Showing posts with label death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts

Friday, July 5, 2024

Ten Wise Quotes to Ponder This Day

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"As a well-spent day brings happy sleep, so a life well spent brings happy death." ~Leonardo da Vinci

“I have discovered that all human evil comes from this, man’s being unable to sit still and quiet in a room alone.” — Blaise Pascal

"Enjoy the spring of love and youth, To some good angel leave the rest; For time will teach thee soon the truth, There are no birds in last year's nest." ~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

“The years between 50 and 70 are the hardest...Because you are always being asked to do things, and yet you are not decrepit enough to turn them down.” ~T.S. Eliot

"Millions long for immortality who don't know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon." ~Susan Ertz

“The greatest thing in life is to die young – but delay it as long as possible." ~George Bernard Shaw

"Judge a man by his questions rather than his answers." Voltaire

"Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once." Shakespeare

"To do just the opposite is also a form of imitation." ~Georg Christoph Lichtenberg 

"If I knew I was going to live this long, I'd have taken better care of myself." ~Mickey Mantle

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Thursday, December 21, 2023

Death by Wedgie on This Day in History

 

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This day in history: 58-year old Denver Lee St. Clair was asphyxiated by an "atomic wedgie" administered by his stepson during a fight on this day in 2013. After he had been knocked unconscious, the elastic band from his torn underwear was pulled over his head and stretched around his neck, strangling him. The stepson was sentenced to 30 years in prison.

"Wedgies have been known to cause serious harm to victims, especially boys. In 2004, a 10-year-old boy underwent surgery to reattach a testicle to his scrotum after receiving a wedgie (a maneuver the pranksters said they learned from The Simpsons)." Source

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Tuesday, December 5, 2023

Sucked into an Aircraft's Jet Engine on This Day in History

 

This day in history: On this day in 2015, Ravi Subramanian, an Air India technician was sucked into an aircraft's jet engine and killed instantly.

No one has survived being sucked into a jet engine. There have been 33 reported cases of people being sucked into the engine of a 737-100/-200 airplane since 1969. 

The risk of being sucked into an aircraft engine increases when the aircraft has lower ground clearance. This is because the turbofan creates an area of low pressure, which rapidly pulls in air close to the engine's intake. 

If someone is sucked into an aircraft engine, they would be disintegrated into small red particles in seconds. 


Friday, November 3, 2023

Killed by a Tape Measure on This Day in History

 

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This day in history: Gary Anderson was killed by a tape measure on this day in 2014. Anderson, 58, of New Jersey was delivering drywall to a construction site and leaned his head into the car of a co-worker while having a conversation. As he pulled his head out, a worker accidentally dropped a 1-pound (0.45 kg) tape measure which plummeted 50 stories, or approximately 500 feet (150 m), when it ricocheted off a piece of metal 10 feet (3.0 m) off the ground and smashed into Anderson's head. He was rushed to Jersey City Medical Center where he suffered cardiac arrest and was pronounced dead at 9:52 a.m. Hard hats were mandatory at the site, and it is unclear why Anderson was not wearing one when he was killed.




Thursday, November 2, 2023

Thomas Midgley's Strange Death on This Day in History

This day in history: American mechanical and chemical engineer Thomas Midgley Jr., died on this day in 1944. In 1940, at the age of 51, Midgley contracted polio, which left him severely disabled. He devised an elaborate system of ropes and pulleys to lift himself out of bed. In 1944, he became entangled in the device and died of strangulation.

Alexander Bogdanov also died during a medical experiment. Bogdanov (1873–1928) was a Russian polymath, Bolshevik revolutionary and pioneer haemotologist who founded the first Institute of Blood Transfusion in 1926. He died from acute hemolytic transfusion reaction after carrying out an experimental mutual blood transfusion between himself and a 21-year-old student with an inactive case of tuberculosis. Bogdanov's hypotheses were that the younger man's blood would rejuvenate his own aging body, and that his own blood, which he believed was resistant to tuberculosis, would treat the student's disease.

Saturday, October 21, 2023

Dying from Laughter on This Day in History

 

This day in history: On this day in 1556, the influential Italian author and libertine Pietro Aretino is said to have died of suffocation from laughing too much at an obscene joke during a meal in Venice. Another version states that he fell from a chair from too much laughter, fracturing his skull.

Death from laughter is an extremely rare form of death, usually resulting from either cardiac arrest or asphyxiation. Though uncommon, death by laughter has been recorded from the times of ancient Greece to modern times.

Laughter is normally harmless. However, death may result from several pathologies that deviate from benign laughter. Infarction of the pons and the medulla oblongata in the brain may cause the pseudobulbar affect. Asphyxiation caused by laughter leads the body to shut down from the lack of oxygen.

Laughter can cause atonia and collapse ("agelastic syncope"), which in turn can cause trauma. See also laughter-induced syncope, cataplexy, and Bezold–Jarisch reflex. Gelastic seizures can be due to focal lesions to the hypothalamus. Depending upon the size of the lesion, the emotional lability may be a sign of an acute condition, and not itself the cause of the fatality. Gelastic syncope has also been associated with the cerebellum.

Zeuxis, a 5th-century BC Greek painter, is said to have died laughing at the humorous way in which he painted the goddess Aphrodite – after the old woman who commissioned it insisted on modelling for the portrait.

Chrysippus, also known as "the man who died from laughing at his joke", is a 3rd-century BC Greek Stoic philosopher who died of laughter after he saw a donkey eating his fermented figs; he told a slave to give the donkey undiluted wine to wash them down, and then, "having laughed too much, he died" 

In 1410, King Martin of Aragon died from a combination of indigestion and uncontrollable laughter triggered by a joke told by his favourite court jester.

In 1556, Pietro Aretino "is said to have died of suffocation from laughing too much".

In 1660, Thomas Urquhart, the Scottish aristocrat, polymath, and first translator of François Rabelais' writings into English, is said to have died laughing upon hearing that Charles II had taken the throne.

On October 14, 1920, 56-year-old Arthur Cobcroft, a dog trainer from Loftus Street, Leichhardt, Australia, was reading a five-year-old newspaper and was amused at the prices for some commodities in 1915 as compared to 1920. He made a remark to his wife regarding this and burst into laughter, and in the midst of it, he collapsed and died. A doctor surnamed Nixon was called in, and stated that the death was due to heart failure, brought by excessive laughter.

During the night of October 30, 1965 in Manila, Philippines, a 24-year-old carpenter who was well-known for making his companions laugh was telling jokes to his friends. The joke, which the carpenter's friends told to the police, was so funny that it caused the carpenter to fall in a uncontrollable fit of laughter, from which he then fainted, was brought to the hospital, but died before he could be given medical help. The book The Big Book of Boy Stuff by author Bart King recounts the incident in anecdotal form, where the carpenter was instead told the joke by his friends rather than himself, and "laughed until he cried, collapsed, and then died."

On March 24, 1975, Alex Mitchell, from King's Lynn, England, died laughing while watching the "Kung Fu Kapers" episode of The Goodies, featuring a kilt-clad Scotsman with his bagpipes battling a master of the Lancastrian martial art "Eckythump", who was armed with a black pudding. After 25 minutes of continuous laughter, Mitchell then slumped on the sofa and died from heart failure. His widow later sent The Goodies a letter thanking them for making Mitchell's final moments of life so pleasant.Diagnosis of his granddaughter in 2012 of having the inheritable long QT syndrome (a heart rhythm abnormality) suggests that Mitchell may have died of a cardiac arrest caused by the same condition.

In 1989, during the initial run of the film A Fish Called Wanda, a 56-year-old Danish audiologist named Ole Bentzen reportedly laughed himself to death.

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Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Death by Meteorite on This Day in History

 

This day in history: At around 8:30 pm on this day in 1888, a shower of meteorites fell "like rain" on a village in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq (then part of the Ottoman Empire). One man died and another was paralyzed. The man's death is considered the only credible case of death-by-meteorite.

"However, if ancient scholars can be trusted, humans haven’t always been so lucky. Researchers mining ancient texts in recent decades have discovered that historical records are surprisingly rich with accounts of apparent deaths due to falling space rocks. In most cases, there’s no physical evidence to confirm these stories. Yet their presence in official histories and similarities to modern accounts lead some scientists to believe at least some of the events must have really occurred.

Chinese histories in particular are rich with accounts from government scholars and astronomers that document times when “a star fell.” These records were kept consistently across many provinces and passed from dynasty to dynasty, chronicling significant events spanning thousands of years. If these documents accurately portray meteor fireballs, then somewhere between hundreds to tens of thousands of people have been killed by falling space rocks." Read more here.

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Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Decapitated by an Elevator on This Day in History

This day in history: On this day in 2003, Hitoshi Nikaidoh, a doctor in Houston, Texas, was killed after his head was trapped in elevator doors at the hospital where he worked. He was partially decapitated as the elevator ascended, and he also sustained injuries to his ribs and spine.

"An estimated 50 people die from elevator-related accidents annually in the United States. These fatalities can include falls due to malfunctioning doors or cages to entrapment between two floors caused by failure of the car’s emergency brake system." Source

There are approximately 10,000 elevator injuries every year in the USA. 


Sunday, August 13, 2023

Death by Wool on This Day in History

This Day in History: On this day in 1987, Paul G. Thomas, 47, co-owner of a wool mill in Thompson, Connecticut, fell into a machine winding yarn between spools, was wrapped in approximately 800 yards of yarn and suffocated.

Something similar happened more recently in Australia. On January 2022, a shearing shed worker died after becoming caught in a wool press. The man was reportedly placing wool into a wool press when he was caught in the machinery and killed. Read more here.

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Sunday, July 9, 2023

A Bizarre Golf Death on This Day in History

 

This day in history: 16 year-old Jeremy Brenno was playing golf when he hit a bench out of frustration with his club. This caused the club shaft to break, bounce back, and pierce his heart, killing him.

Golf deaths are rare but not uncommon. A six-year-old girl died on golf course in Utah in 2019 after being hit in the head by her dad’s golf ball.

It is lightning however that kills most golfers. Between 2006 to 2016 nine golfers died from lightning strikes.


Sunday, July 2, 2023

Ernest Hemingway's Suicide on This Day in History

 

This day in history: Ernest Hemingway committed suicide on this day in 1961.

As posted on Social Media: Early in the morning of 1961, while his wife Maria was still asleep in the upstairs bedroom, Ernest Hemingway walked into the lobby of his Idaho home, selected his favorite shotgun from the hunting rifle rack and committed suicide.

While he was still alive, he complained constantly to friends and family about being followed by agents of the FBI. He was repeatedly sent to psychiatric clinics, from where he also called and complained about bugs and wiretaps. As treatment, Hemingway was prescribed electroshock, which at the time was used to treat all mental disorders.

Decades later, the FBI confessed that it had been following him since the 1940s. The regime was suspicious of his activities on the Caribbean, so agents hid bugs in the writer's house, car and hospital room, tapped his phone conversations, opened his mail and checked his bank accounts.


Saturday, July 1, 2023

The Death of Allan Pinkerton on This Day in History

 


This day in history: Allan Pinkerton, the founder of the Pinkerton Detective Agency, died on this day in 1884 after he tripped on the pavement and severely bit his tongue, which became infected with gangrene.

Gangrene is a type of tissue death caused by a lack of blood supply. Symptoms may include a change in skin color to red or black, numbness, swelling, pain, skin breakdown, and coolness. The feet and hands are most commonly affected. If the gangrene is caused by an infectious agent, it may present with a fever or sepsis.

Friday, June 30, 2023

A Jousting Death on This Day in History

 

This day in history: King Henry II of France was injured while jousting on this day in 1559, which eventually led to his death.

On 30 June 1559, a tournament was held near Place des Vosges to celebrate the Peace of Cateau-Cambrésis with his longtime enemies, the Habsburgs of Austria, and to celebrate the marriage of his daughter Elisabeth of Valois to King Philip II of Spain. During a jousting match, King Henry, wearing the colors of his mistress Diane de Poitiers, was wounded in the eye by a fragment of the splintered lance of Gabriel Montgomery, captain of the King's Scottish Guard. Despite the efforts of royal surgeons Ambroise Paré and Andreas Vesalius, the court doctors ultimately "advocated a wait-and-see strategy"; as a result, the king's untreated eye and brain damage led to his death by sepsis on 10 July 1559. 

Henry's death played a significant role in the decline of jousting as a sport, particularly in France.

In the early 17th century, the joust was replaced as the equine highlight of court festivities by large "horse-ballet" displays called carousels, although non-combat competitions such as the ring-tilt lasted until the 18th century. Ring tournaments were introduced into North America, and jousting continues as the state sport of Maryland.




Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Killed by a Fire Hydrant on This Day in History


This Day in History: Humberto Hernandez, a 24-year-old Oakland, California resident, was killed after being struck in the face by an airborne fire hydrant while walking on this day in 2007. A passing car had struck the fire hydrant and the water pressure shot the hydrant at Hernandez with enough force to kill him.

In 2017, 89 year old Florida man Robert Dreyer, veered off the road in his car and hit a fire hydrant. When he stepped out of the car, the ground crumbled and water from the hydrant began shooting out. Dreyer then fell into a 5-foot hole formed by the force of the crash and the rushing water. He died at the scene.



Sunday, June 4, 2023

Died After Touching a Snail on This Day in History

 

This day in history: A 7 year old American girl died after touching an African Snail in Japan on this day in 2000.  

"Bliss Scott, a first-grader at Stearley Heights Elementary School on Kadena Air Base, died of meningo-encephalitis, an infection of the brain and its covering that has symptoms of both meningitis and encephalitis. It was caused by a rare parasite transmitted by snails and slugs, according to the Stars and Stripes.

The U.S. military’s semiofficial daily said tests conducted by the university showed the girl had contracted a parasite called rat lung worm.

The doctors said that Scott suffered from severe headaches and that blood serum tests suggested she had contracted the parasite angiostrongylus cantonensis.

One or two cases of the disease are reported annually in Okinawa, but it is the first death linked to the parasite." Source


Tuesday, May 2, 2023

A Real Life Zombie on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: It was on this day (May 2) in 1962, a Haitian man named Clairvius Narcisse was exhumed from his grave and was turned into a zombie and forced to work as a slave. A bokor (vodou witch) who recovered him, managed this using administering a combination of psychoactive substances (often the paralyzing pufferfish venom tetrodotoxin and the strong deliriant Datura), which rendered him helpless and seemingly dead. When the bokor died, and regular doses of the hallucinogen ceased, he eventually regained sanity and returned to his family after another 16 years. Narcisse was immediately recognized by the villagers and his family. When he told them the story of how he was dug up from his grave and enslaved, the villagers were surprised, but they accepted his story because they believed his experience resulted from the power of voodoo magic. He was seen as the man who was once a zombie.

This case puzzled many doctors because Narcisse's death was documented and verified by the testimonies of two American doctors. The case of Narcisse was argued to be the first verifiable example of the transformation of an individual into a zombie. Narcisse's story intrigued Haitian psychiatrist Lamarque Douyon. Though dismissing supernatural explanations, Douyon believed there was some degree of truth to tales of zombies and he had been studying such accounts for decades. Suspecting zombies were somehow drugged and then revived, Douyon reached out to colleagues in America. Davis traveled to Haiti, where he obtained samples of powders purportedly used to create zombies.


Tuesday, February 28, 2023

A Nascar Death on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: On this day in 1965, an 8-year-old boy was killed and eight other people injured when a stock car, driven by NASCAR champion Richard Petty, flew off a drag strip and into a crowd of spectators. The accident, which happened at the Southeastern International Dragway in Dallas, Georgia, happened when a tie rod broke on Petty's Plymouth Barracuda dragster while he was moving at 130 miles per hour. Most of the fans were able to get out of the way, but Wayne Dye of Austell died when the car struck him.

A month earlier, another spectator was killed during a race. "During the first lap of the NASCAR Grand National race Motor Trend 500, held at Riverside International Raceway on Sunday, 17 January 1965, the 1962 Pontiac #38 driven by Charles Powell, spun and went off the track, between turns one and two, ending into a dirt embankment on the infield.
In that same place a group of spectators were watching the race, standing on a forklift truck. At the moment of the accident several of them moved to see the spinning car, causing a freak accident. The forklift suddenly lost its balance, slid and rolled down an incline, at least five persons were seriously injured when it toppled over. One of them, Ronald Pickle, 20-year-old from San Diego, California, was killed upon impact, crushed between the truck and a chain link fence which kept the truck from rolling onto the track." Source

Sunday, February 26, 2023

Camille Flammarion on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: Camille Flammarion was born on this day in 1842. Flammarion was a French astronomer and author. He was a prolific author of more than fifty titles, including popular science works about astronomy, several notable early science fiction novels, and works on psychical research and related topics. 

"It is difficult today to gauge the celebrity status that Flammarion held. Men, at least some men, admired and emulated Flammarion, and many a woman swooned over him. As the saying goes, some would 'give their right arm' to be in any way associated with the great Flammarion – indeed, in a bizarre but true story, Flammarion received a body part from a deceased young female admirer." Source

In his presidential address before the Society for Psychical Research in October 1923, Flammarion summed up his conclusions after 60 years of psychical research: "There are unknown faculties in man belonging to the spirit, there is such a thing as the double, thought can leave an image behind, psychical currents traverse the atmosphere, we live in the midst of an invisible world, the faculties of the soul survive the disaggregation of the corporeal organism, there are haunted houses, exceptionally and rarely the dead do manifest, there can be no doubt that such manifestations occur, telepathy exists just as much between the dead and the living as between the living."

Thursday, January 5, 2023

Killed by Too Much Coffee on This Day in History

 

Thomas Anthony Mansfield, a 29-year-old personal trainer from Colwyn Bay, Wales, died after consuming a drink with too much caffeine powder on this day in 2022. 

Mansfield bought a 100g (3.5 oz) bag of caffeine powder from Blackburn Distributions, a British sports supplements company, according to BBC News.

Mansfield's scale, which he was using to measure the powder, could only weigh between 2,000 milligrams (2.0 g) and 5,000 milligrams (5.0 g), causing him to miscalculate and ingest an equivalent of two hundred cups of coffee. Shortly after consuming the drink, he reportedly complained that his heart was beating too fast and began foaming at the mouth minutes later. 

Paramedics could not save him.

"According to North Wales Live, the coroner said that had Mansfield been provided with a scoop, he would likely still be alive today. Gittins said he had been 'massively reassured' that Blackburn Distributions now provides a scoop with this brand of caffeine powder, the media outlet said." Source

Sunday, January 1, 2023

Charles the Bad's Horrific Death on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: Charles the Bad (Charles II of Navarre) died on this day in 1387. "The ultimate opportunist, Charles earned the nickname 'The Bad' for his dealings during the Hundred Years' War. He also goes down as a great example of karmic justice. Charles gained a reputation for playing the English and French against each other during the Hundred Years' War. Several times he escaped imprisonment and execution. He was one of the most cunning rulers of his time." Source

His horrific death became famous all over Europe, and was often cited by moralists, and sometimes illustrated in illuminated manuscript chronicles. There are several versions of the story, varying in the details. This is Francis Blagdon's English account, of 1803:

Charles the Bad, having fallen into such a state of decay that he could not make use of his limbs, consulted his physician, who ordered him to be wrapped up from head to foot, in a linen cloth impregnated with brandy, so that he might be inclosed [sic] in it to the very neck as in a sack. It was night when this remedy was administered. One of the female attendants of the palace, charged to sew up the cloth that contained the patient, having come to the neck, the fixed point where she was to finish her seam, made a knot according to custom; but as there was still remaining an end of thread, instead of cutting it as usual with scissors, she had recourse to the candle, which immediately set fire to the whole cloth. Being terrified, she ran away, and abandoned the king, who was thus burnt alive in his own palace.

John Cassell's moralistic version states:

He was now sixty years of age, and a mass of disease, from the viciousness of his habits. To maintain his warmth his physician ordered him to be swathed in linen steeped in spirits of wine, and his bed to be warmed by a pan of hot coals. He had enjoyed the benefit of this singular prescription some time in safety, but now, as he was perpetrating his barbarities on the representatives of his kingdom, "by the pleasure of God, or of the devil," says Froissart, "the fire caught to his sheets, and from that to his person, swathed as it was in matter highly inflammable." He was fearfully burnt, but lingered nearly a fortnight, in the most terrible agonies.