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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums65 Years Ago Today; The Hodges meteorite strikes napping woman - only recorded incident of human hit
...by a space rock.
https://tinyurl.com/nqyckh6 (Wikipedia link)
A slice of the meteorite, the National Museum of Natural History, the Smithsonian, DC
The Sylacauga meteorite fell on November 30, 1954, at 12:46 local time (18:46 UT) in Oak Grove, Alabama, near Sylacauga. It is commonly called the Hodges meteorite because a fragment of it struck Ann Elizabeth Fowler Hodges (19201972).
The meteorite was confiscated by the Sylacauga police chief who then turned it over to the United States Air Force.
Importance
The Sylacauga meteorite is the first documented extraterrestrial object to have injured a human being. The grapefruit-sized fragment crashed through the roof of a farm house, bounced off a large wooden console radio, and hit Hodges while she napped on a couch. The 34-year-old woman was badly bruised on one side of her body, but was able to walk. The event received worldwide publicity.
The earliest claim of a person being hit by a meteorite comes from 1677 in a manuscript published at Tortona, Italy, which tells of a Milanese friar who was killed by one, although its veracity is unknown. In 1992 a small meteorite fragment (3 g) hit a young Ugandan boy in Mbale, but it had been slowed down by a tree and did not cause any injury.
Fireball
The meteor made a fireball visible from three states as it streaked through the atmosphere, even though it fell early in the afternoon. There were also indications of an air blast, as witnesses described hearing "explosions or loud booms".
Following events
The meteorite was confiscated by the Sylacauga police chief who then turned it over to the United States Air Force. Both the Hodgeses and their landlord, Bertie Guy, claimed the rock, Guy's claim being that it had fallen on her property. There were offers of up to $5,000 for the meteorite. The Hodgeses and Bertie Guy settled, with the Hodgeses paying $500 for the rock. However, by the time it was returned to the Hodgeses, over a year later, public attention had diminished, and they were unable to then find a buyer.
Ann Hodges was uncomfortable with the public attention and the stress of the dispute over ownership of the meteorite. The Hodgeses donated it to the Alabama Museum of Natural History in 1956.
The day after the fall, local farmer Julius McKinney came upon the second-largest fragment from the same meteorite. An Indianapolis-based lawyer purchased it for the Smithsonian Institution. The McKinney family was able to use the money to purchase a car and a house.
</snip>
A slice of the meteorite, the National Museum of Natural History, the Smithsonian, DC
The Sylacauga meteorite fell on November 30, 1954, at 12:46 local time (18:46 UT) in Oak Grove, Alabama, near Sylacauga. It is commonly called the Hodges meteorite because a fragment of it struck Ann Elizabeth Fowler Hodges (19201972).
The meteorite was confiscated by the Sylacauga police chief who then turned it over to the United States Air Force.
Importance
The Sylacauga meteorite is the first documented extraterrestrial object to have injured a human being. The grapefruit-sized fragment crashed through the roof of a farm house, bounced off a large wooden console radio, and hit Hodges while she napped on a couch. The 34-year-old woman was badly bruised on one side of her body, but was able to walk. The event received worldwide publicity.
The earliest claim of a person being hit by a meteorite comes from 1677 in a manuscript published at Tortona, Italy, which tells of a Milanese friar who was killed by one, although its veracity is unknown. In 1992 a small meteorite fragment (3 g) hit a young Ugandan boy in Mbale, but it had been slowed down by a tree and did not cause any injury.
Fireball
The meteor made a fireball visible from three states as it streaked through the atmosphere, even though it fell early in the afternoon. There were also indications of an air blast, as witnesses described hearing "explosions or loud booms".
Following events
The meteorite was confiscated by the Sylacauga police chief who then turned it over to the United States Air Force. Both the Hodgeses and their landlord, Bertie Guy, claimed the rock, Guy's claim being that it had fallen on her property. There were offers of up to $5,000 for the meteorite. The Hodgeses and Bertie Guy settled, with the Hodgeses paying $500 for the rock. However, by the time it was returned to the Hodgeses, over a year later, public attention had diminished, and they were unable to then find a buyer.
Ann Hodges was uncomfortable with the public attention and the stress of the dispute over ownership of the meteorite. The Hodgeses donated it to the Alabama Museum of Natural History in 1956.
The day after the fall, local farmer Julius McKinney came upon the second-largest fragment from the same meteorite. An Indianapolis-based lawyer purchased it for the Smithsonian Institution. The McKinney family was able to use the money to purchase a car and a house.
</snip>
Never heard of this until this am!
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65 Years Ago Today; The Hodges meteorite strikes napping woman - only recorded incident of human hit (Original Post)
Dennis Donovan
Nov 2019
OP
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)1. Lol, me neither. Was Ms. Hodges extremely lucky or extremely unlucky?
panader0
(25,816 posts)2. A poem by John Donne:
Go and catch a falling star,
Get with child a mandrake root,
Tell me where all past years are,
Or who cleft the devil's foot,
Teach me to hear mermaids singing,
Or to keep off envy's stinging,
And find
What wind
Serves to advance an honest mind.
colsohlibgal
(5,275 posts)3. Saw This Detailed Years Ago
I saw it on one the the Science/History Channels....guess she was both lucky and unlucky.
With all these space objects ping ponging around you might think there would be more incidents like this but none have surfaced.
catbyte
(34,376 posts)4. Yikes! What are the odds?
She's lucky it didn't kill her.
sl8
(13,749 posts)5. Don't nap, people!
Nah, just kidding.
Nap away.
NurseJackie
(42,862 posts)6. It left a mark! (That looks very painful!)
CatWoman
(79,298 posts)10. yikes!!!
look at that bruise!!!
MrModerate
(9,753 posts)7. I guess there's a right way...
And a wrong way to monetize your meteorite.
KatyMan
(4,190 posts)9. Oak Grove, Alabama, near Sylacauga.
Well that sure clears up the location...😀