Unbelievable
Facts - Strange Facts - Coincidence
What a Coincidence
Writer Mark Twain was born in 1835, the year of Halley’s
comet. Twain remarked that as he had come into the world
with the comet, so he would pass from the world with
it. Halley’s comet returned in 1910, and, sure
enough, Twain died that year.
During the Second World War the British Museum in London
was twice hit by German bomb, the second passing through
the hole made by the first. Neither bomb exploded.
Buzz Aldrin’s mother’s maiden name was
Moon. Aldrin was the second man on the Moon.
In 1898, retired Merchant Navy Offices Morgan Robertson
wrote a novel, The Wreck of the Titan, which uncannily
predicted the Titanic disaster 14 years later. Apart
from the similarity in the names of the two ships, Robertson’s
Titan was also huge, supposedly unsinkable British liner
making its maiden voyage from Southampton to New York
with 3000 passengers on board. It too struck an iceberg
in the North Atlantic and sank with many people losing
their lives because of the shortage of lifeboats.
In April 1935, a ship named the Titanian, carrying
coal from Newcastle to Canada, almost suffered the same
fate as the Titanic when encountering an iceberg on
the same area of the North Atlantic. Luckily, crewman
William Reeves had a premonition of impending disaster
and yelled “Danger ahead!” to the navigator
shortly before the iceberg beamed visible in the darkness.
Reeves was born on 15 April 1912 – the day the
Titanic sank.
Duane Allman of The Allman Brothers rock band was killed
in a motorbike accident in Macon, Georgia, in 1971.
A year later, fellow Allman Brother’s member Berry
Oakley was killed in another motorbike crash just three
blocks away.
In 1799 and American privateer, the Nancy, was seized
by a British warship in the Caribbean. Prior to capture,
the Nancy’s skipper, Thomas Briggs, managed to
throw the hip’s American paper overboard and replace
them with Dutch forgeries. Charged in Jamaica with running
a British blockade during wartime, Briggs looked set
to go free for lack of evidence, But in the course of
the trial another British warship, HMS Ferret, arrived
in port and produced the incriminating papers. The ferret,
had caught a large shark off Haiti and inside the shark’s
stomach were the papers.
For three successive seasons between 1956 and 1958,
Leeds United were drawn at home to Cardiff City in the
third round of the FA Cup. Each time, Cardiff won 2-1.
Four of the first six US Presidents – George
Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and John
Quincy Adams - were 57 when they were inaugurated.
In 1975 a Bedfordshire family were stunned when a huge
chunk of ice dropped out of the sky and crashed through
the roof of their house. At the time they were watching
a film on TV about the Titanic.
On 23 May 1939, the recently built American submarine
Squalus sank off the eastern seaboard. A sister ship,
the Sculpin succeeded in rescuing half of the 56-man
crew. The Squalus was subsequently salvaged and renamed
the Sailfish. In 1943, the Sculpin was sunk by the Japanese
who took 42 men prisoner, placing half of them on board
the aircraft carrier Cuyo. Approaching Japan, the Cuyo
was torpedoed by the Sailfish and everyone on board
was killed. So the crew of the Sailfish had killed half
of the survivors of the submarine that had come to their
rescue four years previously
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