JERRY PERSON -- A LOOK BACK
I can remember when I was a kid going to the movies and watching the
screen as men from Mars landed on Earth in their flying saucers in the
1950s.
Little did I realize then that what local people may have seen was
Huntington Beach inventor William E. Horton’s own flying saucer.
Horton and his wife, Marion, lived at 16805-1/4 Roosevelt Lane, which was
at the entrance to Meadowlark Airport.
Horton, 36, was an aircraft designer for companies like Aero-Jet,
Consolidate, North American Aviation and Vaultee. He also designed cars
for both Chrysler and General Motors.
But it was in 1952 that Horton designed a flying saucer that he called
the Horton Wingless plane. The circular yellow and green craft was 26
feet wide and 40 feet long. From the ground, the craft appeared to look
like Hollywood’s idea of an alien spaceship.
The wingless craft was powered by two 225-horsepower Jacobs engines and
was housed at what was then Orange County Airport (now called John Wayne
Airport). Horton’s saucer had a tubular steel framework and was covered
in fabric, with flaps on either side that Horton called “sealers.”
Horton tested five small models before he built his full-size model. The
first four models crashed.
On Nov. 13, 1952, Horton taxied the plane down Orange County Airport’s
runway for its first test flight. The $50,000 experimental plane lifted
off the ground with Horton at the controls and rose 50 feet into the air.
But a minute later, the strange craft landed in a nearby bean field after
one of the engines acted up.
After towing the craft back to the airport, Horton replaced the Jacobs
engines with two 450-horsepower Wasp Junior engines. Now known as the
Horton Wingless HWX 28-54, Horton invited two California congressmen to
witness the craft’s next flight in September 1953. On hand at that
memorable occasion were Congressmen James Utt of Santa Ana and Robert
Wilson of Long Beach.
This time, the plane rose 30 feet. After a couple of successful takeoffs
and landings, Horton brought the craft down. Wilson was so pleased by
what he had seen that he asked Horton if he would take him up for a ride.
Horton took Wilson, who was also a member of the Armed Services
Committee, up for two test rides that day. Wilson was impressed with the
flight.
Television personality and fellow pilot Spade Cooley was so impressed
when he saw the saucer that he wanted to hire a troop of midgets, outfit
them in alien looking clothing, put antennas on their heads and land the
strange looking saucer at Los Angeles International Airport for a joke,
but Horton didn’t like the idea.
So if you were one of those who thought you saw a flying saucer back
then, I’m sorry to report that all you may have seen was the dream of
Huntington Beach’s William Horton. The last I heard of the saucer was
that it may be heading for some small town in New Mexico called Roswell.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach 92615.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.