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Karl Hunrath and the Incredible
Adventures of Bosco
MARCH 11, 2020MARCH 11,2020 / CHASINGUFOSBLOG
In July 1952, Karl Hunrath—a resident of beautiful Racine, Wisconsin-
contacted the local police department to report an encounter he'd
experienced late one night with a man dressed in a black suit who had
entered his home, injected him with a tranquilzer, and proclaimed: “I am
Bosco. You have been chosen to enter our brotherhood of galaxies.” 1
Not long after his curious encounter with a purported Man-in-Black,
Hunrath invented a contraption he dubbed “Bosco” apparently in homage
to his mysterious dark-clad visitor. Encased in a black box, Bosco was said
to duplicate the magnetic field of UFOs and could ostensibly “call them
down.” At the time, Hunarth was emplyed as a “project engineer” with
Oster Manufacturing Co. 2 Known for its Sunbeam brand of small electric
appliances, during the war Oster branched out into avionics, which is
where Hunarth might have developed certain skills that aided with the
invention of Bosco. One of Hunrath’s fellow employees at Oster, and the
co-inventor of Bosco, was Wilbur “Jack” Wilkinson, an assistant foreman
at the company, who would subsequently follow Hunrath into infamy.Professor George Adamski (Photo credit: Joe Fex/Ape-X Research)
In November 1952, Hunrath quit his job at Oster and relocated to Southern
California where he hooked up with George Adamski and gave the
“Professor” (as Adamski was sometimes called) the lowdown on how
Bosco not only attracted flying saucers, but could also produce enough
free energy to provide all the electricity needed to power Adamski’s
burger stand at Palomar Gardens. 3 The only hitch was that Bosco was
stored in safekeeping in Wisconsin, and Hunrath was going to have his co-
inventor, Wilkinson, bring it out to California, so there was going to be a
bit of a delay on all the free energy soon to flow Adamski’s way. All of this
Bosco business seemed fine with Professor Adamski until—during a
Palomar Gardens wine drinking soiree—Hunrath went off the rails about
how Bosco could disable flying saucers, causing them to land against their
will, and potentially even crash. 4
Why Hunrath wished to bring down the kindly space brothers is
anybody’s guess, but this business about crashing saucers so alarmed the
good Professor that he told Hunrath to get the hell off his property—that
there'd be no disabling flying saucers if he had anything to say about it—
and take that infernal Bosco with him! Part of Adamski’s concern was that
if Bosco could bring down UFOs then it could most likely mess with
military aircraft as well, to which Hunrath replied:”WHO CARES? WE
WANT THE SAUCERS!” 5
After witnessing this heated exchange, one of the Adamski’s followers,
Lucy McGinnis, notified the authorities that Hunrath’s black box thingy
could potentially disable military aircraft! Not long after, both the FBI and
Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) paid a visit to Palomar
Gardens to question Adamski on the matter. In response, the professor
informed them, in no uncertain terms, that his former colleague (Hunrath)had gone off the deep end and was quite possibly possessed by
otherworldly demons. Adamski referred to Hunrath as an “uncontrollable
monster” who practiced “occultism.” 6
Before his relationship with Adamski went south, Hunrath—along with
fellow saucer enthusiasts George Hunt Williamson and Jerrold Baker—
formed the short-lived “Adamski Foundation,” an organization dedicated
to preserving and promoting the works of the good professor.
aie a
George Hunt WIlliamson (left), his charming wife Betty, and a third
individual, quite possibly Lyman Streeter
In August 1953, Bosco co-inventor Wilbur Wilkinson joined Hunrath in
California, During this period, Hunrath had apparently fallen under the
spell of George Hunt Williamson and his supposed ability to channel
entities from other planets. Hunrath, Wilkinson, and Baker spent
considerable time at Williamson’s home in Prescott, Arizona, where a
pseudo-scientific laboratory had been set up. To this end, Williamson and
crew enlisted a diverse array of ET contact methods that included short-
wave radio, telepathy, use of an Ouija board as well as the ingestion of
mescaline that allowed the men to enter altered states and ostensibly
enhance their otherworldly communications. 7 Around this time, the men
adopted space brother names: Hunrath was Firkon, Wilkinson was Ramu,
Williamson was Mark III, and Baker was Markon. Whether the men
actually believed they were aliens, or channels for aliens, or whatever their
intent was, isn’t entirely clear, but some of these very same alien names
(Firkon and Ramu) later appeared in Adamski’s book Inside the Spaceships.
8
‘hat summer, Hunrath and Wilkerson moved to Los Angeles to seek
employment in order to fund their many flying saucer investigations,
landing jobs as electricians. Wilkinson settled his family into a rented
home near Echo Park, while Hunrath found accommodations at a rooming,
house in downtown L.A.
On November 10, 1953, Hunrath phoned Hollywood based ufologist
Manon Darlaine, alerting her that he and Wilkinson were planning to meet
up the next day with a landed saucer and invited her to tag along. Manon
politely declined, fearing the men weren't operating with a full set of
dilithium crystals.The next day, Hunrath and Wilkinson rented a light plane from the now
defunct Gardena Valley Airport, and with three hours of fuel flew off into
the great unknown, never to be seen again. For some reason, the men
neglected to file a flight plan, which made subsequent search and rescue
efforts all the more challenging,
Hunrath—who was at the controls of the plane—was not an experienced
pilot, and only a week before their flight had taken a refresher course. It
was rumored that the men planned to fly in the direction of Prescott,
Arizona, a flight line which would have taken them over the remote
Southern California desert mountains where it was presumed they had
crashed.
PLANE VANISHES IN MYSTERY.
Wife Fears Hubby in ©
Flying Saucer Kidnap
‘eos eran may have brn naps | QD =m
sim wine cts Lasoo no toe
ae te src
ES Reece
Following their disappearance, a Los Angeles Mirror article featured the
alarming title PLANE VANISHES IN MYSTERY: Wife Fears Hubby in Flying
Saucer Kidnapping in which Mrs. J. Wilkinson of 1933 % LeMoyne Ave.
stated that her husband might have been nabbed by “interplanetary
invaders in a flying saucer.” Mrs. Wilkinson described her husband Wilbur
as an “avid believer in flying saucers” and that he and Hunrath “believed
the end of earth was nearing and that strange little men from the planet
‘Maser’ were ready to invade.” Mrs. Wilkinson took the Mirror reporter on
a tour of her husband’s “den” which was lined with “flying saucer
pictures, weird signs, and formulas...” One of the messages on the wallwas from “Prince Reggs of the planet Maser.” Mrs. Wilkinson recalled that
her husband played her tape recordings that featured “conversations with
men, presumably from other planets, who landed here in saucers.” 9
Afterwards, reports surfaced that the FBI had looked into the case of the
missing men and came to suspect they may have high-tailed it to Mexico
to escape “personal problems” unrelated to UFOs or Bosco. 10
1 Nick Redfern
2 Racine City Directory
3 Barker, Gray. 1965. Gray Barker's Book of Saucers. Clarksburg, WV:
Saucerian Books. (p. 36).
4 Moseley, James. 1971. The Wright Field Story. Clarksburg, WV:
Saucerian Books. (p. 24).
5 Barker, Gray. 1965. Gray Barker's Book of Saucers. (p. 36).
6 James W. Moseley, “Some New Facts about Flying Saucers Have
Landed,” Nexus (Jan. 1955).
7 Redfern, Nick. 2014. Close Encounters of the Fatal Kind. New Page
Books. (p. 62).
8 Moseley, James. 1971. The Wright Field Story. Clarksburg, WV:
Saucerian Books. (p. 25).
9 “Wife Fears 2 Killed by Flying Saucers.” Racine Journal-Times (2 Dec.
1953)
10 Moseley, James & Karl Pflock. 2002. Shockingly Close To The Truth:
Confessions of a Grave-Robbing Ufologist. New York: Prometheus Books
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