Duncan Cameron at right and Preston Nichols with Ella Crystal
Did The Montauk Experiment Almost Destroy The World?
By James Donahue
Duncan Cameron, one of the alleged survivors of the ill-fated “invisibility” test of the USS Eldridge, in what has been known as the Philadelphia Experiment, was subjected to a lengthy interview concerning his involvement with this and other events that went on at Montauk, New York, in the 1940s.
One brief portion of the interview, which has appeared in a few Internet publications, suggests that the Eldridge disappeared because it was projected through “hyperspace” to the year 1983, and that extreme measures had to be taken to make sure the equipment on board didn’t throw the entire world into a destructive time warp.
The interview was apparently conducted by Valdamar Valerian, who published the material in his book Matrix II, in 1990.
As the story is told, some of the top researchers including Nicola Tesla, Albert Einstein, Dr. Jonn von Neumann and Aleister Crowley were involved in research designed to make U.S. Navy ships invisible to radar during the war. What they accidentally designed was equipment that sent their especially built test ship through time. When it returned about 20 minutes later in earth time, 31 of the 33 men that volunteered to be on board for the test, were either dead or mentally unstable. Some were found with their bodies melted into the steel superstructure of the ship.
Two crew members allegedly survived because they sensed something was going wrong, tried unsuccessfully to stop the experiment, and then jumped overboard. At least that is the story. Cameron was one of those two survivors. The other was believed to be Preston Nichols.
What we were never told was that Cameron and Nichols rode with the ship through a time vortex. They came out in 1983. Cameron said they found themselves still in Montauk, Long Island, on August 12, the day of the experiment, but exactly 40 years in the future.
Cameron remembered that it was night. “We were found very quickly and taken down stairs, where Von Neumann greeted us. He expected us. It was a bit of a shock. We had just been in 1943 and now we were in 1983 looking at Von Neumann as an old man.”
Von Neumann told the men that there had been a “hyperspace lockup” and that they had to return and shut off the generators on the ship. He believed that the hyperspace rift that had sent them all into the future would keep building and possibly engulf the planet.
Von Neumann had been waiting 40 years to shut off the experiment and save the earth.
Cameron said he and Nichols went aboard the Eldridge and smashed the equipment with axes. The ship returned to its original point in time about three hours later. Apparently Von Neumann could or would not explain what went wrong.
The project was put on hold for a while because Von Neumann got involved in the atomic bomb project. But in 1947, the newly created Department of Defense sent Von Newmann back to take another look at the time travel project. He and a man named Jack Pruett were put in charge of the project. They moved back into the old Montauk Air Base and began using an old radar unit for their experiments.
What happened next is yet another amazing story.
By James Donahue
Duncan Cameron, one of the alleged survivors of the ill-fated “invisibility” test of the USS Eldridge, in what has been known as the Philadelphia Experiment, was subjected to a lengthy interview concerning his involvement with this and other events that went on at Montauk, New York, in the 1940s.
One brief portion of the interview, which has appeared in a few Internet publications, suggests that the Eldridge disappeared because it was projected through “hyperspace” to the year 1983, and that extreme measures had to be taken to make sure the equipment on board didn’t throw the entire world into a destructive time warp.
The interview was apparently conducted by Valdamar Valerian, who published the material in his book Matrix II, in 1990.
As the story is told, some of the top researchers including Nicola Tesla, Albert Einstein, Dr. Jonn von Neumann and Aleister Crowley were involved in research designed to make U.S. Navy ships invisible to radar during the war. What they accidentally designed was equipment that sent their especially built test ship through time. When it returned about 20 minutes later in earth time, 31 of the 33 men that volunteered to be on board for the test, were either dead or mentally unstable. Some were found with their bodies melted into the steel superstructure of the ship.
Two crew members allegedly survived because they sensed something was going wrong, tried unsuccessfully to stop the experiment, and then jumped overboard. At least that is the story. Cameron was one of those two survivors. The other was believed to be Preston Nichols.
What we were never told was that Cameron and Nichols rode with the ship through a time vortex. They came out in 1983. Cameron said they found themselves still in Montauk, Long Island, on August 12, the day of the experiment, but exactly 40 years in the future.
Cameron remembered that it was night. “We were found very quickly and taken down stairs, where Von Neumann greeted us. He expected us. It was a bit of a shock. We had just been in 1943 and now we were in 1983 looking at Von Neumann as an old man.”
Von Neumann told the men that there had been a “hyperspace lockup” and that they had to return and shut off the generators on the ship. He believed that the hyperspace rift that had sent them all into the future would keep building and possibly engulf the planet.
Von Neumann had been waiting 40 years to shut off the experiment and save the earth.
Cameron said he and Nichols went aboard the Eldridge and smashed the equipment with axes. The ship returned to its original point in time about three hours later. Apparently Von Neumann could or would not explain what went wrong.
The project was put on hold for a while because Von Neumann got involved in the atomic bomb project. But in 1947, the newly created Department of Defense sent Von Newmann back to take another look at the time travel project. He and a man named Jack Pruett were put in charge of the project. They moved back into the old Montauk Air Base and began using an old radar unit for their experiments.
What happened next is yet another amazing story.