MUFOB ARCHIVE Introduction to the Archive

Magonia was one of Britain’s oldest established magazines in the fields of ufology, Forteana and contemporary beliefs.
It began in 1966 as a small stencil-duplicated bulletin put out by the Merseyside UFO Research Group called, rather predictably, the Merseyside UFO Research Group Bulletin. This was edited by John Harney and another group member, Alan Sharp. The magazine rapidly gained a reputation amongst the conservatively-minded UFO community of the time as being a sceptical and disrespectful commentator of the foibles of the UFO scene.
After a couple of years the inevitable split happened, and in 1968 Harney and Sharp set up the Merseyside UFO Bulletin as an independent magazine. John Rimmer joined the team after the first two issues. As the editors increasingly realised that the UFO mystery was only a small part of a greater set of phenomena the coverage of the magazine widened, and MUFOB was a pioneer in Britain of the study of folklore in relation to UFOs. The work of controversial American researchers of the era, such as John Keel, and Frenchman Jacques Vallee, found an enthusiastic reception with MUFOB.
This change in direction kept the magazine in the forefront of controversy as a voice of the New Ufology, and kept the editors well supplied with letters of apopleptic fury from outraged readers. However other readers appreciated the direction the Bulletin was taking, and two in particular, Peter Rogerson and Roger Sandell, became regular correspondents and eventually joined the editorial panel.
In 1973 John Rimmer married, and moved from Liverpool to a new job in London, and the future of the magazine seemed in doubt; but little more than a year later, by coincidence John Harney also moved to work at Kew Observatory in the same part of London. The magazine was now relaunched as MUFOB New Series, with a litho printed format replacing the old, messy stencil duplicating, and John Rimmer taking over the bulk of the editorial work. As the magazine was no longer published from Merseyside and the range of topics covered by the new MUFOB now spread far beyond UFOs (although ufology has always been central to the magazine) a new name was needed. With a nod to Jacques Vallee the title changed to Magonia, but the coverage and philosophy remained the same.
More than forty years of continuous publication in the MUFOB/Magonia tradition of open-mindedness, sensible scepticism and a keen sense of humour, helped to keep Magonia at the forefront of independent UFO and Fortean journalism in Britain and around the world.
In 2009, with the appearance of the 99th issue, editor John Rimmer took the decison to cease publication of Magonia as a print magazine. This archive contains most of the major articles from MUFOB/Magonia’s forty years of publication, as well as some items of interest added later, and the complete texts of the very earliest MUFORG Bulletins.
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/01 A Brief Look at the South Hertfordshire UFO Investigation Group
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/01 BUFORA Conference at Bristol, July 1968.
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/01 Chaos at Colorado
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/01 Extraterrestrial Life
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/01 New Hope for Extraterrestrial Communication
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/01 Should ‘Men in Black’ Reports be Taken Seriously
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/01 The 'Silencers' in England
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/01 The Large Scale Study of UFO Reports
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/01 UFO Documentary
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/02 1966 MUFORG Bulletin 01
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/04 1966 MUFORG Bulletin 02
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/NS01 The Loot of the Lecturer Von Daniken in London. February, 1975
- MUFOB ARCHIVE/NS04 Winged Creatures
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