectures, and publicity.
From its start the tour was a success. The lectures (which
included a film) were attended by overflow crowds. Aus-
tralia was particularly gratifying. When his plane landed in
Sidney, a crowd of reporters, curiosity seekers, and saucer
enthusiasts (whom Adamski describes in Flying Saucers
Farewell as “wonderful men and women who are dedicated
to seeking out the peaceful, productive means by which we
shall earn our rightful, dignified position among the civi-
lizations of other planets”) converged on him; and he held
a press conference. The ensuing publicity helped fill the lec-
ture halls.
* Quoted in Lou Zinsstag, UFO…George Adamski, Their Man
on Earth (UFO Photo Archives, 1990).
† Zinsstag reports that he had a “peculiar idiosyncrasy against
entering any church.” When he did so once during a visit to
Rome, he turned pale and left as soon as possible.

Then it was on to England, where he lectured to large
crowds and appeared in a television debate with an astron-
omer. (Adamski claims to have won the debate through
“sheer dignity.”)
But the high point of the tour came in Holland. Just
before his arrival, Adamski learned—to his surprise and
glee—that the country’s ruler, Queen Juliana, wished to
meet with him. Juliana had a penchant for the mystical.
(Her attachment several years earlier to a faith-healer had
prompted calls for her abdication; but she had weathered
the crisis.) Having heard that the man who had gone up in
a flying saucer was about to visit her domain, the Queen
wanted to talk with the fellow.
Adamski checked into a hotel in The Hague. The next
day a royal limousine picked him up and drove him to the
Palace. As he was led inside, Adamski (pleased with himself )
was saluted by guards, doormen, and attendants.
The audience took place in the library. Wearing a stately
blue frock, the Queen was flanked by Prince Bernhard, her
science advisers, and the Air Force Chief of Staff. Unable to
dissuade the Queen from meeting with an obvious charla-
tan (as they viewed Adamski), these men had sought to
form a protective group about her.
Adamski was “nervous with anticipation” (he recalls in
Flying Saucers Farewell ), “but a feeling of calm and ease
came over me as I stood in the presence of the Queen.…I
completely forgot all the instructions and could not remem-
ber the formalities that should have followed. Instead, I
acted upon my feelings, for here was a feeling of welcome
as among friends.”
Coffee and pastries were served. Then, for nearly two
hours, Adamski regaled Her Majesty with an account of his
adventures in Space.
The Queen listened politely and attentively. Her advis-
ers, however, kept asking Adamski questions designed to
discredit him. The space traveler remained undaunted. At
one point he insisted officials in the U.S. were withholding
information on UFOs, and asked the Queen if the same sit-
uation might not exist in Holland.
Her Majesty gave “a tiny smile of acknowledgement.”


When the audience was over, both the Queen and the
Prince shook Adamski’s hand. The firmness of their hand-
shakes impressed him. Of the Prince’s he would remark: “It
was one of those handshakes which mean more than words.
I felt he was in agreement with me.”
And climbing back into the royal limousine, Adamski
was returned to his hotel.
Meanwhile, word of Juliana’s meeting with a flying saucer
contactee had spread—and Holland was thrown into an
uproar. Declared one newspaper: “A shame for our coun-
try.” Another paper was more accommodating: “We are not
opposed to a court jester on the green lawns of the Royal
Palace, provided he is not taken for an astronomical phi-
losopher.” In an interview the Air Force Chief dismissed
Adamski: “The man’s a pathological case.”
But Juliana seemed to have enjoyed her meeting with the
man who had been to Space. Said one of her advisers: “The
Queen showed an extraordinary interest in the whole sub-
ject.” And Adamski—who went on to lecture before sold-
out houses in The Hague and Amsterdam—stated that Her
Majesty had been “very interested…I wish everyone had a
mind as open to progress—and I don’t mean gullible—as I
experienced today.”*
The next stop on the tour was Switzerland. He was
picked up at the train station and taken to a hotel by co-
worker Lou Zinsstag.†
In her George Adamski: Their Man on Earth, Zinsstag has
described his stay in Switzerland. A memorable moment,
she says, came in Basle, where she and Adamski encoun-
* Adamski’s meeting with the Queen brings to mind Groucho
Marx’s encounters with the society matron played by Margaret
Dumont.
† Zinsstag was cousin to Carl Jung, the noted psychologist. In
his book Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies
(Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1959), Jung posits that UFOs are
archetypes—“psychological projections” that express the fears
and yearnings of the Unconscious—visionary images of whole-
ness and order. Zinsstag tried unsuccessfully to convince him
they were actual spacecraft, piloted by extraterrestrials. She also
sought, unsuccessfully, to get him to meet with Adamski.


tered one of the Space People. They were sitting in a side-
walk cafe at the time, having a conversation. The only other
patron was a blond man in sunglasses, whom Adamski kept
eyeing. The man finally got up and left, smiling at them as
he walked by. Adamski explained to her that the stranger
was one of the Space People.
But Switzerland was also the scene of something new in
Adamski’s career: organized hostility. The first sign that
trouble was brewing came at his opening lecture in Zurich.
The lecture was attended by a sympathetic audience; and
when it was over, a question-and-answer session was held.
Suddenly, a man stalked to the front and insisted that the
questioning was a stage-managed sham. He also accused
Adamski of being not the real Adamski, but an imperson-
ator. The man refused to give his name and departed has-
tily from the hall.
The following day Adamski delivered a second lecture,
at a larger hall that was filled to capacity. But many in the
crowd were university students who had come to disrupt
the event. They proceeded to do so. After each of his sen-
tences they stamped their feet and clapped. They hollered,
sang, tossed fruit. Adamski gave up trying to speak and
called for the film to be shown. But as the lights dimmed,
trumpets and noisemakers began to sound. Firecrackers
exploded. A searchlight was beamed at the screen. After a
woman was struck by a tossed beer bottle, the police
ordered everyone to leave.
The students, it would seem, were simply out for some
raucous fun. But Adamski blamed the disruption on “the
Silence Group,” a cabal dedicated to suppressing the truth
about flying saucers.
His next scheduled stop was Rome. But the rigors of
touring, the incident at Zurich, and the summer heat had
taken their toll on the 68-year-old lecturer. He cancelled his
remaining appearances and flew back to America. Zinsstag
describes his departure from the airport: “While standing
in a queue, he suddenly took me in his arms and gave me a
huge kiss. I have seldom been so astonished in my life—of
a kiss, I mean.”
She was one of those “wonderful men and women” ded-


icated to spreading the word about the Space People; and
Their Man on Earth was appreciative.

Last Years

Adamski was soon at work on another book. And in


1961 Flying Saucers Farewell—perhaps the most interesting
of his works—was published by Abelard-Schuman. It
touches on such matters as farming on Venus; the mission
of the Space People; the principles by which they live
(avoidance of negative thoughts, etc.); their architecture;
their attitude toward work; UFOs and the Bible; telepathy;
vegetation on the Moon; the propulsion system of the ships;
and scientific confirmation of Adamski’s findings. The
book includes a refutation of charges of fakery that had
been leveled against him, and an account of his world tour.
The farewell in the title refers, he explains, to his having
completed a preliminary study of the UFO phenomenon.
Henceforth a “new program of greater intellectual expan-
sion, along technical and philosophical lines, will be carried
out by myself and my associates.” He would continue to
explore Man’s place in the Universe, but from a new per-
spective.
That same year Adamski self-published a philosophic
treatise called Cosmic Philosophy. Unlike his saucer books,
it is abstract, didactic—and almost unreadable. Here is a
sample of its prose:
Always you are One, you are All, as a centralized point of
being. Undying, unchanging—and the Consciousness,
Cause, and the Action—evolving, transmuting a form to a
unified state of awareness.

The main idea of the book seems to be that the ego must
be transcended, allowing the mind to “vanish into the illu-
mined vastness of Cosmic intelligence.” The reader is urged
to tear away “the veil of mystery that separates himself
from the Cosmic Halls of Wisdom.” For some 87 pages
Adamski expounds (or blathers) in this high-minded fash-
ion. Toward the end Firkon appears and relates a parable.


Cosmic Philosophy does conclude with some practical
advice. Adamski suggests keeping a daily ledger of your
thoughts. Divide a page into two columns—one for posi-
tive thoughts, the other for negative. Constantly monitor
and assess your thoughts, making marks in the appropriate
column. At the end of each day tabulate your score. “Over
a period of time you will find that your old thought habits
that caused confusion and disorder in the mind and body
have disappeared.”
He also disseminated, via the newsletter, a series of arti-
cles on Cosmic Philosophy. The reaction was mixed. “I for
one found his elaborations becoming repetitious and, some-
times, too abstract,” writes Lou Zinsstag. She complains of
having grown “tired of Adamski’s articles on Cosmic Phi-
losophy. They were moralizing and often singularly point-
less.”
The network of co-workers was still alive and well. They
continued to correspond, publish bulletins, hold meetings
—and await the arrival of the Space People. But Adamski’s
communiqués to them became briefer and less frequent;
and finally he put C. A. Honey in charge of the network.
He had decided to concentrate, he explained, on Cosmic
Philosophy and other vital concerns.
The nature of those concerns soon became apparent. In
March 1962, Adamski announced that he was about to
leave for Saturn—to attend an interplanetary conference.
He would bring back, he promised, “the highest teachings
ever given to Earth people.” He would also attempt to send,
from the conference, a telepathic message to co-workers
around the world. They were told to meditate at a specified
hour, and to have pencil and paper ready.
Only one of them succeeded in receiving the message. (It
was a brief greeting.) But all were soon receiving in the mail
a copy of “Report on My Trip to the Twelve Counselors’
Meeting of Our Sun System.” The Saturn Report, as it
became known, was disturbing to many of his followers.
The problem was not that he had gone to Saturn (they
expected no less), but that he had gotten there by a disrep-
utable means. For Adamski had traversed the millions of
miles via a kind of astral travel.


Astral travel involves zipping about in one’s nonmaterial
body; and Adamski had denounced as frauds those claim-
ing to have engaged in the practice. They were “mystical
hucksters,” who undermined the credibility of authentic
fellows like him. That psychic stuff—astral bodies, auto-
matic writing, spirit entities—was nonsense; and he had
told his followers to stay away from it.
But now he did a turnabout, and became preoccupied
with a grab bag of mystical practices. He experimented with
Ouija boards and hypnotism; wrote about witchcraft; spec-
ulated on the past lives of those around him. And he en-
gaged in trance mediumship—something the old Adamski
had especially denounced. During one trance he insisted
Orthon had possessed him and was speaking through him.
Many of his followers were scandalized. A ride in a fly-
ing saucer—a nuts-and-bolts ship—had been easy for them

to accept. But astral travel? Reincarnation? Possession by
spacemen? These were beyond the pale of belief. C. A.
Honey, who was editing the newsletter, wrote to Lou Zins-
stag: “Recent articles by George were so far out I could not
publish them.”
Was Adamski exploring the borderlands of human expe-
rience…or (the view of his detractors) cracking under the
strain of an on-going imposture?
Then came the matter of the postal box.
In October copies of a mysterious note were received by
co-workers. The note was written in hieroglyphic charac-
ters, with an English translation:
You are doing good work. Adamski is the only one on Earth
that we support.

The return address was a postal box in Glendale, Califor-


nia. Around the same time a classified ad, offering to put
“qualified persons” in touch with the Space People—for a
fee—appeared in newspapers. The address was that same
postal box.
Adamski denied any connection with the note or the ad.
But it was discovered that he had secretly rented the postal
box. Could the old man be “going off the beam” (as fellow
contactee Sonja Lyubein, who was staying with him at the
time, was telling people)? He was acting like a two-bit char-
latan.
His followers began to doubt Adamski. They saw him as
defecting from his mission and betraying the Space People.
Even Lucy McGinnis—his devoted secretary of many years
—left him, unable to bear what must have seemed to her a
self-betrayal.
Adamski’s career was in decline. Yet a final moment of
glory awaited him.
In 1963 he flew to Copenhagen and delivered a series of
lectures. Afterwards he stopped in Switzerland, for a visit
with Lou Zinsstag. She greeted him with enthusiasm. But
it was not the Adamski she remembered. He had become,
she says in her book, boastful, flippant, inattentive to oth-
ers. Zinsstag found herself dismayed by this new persona.


Why the change? She speculates that he had come under
the influence of malevolent spacemen. And she knew that
some of his recent projects had come to naught. (It does not
seem to have occurred to Zinsstag that he might be sagging
under the weight of decades of deception.) Whatever the
case, his visit was proving a disappointment.
At times, however, he became his old self—sincere,
jovial, friendly. He would tell jokes or address some fasci-
nating topic; and the two wound up passing a few “won-
derful hours of perfect understanding.”
Then Adamski made a startling announcement. He want-
ed her to accompany him to Rome, where he was scheduled
to meet with the Pope.
Zinsstag looked at him in astonishment. The Pope?
Adamski nodded and insisted that a meeting with the
Pope had been arranged. From his pocket he took a pack-
age. It contained a message, he said, from the Space People,
who had asked him to deliver it to the Pope.
Zinsstag was dubious. But they flew to Rome, and were
soon making their way to the Vatican. As they approached
the Apostolic Palace, Adamski looked about for the papal
representative with whom he was supposed to rendezvous.
“There he is, I can see the man. Please, wait for me at this
very spot in about an hour’s time!”
He descended the steps and, going to the left, entered a
doorway—from which Zinsstag thought to discern some-
one gesturing to him. She was puzzled, though, having
expected Adamski to turn right and go in at the main
entrance where the Swiss Guards were posted.
After an hour she returned, to find Adamski waiting for
her and “grinning like a monkey.” On his face was an unfor-
gettable look of sheer joy. The Pope had received him, he
said, and accepted the message from the Space People.
Adamski showed her a commemorative coin, and
described how the Pope had given it to him—in apprecia-
tion of his having delivered the message.
Had this meeting truly taken place? The coin dispelled
any doubts Zinsstag may have had. It could only have come,
she told herself, from the Pope. George had met with him!
Adamski returned to California with his memento. And


he sank deeper into questionable activities. He peddled
instructions for traveling (via self-hypnosis) to other plan-
ets. And he published a study course that was an updated
version of Questions and Answers by the Royal Order of Tibet
—with all references to Tibetan Masters altered to “Space
Brothers” or “Cosmic Brotherhood.”*
His final years were marred by a schism in his organiza-
tion. It began with a dispute over copyrights. Adamski
accused C. A. Honey of publishing, under Honey’s own
name, ideas and materials stolen from Adamski. The two
men split. Co-workers sided with one or the other; and
everything began to fall apart.
Even Lou Zinsstag, appalled by his descent into mysti-
cism, broke with Adamski. Yet she felt beholden to him. “I
can still call him friend. Never in my life can I forget the

* The Tibetan Masters themselves, say Adamski’s critics, were


borrowed from Theosophy (via one or another of its offshoots
that flourished in Southern California during the thirties).
Theosophy was an influential mystical movement founded by
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831–1891). A trance medium and
occultist, Madame Blavatsky claimed to be in contact with the
Ascended Masters—advanced beings with powers such as telep-
athy and astral projection. Based in Tibet (yet traveling widely—
to other planes, other planets, and Blavatsky’s apartment in New
York), they manifest themselves to specially favored individuals.
The Masters that appeared to
Blavatsky were a wisdom-
speaking pair named Koot
Hoomi and Morya—the pre-
decessors, say those critics, of
Firkon and his friends.
Like Adamski, the cigar-
smoking Madame Blavatsky
(whom the Society for
Psychical Research called “one
of the most accomplished,
ingenious, and interesting im-
posters of history”) was reviled
by many as a charlatan, and
revered by others as a spiritual     
   
teacher.


thrill and the happiness his books and former letters
brought into my life.”
He continued to travel and lecture; to meet with followers
who had remained loyal; and to dwell on Mount Palomar.
Over Mount Palomar, on cloudless nights, hovered the
Moon. A pale orb that astronomers scrutinized…that coy-
otes yapped at…that owls hunted by.
And that George Adamski—who had flown around it—
gazed at dreamily and nostalgically.
In 1965, while in Washington, D.C., for a lecture, Adam-
ski died. He was buried (as an ex-soldier) in Arlington
National Cemetery.

Who Was This Man?

What sort of man was George Adamski? Did he truly


travel on a flying saucer and meet with the Space People?
Was he a contactee—or a con man?
In her introduction to Inside the Space Ships, Charlotte
Blodget (its ghostwriter) admits that the book will elicit
“incredulity in varying degrees.” Some will believe Adam-
ski, she says; others will see him as the victim of delusions
or the perpetrator of a hoax. But she knows her own mind
in the matter. She has met the man, and found him to be of
“unquestionable integrity.”
Blodget goes on to describe Adamski. He is handsome,
kind, patient. (That patience, she says, must have influ-
enced his selection by the Space People.) He is well-
balanced and approachable. He has a sense of humor. And
he is a man of wisdom, whose lack of formal education has
left him “free of the fetters which too often shackle the
academic mind.”
Others who knew him have added to this portrait. Lou
Zinsstag reports that his manners were impeccable; that he
was “the perfect gentleman” in his relations with women;
that he was at once quick-witted and naïve. But the quality
she found most remarkable was his ability to play down his
own courage and dedication. Instead, he came on as a light-
hearted fellow, sprinkling his conversation with expressions
such as “to hell with it” or “what the devil.”

Desmond Leslie tells us that Adamski was physically
strong, with “burning black eyes.” He was a down-to-earth
sort, and—beneath his public persona of a talkative, color-
ful celebrity—a “great human being.”
William Sherwood, a ufologist who met with Adamski
on several occasions, praises his integrity. He describes (in a
letter reprinted in Zinsstag’s book) how Adamski had been
offered money to repudiate his photos and claims, but had
turned it down. (The money had been offered, speculates
Sherwood, by business interests opposed to the low-cost
sources of energy that the Space People might reveal to us.)
Sherwood sums him up as a “self-taught, many sided man
of destiny”—a visionary who faced courageously the ridicule
and antagonism that came his way.
And Bryant and Helen Reeve (a retired couple who vis-
ited contactees) found him to be a “sincere and unruffled
man.” They were taken with Adamski’s winning smile, and
found his answers to their questions to be sensible and con-
vincing. “He is truly an extraordinary individual,” they
concluded, “a man of many contrasts, many moods, many
ideas, and many experiences—different, so different.”
For many who knew him, then, Adamski was almost a
noble figure. Yet even his admirers could admit that the “man
of destiny” was not perfect. Sherwood noted that the pres-
sures to which he was subject caused him to make mis-
takes—though never to become dishonest.
And Major Hans Peterson, the Danish Air Force officer
who organized the lectures in Copenhagen, saw the entire
man:
George Adamski was a remarkable person. He owned
nothing, had no money, not in a bank. Without being
slovenly he dressed as he wished, even at high level parties.
He swore, he liked a drink, he made love with any woman
who approached him and whom he liked, and they were
not few. And at the same time we find a man who enter-
tains deep veneration of the Creator, of Nature and of his
fellow man and for the Cosmic Laws in a degree, which one
normally does not see on this planet.*

* UFO Contact, Spring 1980. Reprinted in Zinsstag.



Even Lou Zinsstag recognized the ambiguities in the
man, realizing there was “probably another story to his
story.” She mentions his skill at evading direct questions,
and tells of a conversation that “added to the somewhat
oppressive image of a mystery man and kept me at a dis-
tance for the rest of our friendship.”
So we are left with a mystery man—a down-to-earth
sage and high-minded emissary of the Space People, with
an unknown side to him.
Yet for many who heard about him, George Adamski was
no mystery at all. In the view of those who scoffed at flying
saucers (and of many who believed in them), he was clear-
ly a fraud—a humbug—a rascal! His claims of having met
the Space People were preposterous. His detractors were
amazed that such nonsense was given the slightest atten-
tion—much less credence. Seeking to discredit him, they
accused Adamski of all manner of sins and disreputable
activities. Major Peterson has listed some of the calumnies
leveled against him: “Dishwasher, hot-dog seller, restau-
rant-keeper, religious fanatic, drunkard, illegal alcohol dis-
tiller, liar, rich author and much more is, what his enemies
have called him—every word a lie.”*
Peterson also raises the question of Adamski’s photos. He
tells how those astounding images of spacecraft were
maligned by skeptics—labeled as blatant fakes. Not true,
says Peterson. The photos were genuine.
And certainly, the issue is central. If the photos are gen-
uine, Adamski must be telling the truth about flying sau-
cers. If they are fake, doubt is cast upon his entire story. So
what about them? What are we to make of those pho-
tographs of spaceships?
Desmond Leslie called them “the most priceless pictures
of all time.” William Sherwood compared Adamski’s zeal in
attaining the photos with that of the most dedicated of sci-
entists. And Pev Marly, a special-effects cinematographer,
said that if the photos were fake, they were the most con-
* The bootlegging accusation came from a visitor to Palomar
Gardens, who claimed that Adamski had confessed—during a
drinking spree—to having started the Royal Order of Tibet as a
front for making wine during Prohibition.

vincing trick photography he had ever seen. To have faked
them, said Marly—to have gotten the shadows right—
would have required expensive equipment that Adamski
did not possess.
But others were not so sure. The famous shot of the scout
ship (page 14) was scrutinized by the British UFO Society.
Their verdict? A model, fashioned from the lid of a soda
machine. Other analysts saw the lid of a beer cooler, of a
chicken brooder, of a tobacco humidor. But clearly a lid!
Adamski dismissed these attacks. Everyone was free, he
allowed in Inside the Space Ships, to judge his photos and his
stories; but a skeptic’s “personal conclusion in no way alters
the fact of their reality.” The average mind, he noted, always
finds it easier to “scoff at new wonders than to face the fact
of its own limited knowledge of the miracles that await dis-
covery in the unlimited Universe in which he dwells.”
The attacks on Adamski were not limited, of course, to
his claims. His character, too, was denounced. He was
labeled a crackpot, a confidence man, a “self-styled profes-
sor of Oriental philosophy.” But the most common dispar-
agement—and the one that served to discredit him most in
the eyes of the public—was that George Adamski was the
mere proprietor of a hamburger stand.
Now it was no secret that he was closely connected with
the Palomar Gardens Cafe. For years Adamski had held
court there, holding informal discussions with guests and
lecturing in the evenings. He once described to Lou Zins-
stag how he had sold refreshments, and performed other
menial tasks, at the Cafe. And she was dismayed to learn
that such employment had harmed his reputation in
America. Why would a democratic people, she wondered,
find problematical a humble background?
But it was an aspersion Adamski did not allow to go
unchallenged. On one occasion a UFO investigator had
described him as someone who “ran a hamburger stand on
the road to the Mount Palomar Observatory,” and who
kept his telescope on the roof of the stand—all of which
showed him to be a rude, untutored fellow, sniffed the
investigator, scarcely to be taken seriously as a student of
the Cosmos. An indignant Adamski responded to the


charge (in Flying Saucers Farewell ). First of all, he pointed
out, the Palomar Gardens Cafe was not a hamburger stand.
It was a full-scale restaurant that had been mentioned in
Holiday magazine; indeed, many “notable visitors” had
dined there and signed the guest register. Secondly, he nei-
ther owned nor worked at the Cafe—he simply lived on the
property, and spent time in the restaurant conversing with
guests. Thirdly, his telescope was not kept on the roof, but
under a dome in a nearby clearing. And even if he were a
hamburger vendor, what would be wrong with that? Amer-
ica had been built upon “little fellows who made good.”*
And a final charge that has been leveled against him
involves a novel Adamski wrote and self-published in 1949
—four years before his first (alleged) ride on a saucer.
Pioneers of Space: A Trip to the Moon, Mars, and Venus is a
work of fiction about a voyage by rocket ship. Encountered
on the planets are high-minded humans, living in utopian
societies. Their philosophy and customs resemble those of
the Space People who would appear in Inside the Space
Ships. For Adamski’s detractors the novel was the smoking
gun—proof of his humbuggery. He had simply rewritten it
as a “factual” account.†
So…who was George Adamski?
The question would seem to have only two possible
answers. He was either the real thing, or an egregious fraud.
He was either a genuine contactee, who met with the Space
People—or a cynical fake. A guller of the gullible. A char-
latan who was in it (and had been ever since his Royal
Order of Tibet days) for the money, women, and fame. One
of these—and one only—was the real Adamski. No middle

* Surely the example of a self-taught sage, employed in a restau-


rant and holding forth there, is worthy of respect. Do we look
down upon Socrates for having earned his living as a stone-
mason? For having taught in the marketplace of Athens? For hav-
ing pondered the deepest matters with a mind, like Adamski’s,
“unfettered by academic shackles”?
† Copies of Pioneers of Space are hard to find. The Library of
Congress has one. Examining it, I wondered if I were not peek-
ing behind the scenes—gazing into the hidden effects of a liter-
ary conjurer.

ground was possible. As Desmond Leslie said: “He must
either be accepted in toto or completely rejected.”
Yet isn’t it conceivable that Adamski was neither a com-
pletely sincere individual nor an utterly venal one? That he
was some curious combination of the two? According to this
view, he started out as a genuine street philosopher—one of
those working-class intellectuals who used to haunt public
libraries, lecture from soapboxes, hold forth in taverns. But
a streak of mischief (or daring) had impelled him to dra-
matize his teachings—by embroidering them with fantasy.
His initial attempt at this had resulted in the Royal Order
and the Tibetan Masters with whom he claimed to have
studied. Then, as flying saucers captured the public imag-
ination, he had simply updated his imagery. Such concoc-
tions were justified if they helped to convey the vital truths
—about nuclear peril, the brotherhood of Man, the perfidy
of the ego—that he saw it as his task to teach. It was a ques-
tion of pragmatism.*
As for the money and other benefits that his books had
earned him, what was wrong with those? If delivering an
urgent message brought you worldly success, the more
power to you. Success was no sin.
So what’s the verdict? Was George Adamski a purveyor
of truth or a perpetrator of fraud? Or some outrageous com-
bination of both?
It is a question the reader must decide for himself. As
Adamski put it in Inside the Space Ships:
At all times I have felt very humble for the privilege which
has been granted me to listen to their words of wisdom and
to visit and travel in their beautiful ships. All that they have
asked of me is that I pass their knowledge on to my fellow
Man, whoever and wherever he may be. This I shall do,

* Writing to a student in 1951, Adamski speaks of the book he


is currently working on: “Its purpose is to alert earthly men to
the manifesting of the universe as it is now being revealed to him
through the presence of saucers and space ships in our own
atmosphere.…It will be all fiction but based on fact and might
open up the minds of earthly men; whereas nothing else proba-
bly would ever be able to do so.” (Quoted in Zinsstag.)

leaving to each man the privilege of believing or disbeliev-
ing, of benefiting from a higher knowledge or casting it
aside in derision and skepticism.*

Yamski

George Adamski died on April 23, 1965, in a suburb of


Washington, D.C.; and there his tale might be expected to
end. But it has an epilogue.
On the following day, an Englishman named Arthur
Bryant was walking in the Devonshire moors—when a fly-
ing saucer appeared (“out of thin air,” he would insist) and
landed near him. Three men hopped out. Two were tall,

* Interested readers may obtain copies of Adamski’s books from


the Adamski Foundation, P.O. Box 1722, Vista, CA 92085.

with high foreheads. The third was of normal height and
features, and introduced himself with a name that sound-
ed like “Yamski.” The three seemed to glow.
They chatted with Bryant, explaining that the ship was
from Venus, and took him aboard briefly. Then they flew
off into the sky.
Bryant reported the incident to ufologists (who were
quick to discern its connection with Adamski). He also told
them of his discovery of a glass phial that the Space People
had left behind. Inside it was a piece of paper, with an
inscription in classical Greek:
α′δελφοσ α′δελφω

Adelphos adelpho. Brother to brother.


And on that enigmatic note concludes the tale of George
Adamski, messenger of the Space People.


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Finder of Lost Objects
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