Did a lightning strike change the course of Mary Anning’s life?

Girl from poor family who became famed fossil collector had near-death experience aged 15 months

Mary Anning became world-famous for her fossil discoveries but her life was hard. She came from a poor background, and life grew even worse when her father died when she was young.

On 19 August 1800, aged 15 months, she narrowly escaped death. She was taken to see an outdoor equestrian event by a family friend, Elizabeth Haskings, and two other women. The afternoon grew very sultry before “there was an awful peal of thunder” and Mary’s group ran for shelter under a tree before lightning struck and the three women were killed. Mary also appeared dead but she was rushed home, given a warm bath and miraculously revived. Her biographer, George Roberts, wrote: “Mary Anning was born a dull child but after the accident grew up lively and intelligent.”

On very rare occasions lightning has led to other life-changing miracles. The neurologist Oliver Sacks in his book Musicophilia described how a surgeon, Tony Cicoria, was almost killed by lightning in 1994. He recovered and became obsessed with music: he heard it in his head, learned to play the piano and composed his own music.

Contributor

Jeremy Plester

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Weatherwatch: the superbolt lightning season is approaching
Recent research shows that superbolt lightning breaks the patterns associated with conventional lightning

Kate Ravilious

20, Sep, 2019 @8:30 PM

Article image
World weatherwatch: deadly lightning strikes hit Poland
South-east Asia battles Typhoon Bailu and Alaska turns into a tinderbox as wildfires rage

Nicholas Lee (MetDesk)

28, Aug, 2019 @8:30 PM

Article image
New sensors record 440-mile lightning megaflash
Satellite observation systems show longest-lasting flash went on for more than 16 seconds

David Hambling

10, Aug, 2020 @8:30 PM

Article image
Weatherwatch: a new way to protect planes from lightning?
Lightning strikes on aircraft rarely cause damage, but can cause costly delays. A new study shows that an electrical charge on the fuselage can repel lightning

Kate Ravilious

14, Feb, 2020 @9:30 PM

Article image
Lightning-sparked forest fires set to increase in North America
Weather conditions play huge role in which strikes start blazes in boreal forests of Canada and Alaska, research suggests

Kate Ravilious

14, Apr, 2022 @5:00 AM

Article image
Weatherwatch: the slow death of tall trees by lightning strikes
Ecologists monitoring damage to older trees, vital to the rainforest ecosystem

David Hambling

21, Sep, 2021 @5:00 AM

Article image
Weatherwatch: cyclones strike in unexpected places
Warming seas may be a factor in why some regions are experiencing tropical cyclones for the first time

Jeremy Plester

08, May, 2019 @8:30 PM

Article image
Weatherwatch: storms and violent tornadoes strike US
Texas and Missouri among states devastated, while extreme weather also hit Dubai and the Philippines

Jodie Wooltorton (MetDesk)

15, Jan, 2020 @9:30 PM

Article image
Weatherwatch: how a deadly storm in 1360 changed the course of English history
On Easter Monday centuries ago, an intense hailstorm killed 1,000 troops and scuppered King Edward III’s French dream

David Hambling

17, Apr, 2020 @8:30 PM

Article image
Weatherwatch: why do some still think climate change isn’t real?
Despite the scientific evidence, psychologists remain puzzled why denial of global warming still exists

Paul Brown

02, Dec, 2021 @6:00 AM