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Did You Know? 15 Strange Coincidences in History
Throughout the annals of human history, certain events have aligned in ways that defy probability and stretch the limits of believability. These strange coincidences remind us that reality can sometimes be stranger than fiction. From uncanny connections between historical figures to bizarre synchronicities that shaped world events, these fifteen remarkable coincidences demonstrate the mysterious patterns that occasionally emerge from the chaos of human existence.
Fifteen Remarkable Historical Coincidences
1. The Lincoln-Kennedy Parallels
Perhaps the most famous set of historical coincidences involves Presidents Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy. Lincoln was elected to Congress in 1846, while Kennedy was elected in 1946—exactly one hundred years later. Lincoln became president in 1860; Kennedy in 1960. Both were assassinated on a Friday, in the presence of their wives, and both were shot in the head from behind. Their successors were both named Johnson—Andrew Johnson born in 1808 and Lyndon B. Johnson born in 1908. While some of these parallels may be cherry-picked from numerous data points, the sheer number of similarities remains striking.
2. The Hoover Dam Deaths
The first man to die during the construction of the Hoover Dam was J.G. Tierney, who drowned on December 20, 1922, while surveying the Colorado River. The final man to die during construction was Patrick Tierney, J.G. Tierney's son, who fell from an intake tower—exactly thirteen years later to the day, on December 20, 1935.
3. Edgar Allan Poe's Prophetic Novel
In 1838, Edgar Allan Poe wrote "The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket," a novel featuring four shipwreck survivors who kill and eat a cabin boy named Richard Parker. Forty-six years later, in 1884, a real yacht called the Mignonette sank. Four survivors were stranded in a lifeboat, and they eventually killed and consumed the cabin boy to survive. His name was Richard Parker.
4. Mark Twain and Halley's Comet
Author Mark Twain was born on November 30, 1835, just two weeks after Halley's Comet made its closest approach to Earth. In 1909, Twain predicted he would "go out with it" when the comet returned. True to his prediction, Twain died on April 21, 1910, one day after the comet's perihelion, the point of its closest approach to the sun during its 1910 return.
5. The Titanic's Fictional Predecessor
In 1898, fourteen years before the Titanic sank, author Morgan Robertson wrote a novella called "Futility" about an unsinkable ship called the Titan. Like the Titanic, the Titan was described as the largest ship afloat, was deemed unsinkable, lacked sufficient lifeboats, and struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic in April, resulting in massive loss of life. The similarities in ship specifications, route, and disaster details are remarkably precise.
6. The Falling Baby and Joseph Figlock
In Detroit during the 1930s, a man named Joseph Figlock was walking down the street when a baby fell from a fourth-story window and landed on him. Both survived with minor injuries. Incredibly, one year later, the exact same baby fell from the same window and landed on Figlock again as he passed by. Once more, both escaped serious harm.
7. The Tamerlane Curse
When Soviet archaeologist Mikhail Gerasimov opened the tomb of the Mongol conqueror Tamerlane on June 19, 1941, he found an inscription warning that whoever disturbed the grave would unleash an invader more terrible than Tamerlane himself. Three days later, on June 22, 1941, Nazi Germany launched Operation Barbarossa, invading the Soviet Union in what became the largest military invasion in history.
8. The Twin Brothers' Identical Deaths
In 2002, twin brothers in Finland died on the same day, within two hours of each other, in separate accidents involving being struck by trucks while riding bicycles. The incidents occurred on the same road, about 1.5 kilometers apart. Neither brother knew of the other's accident.
9. Anthony Hopkins and the Lost Book
When actor Anthony Hopkins was cast in "The Girl from Petrovka," he searched London bookstores for a copy of the novel by George Feifer but couldn't find one. Later, while waiting for a train, he discovered a copy someone had left on a bench. When he met author George Feifer, Feifer mentioned that he didn't have a copy of his own book because he had lent his last one to a friend who had lost it in London. It was the same copy Hopkins had found.
10. The Bermuda Triangle Rescue
In 1664, a ship disappeared in the area now known as the Bermuda Triangle. The only survivor was Hugh Williams. In 1785, another ship sank in the same region, with the sole survivor also named Hugh Williams. In 1860, yet another shipwreck occurred there, and once again, the only survivor was named Hugh Williams. In 1940, the pattern repeated with another sole survivor named Hugh Williams.
11. The Bullet That Waited
In 1883, Henry Ziegland broke off a relationship with his girlfriend, who became so distraught that she took her own life. Her brother, seeking revenge, shot at Ziegland but only grazed his face before the bullet lodged in a tree. Years later, Ziegland decided to cut down that tree and used dynamite to do so. The explosion propelled the old bullet from the tree, striking Ziegland in the head and killing him.
12. The Royal Umberto I Coincidence
In 1900, King Umberto I of Italy dined at a restaurant in Monza and discovered that the owner looked exactly like him, was also named Umberto, was born on the same day in the same town, married a woman with the same name as the queen, and opened his restaurant on the day Umberto was crowned king. The next day, the king learned the restaurant owner had died in a mysterious shooting. Later that day, the king himself was assassinated.
13. The Three Strangers on a Train
In 1920, three men boarded a train in Peru, each entering different compartments. They were the only passengers. At the first stop, they discovered they were all named George D. Bryson, all from different parts of the United States, traveling alone, and had never met before. The extraordinary coincidence drew newspaper coverage across America.
14. James Dean's Cursed Car
After James Dean died in his Porsche 550 Spyder in 1955, the wreckage was sold for parts. George Barris, who bought the shell, was injured when it fell on him. Two doctors who installed parts from Dean's car in their own vehicles were both killed in separate accidents. The car's tires were sold to a man who experienced simultaneous blowouts. The garage where the car was stored burned down, though the Porsche survived largely undamaged.
15. The Triple Execution Witness
In the 1900s, a man named George Elliot witnessed three separate, unrelated execution events during his lifetime. The condemned individuals in all three cases were men named Thomas Williams, executed in different years, in different cities, for different crimes. Elliot, who worked in various legal capacities, happened to be present at all three executions purely by chance.
Conclusion
These fifteen strange coincidences in history challenge our understanding of probability and randomness. While skeptics might argue that with billions of events occurring throughout history, some unusual alignments are statistically inevitable, these particular coincidences capture our imagination precisely because they seem to suggest patterns or meanings beyond mere chance. Whether we interpret them as remarkable flukes, mysterious signs, or simply the fascinating quirks of an unpredictable universe, these historical oddities remind us that truth can indeed be stranger than fiction. They serve as intriguing footnotes to the grand narrative of human history, moments where the ordinary rules of probability appeared to take a holiday, leaving us with stories that continue to puzzle and fascinate generations later.



