The men who got carried away Williamson met with Hunrath and Wilkinson on a couple of occasions, at his Arizona home. It has to be said, though, that Williamson never considered the pair close friends. For Williamson, Wilkinson came across as meek and annoying, while Hunrath intimidated and even frightened Williamson with his abrasive style and character. But we do have a few important pieces of data on the pair from Williamson, particularly in relation to Hunrath. In a 1954 letter to a friend in ufology, Frank Gibson, Williamson writes: Before Hunrath arrived in California he had become acquainted with another so-called “genius”—from Ohio. [Author’s note: the first “genius” was Mr. Bosco.] This man called Karl one night saying he had just returned from Japan where he had been working with a Dr. Nagata on electromagnetic experiments. He asked Karl if he could come up to see him since he had heard that Karl was interested in magnetic research. The man came and he stayed four days and nights! When he left, Karl had become an avid saucer enthusiast. Karl said he thought the man was a “spaceman” because he answered his questions before they were asked and displayed telepathic powers. So, what we have here is Hunrath having meetings with not one but two humanlike extraterrestrials, and both in relation to alien technology.
Hunrath Looks for Answers Two enigmatic characters, both alleged aliens: one named Bosco, who was intent on destroying the US military, and the other a mysterious doctor jetting off to Japan to discuss matters relative to electromagnetic mysteries with that nation’s scientists. And both of them had one person in their sights: Karl Hunrath. But what did Visitor Number Two have to do with Ohio? Hunrath wanted to know. Quickly. First, there is the location. Dayton, Ohio—home to this mysterious “genius” according to George Hunt Williamson—was, and still is, also home to Wright-Patterson Air
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