Mysterious metal monolith appeared in Seattle nearly two decades ago, like Utah

6
utah monolith, utah monolith mystery, utah monolith mystery already in seattle, Like Utah, mysterious monolith appeared in Seattle nearly two decades ago
Utah state worker inspects a metal monolith that was found installed in the ground in a remote area of red rock in Utah. Picture by Utah Department of Public Safety via AP

This above Nov. 18, 2020 photo shows a Utah state worker inspecting a strange metal monolith discovered in a remote area of red rock in Utah.

The 12-foot structure was spotted from the air and officials landed nearby to check it out.

Well, it seems that Seattle also had a similar mystery two decades ago. Read this interesting essay by Walt Crowley found on HistoryLink.org.

In the morning of January 1, 2001, Magnuson Park visitors discover a metalic monolith atop Kite Hill. The oblong object measures approximately three feet wide by nine feet tall and appears to be hollow. There is no indication of the identity of its creators or their planet of origin.

Magnuson Park is located on the grounds of the former Sand Point Naval Air Station in northeast Seattle. The millennial monolith bore a striking resemblance to an alien artifact depicted in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, witnesses said.

Once news of the monolith reached the airwaves, it attracted droves of visitors. Many came to the park to delicately touch the structure, possibly in the hopes of raising their consciousness, and of obtaining a higher plane of thought.

Although no one of this earth obtained permits to install the monolith, park officials’ only concern was that of the safety risk. They pushed against the structure, but it would not give. They decided to let it stand, pending further investigation.

A Migratory Monolith?

It didn’t stand for long. Sometime during the wee hours of January 3, the monolith disappeared as mysteriously as it had arrived. All that remained was a hole containing a concrete platform, used to anchor the obelisk. In place of the monolith lay a single red rose, its stem snapped in two.

The “2001 Space Oddity” (as the Seattle P-I dubbed it) was discovered on Green Lake’s Duck Island the next morning. At the same time, artist and Blue Moon Tavern regular Caleb Schaber revealed that he and a band of anonymous collaborators calling themselves “Some People” had fabricated the device and several smaller versions placed around Seattle.

Schaber also said that his group had nothing to do with the monolith hijack. Magnuson Park manager C. David Hughbanks arranged for the “art work” to return to Sand Point at least temporarily. In the latest twist, someone installed a rocket-like aviation fuel tank nose-down on the monolith’s original site during the night of January 6-7, 2001. The mystery continues…

Discover more mysteries on Kiro7, Strange Sounds and Steve Quayle.

If you are already planning your Christmas gifts, please buy with us on Amazon. The affiliate sales will help us to continue the hard work we are putting in this website.

Follow us: Facebook and Twitter. By the way you can also support us on PaypalPlease and thank you!

6 Comments

  1. This wasn’t the same obelisk in Seattle. Please Strange Sounds, don’t promote mainstream deflection stories. This thing is part of a D.U.M.B.

  2. They could test the metal, probably figure out where it came from. Then, who purchased the material.
    Need some close up pictures. Actually surprised they have not released them.

  3. This is true art the artwork exists in the mind the communication is the buzz the art is the perception generated by the buzz bravo.

  4. Hmmm, two people with the same narcissistic desire to have a sculpture be noticed?

    Artistically, it’s not very sophisticated. Should have made a staircase to nowhere.

    Test it. See what it is made out of, and see if the artist etched his moniker into that monument to boring.

Leave a reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.