The First Person Ever Hit by a Meteorite Has the Craziest Space Story Ever August 19, 2025, 10:01am
Ann Hodges wasn’t doing anything heroic when she made history. She was asleep on her couch in Sylacauga, Alabama, in 1954, when an 8.5-pound rock from space tore through her roof, ricocheted off her radio, and slammed into her hip. That was the moment she became the first documented human to be hit by a meteorite—and possibly the most reluctant celebrity of the atomic age.
Locals thought it was a plane crash. Some swore it was a bomb. The Air Force swooped in to make sure it wasn’t part of a UFO. It wasn’t. It was a 4.5-billion-year-old chunk of chondrite, probably from the asteroid 1685 Toro, which is roughly the size of Manhattan and has been circling us like a mildly menacing ex ever since.
First Human to Be Hit by a Meteorite Still Has the Wildest Space Story on Record Hodges got off easy, physically speaking. A grapefruit-sized bruise bloomed on her hip. But her quiet, simple life exploded. Neighbors swarmed her house. Reporters showed up. She got fan mail from schoolkids and church ladies. She was dragged onto I’ve Got a Secret and posed for photo shoots she hated.
“She was a very private person,” Mary Beth Prondzinski of the Alabama Museum of Natural History told Business Insider. “She didn’t like all the notoriety.” Her husband, Eugene, tried to cash in but couldn’t find a buyer. The landlord claimed the rock belonged to her, since it hit her roof. After a year of legal fighting, the landlord settled for $500. By then, Hodges was sick of all of it. She handed the meteorite over to the museum and asked only to be reimbursed for her lawyer.