Aetherius House in the 1950s and 60s (exterior)
The Aetherius Society moved into what became known as Aetherius House on July 7th, 1958.
These are two photographs of the exterior of Aetherius House. An outline of a flying saucer can be seen near the top of the window, in the center. This flying saucer used to be illuminated with a neon type of light, making it very visible during the night.
One staff team member remembers that when she was a child, her mum, dad and brother would drive up from their home in South London to Mill Hill, North London, to see her grandmother. This was in the late 1950s and early 1960s. The journey took them along the Fulham Road past Aetherius House – The Aetherius Society headquarters. The family would drive home late at night, and she recalls how much she looked forward to seeing the illuminated flying saucer model in the window of Aetherius House.
She didn’t know anything about this building at the time but, later on, heard about the Society at the age of 14 and first attended a lecture there when she was 16. She became a member and then a staff member in her early 20s and is still active in the Society today over forty years later.
Aetherius House in the 1950s and 60s (exterior)
The Aetherius Society moved into what became known as Aetherius House on July 7th, 1958.
These are two photographs of the exterior of Aetherius House. An outline of a flying saucer can be seen near the top of the window, in the center. This flying saucer used to be illuminated with a neon type of light, making it very visible during the night.
One staff team member remembers that when she was a child, her mum, dad and brother would drive up from their home in South London to Mill Hill, North London, to see her grandmother. This was in the late 1950s and early 1960s. The journey took them along the Fulham Road past Aetherius House – The Aetherius Society headquarters. The family would drive home late at night, and she recalls how much she looked forward to seeing the illuminated flying saucer model in the window of Aetherius House.
She didn’t know anything about this building at the time but, later on, heard about the Society at the age of 14 and first attended a lecture there when she was 16. She became a member and then a staff member in her early 20s and is still active in the Society today over forty years later.