Strangely familiar:

I think if you get 'hit' by a meteorite, then it is yours, regardless of where 
it falls.

Greg S.

http://www.encyclopediaofalabama.org/face/Article.jsp?id=h-1280


Hodges Meteorite Strike (Sylacauga Aerolite)



On November 30, 1954, a meteorite crashed through the roof of a home in 
Sylacauga, Talladega County, striking resident Ann E. Hodges (1923-1972). She 
was the first person ever to have been injured by a meteorite, and the event 
caused a nationwide media sensation and a year-long legal battle. The 
meteorite, which weighs about eight and one-half pounds, is on permanent 
display at the Alabama Museum of Natural History at the University of Alabama 
in Tuscaloosa.

Hodges was napping on her living-room couch at mid-day when the meteorite came 
through the ceiling, hit a console radio, and smashed into her hip. Awakened by 
the pain and noise, she thought the gas space heater had exploded. When she 
noticed a grapefruit-sized rock lying on the floor and a ragged hole in the 
roof, she assumed children were the culprits. Her mother, Ida Franklin, rushed 
outside and saw only a black cloud in the sky. Alabamians in and around the 
area saw the event from a different perspective, with many reporting that they 
had seen a fireball in the sky and heard a tremendous explosion that produced a 
white or brownish cloud. Most assumed it involved an airplane accident.

A meteorite crashed through the roof of the Hodges Meteorite StrikeSylacauga 
Chief of Police W. D. Ashcraft and Sylacauga mayor Ed Howard responded to the 
call from the Hodges's residence. They had Ann Hodges examined by physician 
Moody Jacobs, who determined that although her hip and hand were swollen and 
painful, there was no serious damage. (He later checked her into the hospital 
for several days to spare her from all the excitement.) Ashcraft and Howard 
showed the rock to geologist George Swindel, who was conducting fieldwork in 
the area. He tentatively identified the object as a meteorite. That evening 
they turned the meteorite over to officers from Maxwell Field, Montgomery, who 
took it to Air Force intelligence authorities for analysis. Air Force 
specialists identified it as a meteorite and sent it to curators at the 
Smithsonian Institution, who, delighted with their windfall, declined to send 
it back to Alabama. Not until Alabama Congressman Kenneth Roberts intervened
  was the meteorite finally returned to the state, where it soon became the 
focus of a highly public legal battle.

By nightfall some 200 reporters and sightseers filled the Hodges's yard, and 
Ann's husband, Hewlett, arriving home late, was upset by the crowd. Television, 
radio and newspaper excitement lasted for weeks, highlighted by a very public 
dispute between the Hodges and Birdie Guy, from whom the Hodges rented their 
home. Facing repair expenses for the damaged house, Guy was advised by her 
attorney that legal precedent had established that meteorites were the property 
of the landowner, and she sued for possession of the rock. The Hodges 
threatened to counter-sue for Ann's injuries, and the outraged public sided 
with her. Before it went to trial, cooler heads prevailed and after a modest 
private settlement, Guy gave up her claim on the meteorite to the Hodges.

Ann Hodges was barraged by publicity and appeared in Life magazine displaying a 
sizable bruise on her hip. She was persuaded to go to New York to appear on 
Gary Moore's TV quiz show I've Got a Secret. Her life story appeared in the 
Sunday magazine supplement of many Rosa Hall of the Alabama Museum of Natural 
Hodges Meteoritenewspapers and in national magazines. Hewlett Hodges believed 
that the couple stood to make a fortune from the incident. He refused what he 
considered an inadequate offer for the meteorite from the Smithsonian 
Institution, claiming he had received other offers as high as $5,500. In the 
end, Ann Hodges, not knowing how to bargain with the media, earned at most only 
a few hundred dollars from the incident that had made her famous. By 1956, the 
bad publicity surrounding the lawsuit ended the monetary offers, and she 
donated the meteorite to the Alabama Museum of Natural History.

Ann Hodges's physical injuries healed, but she was never able to recover 
emotionally from her brush with celebrity. She and Hewlett separated in 1964. 
They both agreed that the emotional impact and disruption caused by the 
meteorite were contributing factors and said they wished it had never happened. 
Ann Hodges's health declined and in 1972, after some years as an invalid, she 
died. She is buried in the cemetery behind Charity Baptist Church in Hazel 
Green in Madison County.

Probably the only major figure in the entire Sylacauga meteorite story to claim 
a satisfactory ending was Julius K. McKinney, a farmer who lived near the 
Hodges. On December 1, 1954, the day after Ann Hodges was struck, he discovered 
a second fragment of the meteorite in the middle of a dirt road. McKinney was 
able to sell his rock to the Smithsonian for enough to purchase a small farm 
and a used car. This fragment is on display at the Smithsonian Institution, but 
the label strangely does not acknowledge its more famous Alabama sibling.

John C. Hall
University of West Alabama


----------------------------------------
> Date: Fri, 29 Jan 2010 20:03:29 -0500
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> CC: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] More on the Lorton... or Lorton hears a Who ?
>
> Do you think the landowners would be so anxious to claim it, had the
> meteorite struck a patient?
> Just thinking,
> Ken
>
> On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 9:30 AM,  wrote:
>>
>> Possession isn't nine-tenths of the law. It's nine-tenths of the problem.
>> John Lennon
>>
>> --
>> Carl or Debbie Esparza
>> Meteoritemax
>>
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