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October 28th, 1943. Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. A Cannon-class destroyer escort — USS Eldridge, DE-173 — allegedly vanished from its berth and reappeared 200 nautical miles away in Norfolk, Virginia. When the ship returned, the crew was never the same. The Navy says it never happened. But someone at the Office of Naval Research thought the story was important enough to print, bind, and distribute to select personnel. Eighty years later, the question remains — why? This investigation examines the verified history of the USS Eldridge, the real letters of Carlos Miguel Allende, the mysterious death of astronomer Morris K. Jessup, and the classified Varo Edition — a government-funded reproduction of an annotated book that described the experiment in extraordinary detail. We cross-reference Navy deck logs, Merchant Marine service records, Einstein's verified consultancy with the Bureau of Ordnance, and the eventual fate of the ship itself — transferred to Greece, denied to investigators for four decades, and scrapped in 1999. Some testimony in this investigation has been dramatized and is clearly identified. All verified claims are sourced from declassified records, published research, and the National Archives. We are not here to tell you what to believe. We are here to show you what was buried — and ask why. 🧾 Sources Primary Historical Sources National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) — USS Eldridge deck logs, Philadelphia Naval Shipyard records, Navy personnel files Office of Naval Research (ONR) — Official public statements regarding the Philadelphia Experiment Carlos Miguel Allende letters to Morris K. Jessup (January 13, 1956 / May 25, 1956) — reproduced in multiple published works Published Research "The Philadelphia Experiment: Project Invisibility" — William L. Moore and Charles Berlitz (1979) "The Case for the UFO" — Morris K. Jessup, Citadel Press (1955) The Varo Edition — annotated reproduction commissioned by ONR, printed by Varo Manufacturing Company, Garland, Texas (c. 1957) Jacques Vallée — research notes and published references to the Philadelphia Experiment investigation Imagery and Reference Material USS Eldridge (DE-173) official Navy photograph — Wikimedia Commons, public domain Cannon-class destroyer escort technical specifications and diagrams — Wikipedia Degaussing system diagrams and historical photographs — Wikimedia Commons Hedgehog anti-submarine mortar documentation — Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons K-gun depth charge projector documentation — Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons Battle of the Atlantic maps and U-boat positioning data — Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons HS Leon (D-54) Greek Navy service photographs — referenced via public naval archives Philadelphia Naval Shipyard historical and modern aerial imagery — public sources Morris K. Jessup biographical information — Wikipedia Carlos Miguel Allende biographical information and letter reproductions — published research archives SS Andrew Furuseth vessel records — Wikipedia, Merchant Marine archives Stock Footage and Ambient Material Period-accurate naval and industrial footage sourced from Archive.org (public domain) Select imagery generated using AI tools for dramatization purposes and clearly identified as reconstructions ⚠️ Disclaimer: This video is a documentary exploring historical archives, unclassified military reports, and unproven historical theories. The research, script, and visual editing for this documentary were personally crafted by me. To ensure consistent audio quality, this video utilizes digital narration. This approach allows me to focus fully on uncovering rare history and archival footage. Thank you for supporting independent creators! Subscribe to Heroes of the Front for more unsolved history!