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Okla-homey
11/30/2006, 07:39 AM
Nov 30, 1954: Meteorite strikes Alabama woman

52 years ago, on the morning of this day in 1954, the first modern instance of a meteorite striking a human being occurs at Sylacauga, Alabama, when a meteorite crashes through the roof of a house and into a living room, bounces off a radio, and strikes a woman on the hip.

http://img85.imageshack.us/img85/139/pppppppppppmeteorite172ew8.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Ed Howard, then Sylacauga mayor, Ann Hodges and then Sylacauga Police Chief W.D. Ashcraft pose with a meteorite underneath the point where it crashed through Hodges' house in 1954. Hodges donated the meteorite to UA's Alabama Museum of Natural History in 1956.

The victim, Mrs. Elizabeth Hodges, was sleeping on a couch at the time of impact. The space rock was a sulfide meteorite weighing 8.5 pounds and measuring seven inches in length. Mrs. Hodges was not permanently injured but suffered a nasty bruise along her hip and leg.

http://img208.imageshack.us/img208/4420/ppppppppstarsfell18oct0zu9.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

A USAF team was helicoptered from Maxwell Air Force Base to Sylacauga later that afternoon and went to the Hodges’ home – which, ironically, was located near the Comet Drive-In – to examine the meteorite.

With the threat of atomic bombs and fears associated with Communism serving as a backdrop in the early 1950s, the Air Force was under orders to confiscate any items from space. So, the Air Force took the meteorite to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio. Quickly confirming the meteorite was not part of a spacecraft, the Air Force lost interest in the rock and it was later returned to the Hodges.

However, the Hodges’ landlord sued for possession of the grapefruit-sized rock, but the sides reached an out of court settlement, and the Hodges retained possession.

http://img213.imageshack.us/img213/8049/ppppppppppppppmeteoriteqa9.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
The 7 inch by 5 inch by 5 inch rock, displayed at the University of Alabama's Museum of Natural History underneath a glass case, is covered with a thin black coating from its heated entry. It contains several chips, and a patch of tar from the Hodges’ roof remains visible on one tip.

http://img85.imageshack.us/img85/2035/pppppppp381cu5.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
The only other thing that ever happened in Sylacauga to distinguish it is the fact it is Jim Nabors' hometown. "Gomer Pyle" was born and grew up there. He left to go to the University of Alabama after high school and never went back.

According to meteorite experts, the stone was likely a fragment from a meteorite that probably weighed more than 150 pounds when it entered the atmosphere. Meteorites smaller than 150 pounds generally do not survive passage through the earth’s atmosphere..

The UA Museum directors calls the meteorite the museum’s “most memorable” exhibit. “This is the main thing that people from outside the state come to the Museum to see,” he said.

http://img85.imageshack.us/img85/1985/pppppppalabamastarsik2.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Mrs Hodges' encounter with a meteorite in 1954 was such a big deal, nowadays, the State of Alabama put "The Stars Fell On Alabama" on their state car tags. FWIW, the state's tags used to prominently state "Heart of Dixie" by state law, but the AL state legislature's Black Caucus nixed that a few years ago because they believed it was racist...or something. Now, the plates feature "Heart of Dixie" in tiny letters just to the upper right of the last letter in "Alabama."

Ancient Chinese records tell of people being injured or killed by falling meteorites, but the Sylacauga meteorite was the first modern record of this type of human injury. In 1911, a dog in Egypt was killed by the Nakhla meteorite.

http://img87.imageshack.us/img87/6706/insane7zovj8.jpg

12
11/30/2006, 07:44 AM
What the hell are the odds of a dog in Egypt being killed by a meteorite?

Someone made some money somewhere.

I had no idea that was the origin of the 'Bama saying. Incredible, Col. Homey.

reevie
11/30/2006, 07:46 AM
I suppose if you get killed by a meteorite, then you would know that God really hates you.

Okla-homey
11/30/2006, 07:47 AM
What the hell are the odds of a dog in Egypt being killed by a meteorite?

Someone made some money somewhere.

I had no idea that was the origin of the 'Bama saying. Incredible, Col. Homey.

Technically, methinks it also has something to do with an old jazz song of the same name, but, I must defer to Alabama musicologists for a definitive ruling.

12
11/30/2006, 08:02 AM
Yeah, I would imagine so, Colonel. Jimmy Buffett did a crappy remake version of that, you know.

OU4LIFE
11/30/2006, 08:24 AM
is there anything that Jimmy Buffett hasn't made a crappy remake of?

VeeJay
11/30/2006, 08:55 AM
Gomer went to Bama?

Gah-ah-ah-Lee!

Sooner_Bob
11/30/2006, 09:05 AM
I always wondered where that catchy phrase on their tags came from.

Okla-homey
11/30/2006, 09:42 AM
Gomer went to Bama?

Gah-ah-ah-Lee!

Just think how TV would have been different if Jim Nabors had been fatally beaned by that space rock? He was living in the town when the lady caught the ricochet off'n her radio.

Okla-homey
11/30/2006, 09:47 AM
also, for the record, asteroids and hemorrhoids are misnamed. They should switch the names.

What made me think of that you ask? Simple. Jim Nabors is from the town where the asteroid/meteorite struck. Jim Nabors was Gomer Pyle. Jim Nabors is alleged by some to be homosexual. "Pyle" and "Piles" are close to being homonyms. "Piles" is an old, out of use term for hemorrhoids. How's that for some "degrees of separation?"

BtW, DON'T EVAR GIS "hemorrhoids":eek:

TUSooner
11/30/2006, 10:02 AM
Technically, methinks it also has something to do with an old jazz song of the same name, but, I must defer to Alabama musicologists for a definitive ruling.


Professor Homey, if I may, sir:

The original stars falling on Bama occurred in November of 1833 when truly gimongulous meteor shower, especially visible in Alabama & other parts of Dixie, had lots of folks thinking Jesus was arriving on the next cloud. This was a very memorable event, as folks long afterward referred to events as happening before or after the stars fell. 100 years later, in 1934, Frank Perkins and Mitchell Parish sort-of revived the concept with the love song "Stars Fell on Alabama," since covered by the aforementioned Mr. J. Buffet. So the "Stars Fell" thingy is 20 or 120 years older than the space rock.
YWIA ;)

Okla-homey
11/30/2006, 10:11 AM
Professor Homey, if I may, sir:

The original stars falling on Bama occurred in November of 1833 when truly gimongulous meteor shower, especially visible in Alabama & other parts of Dixie, had lots of folks thinking Jesus was arriving on the next cloud. This was a very memorable event, as folks long afterward referred to events as happening before or after the stars fell. 100 years later, in 1934, Frank Perkins and Mitchell Parish sort-of revived the concept with the love song "Stars Fell on Alabama," since covered by the aforementioned Mr. J. Buffet. So the "Stars Fell" thingy is 20 or 120 years older than the space rock.
YWIA ;)

Yeah, but did anybody get whacked on the hip in 1833? Does the University of Alabama Museum of Natural History display any of those rocks next to the Bear's houndstooth hat? I din't think so.;)

TUSooner
11/30/2006, 10:20 AM
Yeah, but did anybody get whacked on the hip in 1833? Does the University of Alabama Museum of Natural History display any of those rocks next to the Bear's houndstooth hat? I din't think so.;)

I only provide the facts.

However, I do regret IMT overlooking the space rock deal, with no disrespect to St Andrew. :)

Okla-homey
11/30/2006, 11:03 AM
I've always been fond of St Andrew. Being Scots-German (just like HRH Queen Elizabeth II,) he's one of my patrons.

BTW,

I'm sure you know this, but the Union Jack contains the Cross of St. George (England,) St Patrick (Ireland of course) and good old St. Andrew (Scotland).

http://img224.imageshack.us/img224/6342/ppppppunionjackcf9.gif (http://imageshack.us)
The red horizontal cross is for George. The White diagonal cross is Andrew's and the Red diagonal cross is Patrick's. Here's the cool part. When they designed that flag, they were careful to place the Irish and Scots crosses in such a way that neither appear to be completely superior to the other. Check it out. On the halyard side, the red Patrick cross is superior, on the fly side, the red Patrick cross is inferior, thus switching the order.

Soooo, politics involved in flag design. Cool, huh?

P.S. Wales got left off entirely.

TUSooner
11/30/2006, 11:57 AM
http://img224.imageshack.us/img224/6342/ppppppunionjackcf9.gif (http://imageshack.us)

Is the halyard side to the left as we look at this?

Okla-homey
11/30/2006, 12:05 PM
http://img224.imageshack.us/img224/6342/ppppppunionjackcf9.gif (http://imageshack.us)

Is the halyard side to the left as we look at this?

yes. I messed up. Its reversed from what I wrote above.

tbl
11/30/2006, 12:13 PM
I love these threads...

SoonerInKCMO
11/30/2006, 12:14 PM
Getting hit by a meteorite isn't nearly as cool as getting nailed by a space station's toilet seat.

http://www.cinemorgue.com/ellenmuth1.jpg
http://www.cinemorgue.com/ellenmuth2.jpg

TUSooner
11/30/2006, 03:19 PM
Getting hit by a meteorite isn't nearly as cool as getting nailed by a space station's toilet seat.


Or how about a chunk of frozen pee-pee from a passing 747?

TUSooner
11/30/2006, 03:47 PM
yes. I messed up. Its reversed from what I wrote above.
groovy. now I get it. vedddddy eenteresting! :)