It has happened only once in the history of the world. A meteor hit a person, a woman asleep in her home in the Oak Grove community, just outside of Sylacauga.
November 30 will be the 70th anniversary of Sylacauga's Ann Hodges' unique experience that she lived to tell about. Amazingly, she was not seriously injured.
A real-life history lesson on the meteoric event will be presented on Saturday at Sylacauga’s Comer Museum and Arts Center from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. (It will be over in time for folks to get home and watch the Iron Bowl at 2:30 p.m.)
The principal speaker for the meteor seminar will be famed astronomer Dr. Lawrence Krumenaker.
The Facebook post about the seminar reads as follows:
Dr. Krumenaker started professional life as an astronomer after growing up steeped in New Jersey’s Revolutionary War historical sites. The two influences eventually merged into a career that included scientific research and popular science, education and historical journalism. His articles and books in historical tourism are based on the idea that history is best understood both by telling the story part of history, and doing that by standing where it happened. It is done best seeing what’s left of the past and the difference between then and today, and traveling along with the event.
As an astronomer, Dr. Krumenaker is best known in the science community as the discoverer of the first microquasar in the galaxy, as a stellar spectroscopist and a planetary cartographer of the planet Mercury. He has been a science journalist and President of the International Science Writers Association. In addition to doing talks on historical events, Dr. Krumenaker has often done workshops and courses in astronomy education for teachers, and writes astronomy-based newsletters on Substack, notably the internationally-read The Galactic Times.
Among his books is “From River to River” (2024) on General Lafayette in Georgia and “Nine Days Traveling” (Lafayette in Alabama, 2020), “The Colonia Tour Book” (Roman sites in Cologne, Germany, 2017), and “Walking the Line” (The Atlanta Civil War defenses that kept Sherman out, 2014). Copies of these books and other creations of Dr. Krumenaker will be available for sale at Comer Museum. He has a Star Trek astronomy book, “Federation Space,” due out next year.
After over two dozen address changes, in multiple Northern and Southern States, and residencies and travel in numerous countries in Asia and Europe, the peripatetic Dr. Krumenaker currently resides in Alabama.
Please join us on November 30 from 10-2
The Comer Museum also maintains an updated exhibit about the Hodges meteor.
Ann Hodges had been asleep under blankets on the couch in her living room. A meteor plunged through the roof of her house, hit her upright console radio, bounced and then hit Ann Hodges in her lower left side. It was a rude awakening.
Naturally, Hodges and her mother, who was also home at the time, did not know what had happened and did not know what the object was. It was sitting on their living room floor close to where it had struck Ann. The air in the room was suddenly full of dust.
The two women called the local police and fire department. Ann was transported to Sylacauga Hospital (now Coosa Valley Medical Center). Word spread through the community that something strange had happened at the Hodges' residence, and crowds gathered.
Rumors abounded. Maybe the object had fallen off an airplane. Maybe a plane had crashed. Maybe the Russians, who were in a Cold War with the United States, had shot off something. Or maybe it was a "shooting star," the common name for a meteor. That last guess turned out to be correct.
After inquiring and legal wrangling with landlord Birdie Guy about who owned the meteor, it ended up at the Alabama Museum of Natural History.
The meteorite that struck the 34-year-old woman weighed 8.5 pounds.
Ann Hodges became a temporary celebrity when she appeared on the highly rated TV quiz show "I've Got a Secret" with Gary Moore. Celebrity contestant Bill Cullen guessed it immediately, as the meteor story had national coverage.
Her photo, exposed bruise and all, appeared in "Life Magazine."
Another piece, believed to be from the same meteor, landed a couple of miles away. As Julius McKinney of Sylacauga was driving his mules home, they balked. They would go no further. He then saw a black object in the trail. He went around it, got the mules home, and came back to get the object. He had the sense to retain a lawyer, and they ended up selling it to the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. He received enough money to buy a house and a car.
If this tale weren't strange enough already, there is yet another ironic chapter. There was a locally popular drive-in movie theater across the street from the Hodge's home where the meteor struck. It was named "The Comet." Its logo, on an upright tower, showed a meteor with trailing flame. The Comet Drive-In Theater.
Many people think the Comet Drive-In was named for the meteor incident across the street. No. The drive-in had already been named for several years when the meteor struck. What are the odds?
You may have noticed that this story uses the terms "meteor" and "meteorite." As the object was in the solar system (outside the Earth's atmosphere), it was a meteoroid, a small asteroid. When it entered the Earth's atmosphere, it was called a meteor.
When it made it to Earth, it was called a meteorite.
As she slept, Ann Hodges, her mother, who was there, and her husband, who was not home and missed the whole thing, were completely unaware of all of this. They received a weeks-long course in meteor science that they were not expecting and did not want.
They thought they were learning “meteorology.” That is the incorrect term and means the science of the weather. We are familiar with weathermen on TV and radio — meteorologists. Has nothing to do with meteors and meteorites. The little-known name for the science of meteors and meteorites is “meteoritics.” Bet you did not know that.
The Hodges/Sylacauga meteorite and the conditions in the skies at the time it hit have been studied by scientists for decades. The case is cited in astronomy classes.
When you have a chance to visit the University of Alabama, go by Smith Hall, just off the Quadrangle. It houses the Alabama Museum of Natural History. Ask for the exhibit of the Sylacauga Meteorite. You will see a once-in-all-of-history display.
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