Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Potpourri: Incredible Coincidences
Episode Date: December 15, 2023The dictionary defines a coincidence as “A sequence of events that, although accidental, seems to have been planned or arranged.” We have probably all experienced coincidences of some type or anot...her. However, there are coincidences, and then there are coincidences. There are cases that are so mind-bogglingly improbable that it would seem that they were fabricated. Yet, they are indeed true. Learn more about some of the world’s most incredible coincidences on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors BetterHelp Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month ButcherBox Sign up today at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to choose your free steak for a year and get $20 off." Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The dictionary defines a coincidence as a sequence of events that although accidental seem to have
been planned or arranged. We've probably all experienced coincidences of some type or another.
However, there are coincidences and then there are coincidences. There are cases that are so
mind-bogglingly improbable that it would seem that they were fabricated. Yet they are indeed true.
Learn more about some of the world's most incredible coincidences on this episode of Everything Everywhere
Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night and how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
It's been a while since I've done a Popery episode.
The premise behind a Popery episode is pretty simple.
I come across things in the course of doing research that are interesting, but there isn't
enough there to do an entire episode about it. So every so often, I'll throw them all together
into a single episode with some sort of theme tying them together. So in this episode,
the topic is strange coincidences. All of us have had some sort of odd coincidences we've
experienced. However, there are some coincidences which are bigger, or at least more interesting,
than others. In the course of researching this episode, I came across many stories that turned out
to simply be false. Many of these incredible stories are really nothing more than urban legends,
or at least have been highly exaggerated. So far as I know, these stories are true,
but I'm going to make a caveat that I can't 100% vouch for their accuracy. Nonetheless,
they do make for good stories. The first story deals with the Academy Award-winning actor Anthony Hopkins.
In the early 1970s, Hopkins was slated to play the role of Kostya in a film adaptation of the book,
The Girl from Petrovka.
In the course of researching his role, he wanted to find a copy of the book so he could read it before filming.
So in London, he searched for a copy of the book in London bookstores.
He searched far and wide in bookstores all over the city, and none of them carried the book.
On his way home from looking for the book, he stopped to sit down on a bench in the London underground.
next to him, sitting on the bench, was a copy of The Girl from Petrovka, that someone had left behind.
Moreover, the book had been signed by the author George Pfeiffer.
About a year later, Hopkins met Fyfer at a reception, and he told them the story of how he found the book.
Fyfer in turn told him that around the same time he was in London, and he had lost his copy of the book that he was annotating to change the spellings from American English to British English.
Hopkins then showed him a copy of the book, and it was the exact same book.
This might seem like a fantastic story, but there are others that are even more incredible.
Take, for example, the case of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand.
The assassination of the Archduke was the spark that ignited the First World War.
When he and his wife were killed, they were driving in a car in the city of Sarajevo,
and the license plate of that car was A-1-1-1-1-1-1.
1-1-18.
Fast forward four years and the deaths of millions of people.
The war finally came to a conclusion.
The armistice was signed on November 11, 1918.
The exact same date that was on the license plate.
A for Armistice, 1111-18.
This is not the only incredible story to come out of the Great War.
The next story ties into a previous episode I did on the last soldier to die in the war.
The last British soldier to die in World War I was named George Edwin Ellison.
He died on November 11, 1918, at 9.30 in the morning, an hour and a half before the armistice began.
He's buried at the cemetery of St. Symphorian in the Belgian town of Mons.
Directly across from his grave is another grave, the grave of another British soldier by the name of John Pons.
John Pons has the distinction of being the first British.
soldier killed in the war. He was killed on August 21st, 1914. And without any intention, the first and
last British soldiers killed in the war are buried right next to each other. There is another incredible
coincidence from the war. The RMS Carmania was a British passenger ship that was owned by the
Kuhnard line that was converted into a military ship. It was classified as an armed merchant cruiser,
and it was sent to the waters off of South America to hunt German ships that were. We have to
were raiding British merchant vessels. On September 14th, 1914, off the coast of Brazil,
the RMS Carmania encountered a German ship named the SMS Cap Trafalgar. Why was this noteworthy?
Because the SMS Cap Trafalgar was also a passenger ship that was converted to a military
vessel. But this wasn't just a battle of passenger ships. The SMS Cap Trafalgar had been purposely
retrofitted to look just like,
the RMS Carmania.
The ship was disguised so it could get close to merchant ships.
The capture fogger was sunk by the Carmania, which was its twin ship,
and it was the only fight that the capture foger was ever in.
Another historical personality who had a host of odd coincidences associated with him and his family
was Abraham Lincoln's son, Robert Todd Lincoln.
The first story was retold by Robert Todd Lincoln several times and is in his.
his autobiography. Supposedly in 1863, while he was on break from Harvard, he was traveling
from New York to Washington. He was at the railway station in Jersey City, New Jersey, waiting for a
train. While he was waiting in line for the train, there was a crush of people who were pushing
forward. This caused him to lose his footing and fall into the space between the track and the platform.
And that was when there was a train that began moving on the track. He was in danger of getting
crushed by the train when suddenly a hand grabbed him by the collar,
and pulled him back up to the platform.
The man who pulled him up was Edwin Booth,
the brother of John Wilkes Booth,
the man who would kill his father.
According to his biography,
he recognized him immediately as he was a famous actor.
The man Booth was traveling with
was the owner of Ford's Theater.
That isn't the only coincidence involving Robert Todd Lincoln.
There have been four presidential assassinations in U.S. history,
and Robert Todd Lincoln was in the vicinity of three of them.
He wasn't in the theater when his father was shot,
but he was at his side when he died.
In 1881, he was walking towards President Garfield
when he was shot at the Baltimore and Potomac train station.
Finally, in 1901, he pulled into the train station in Buffalo
when he was notified that President McKinley had been shot.
He immediately went to go visit him at a house where he was staying,
where he was able to meet the president for a few minutes
after he was shot while he was dying.
One of the oddest stories to have come out of the Civil War
had to do with Wilmer McLean.
Wilmer McLean owned a farm in Manassas, Virginia.
It just so happened to have been the location
of the first major battle of the Civil War,
the first battle of Bull Run on July 21, 1861.
After having lost his home and farm to the battle,
he moved to restart his life in the town of
Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia.
On April 8th, 1865, a messenger knocked on the door and indicated that the generals Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant wanted to use his home the next day to sign the surrender documents.
As McLean later said, quote, the war began in my front yard and ended in my front parlor.
Another highly improbable story of combat in the 19th century involved Henri Trang, who lived in Marseille, France.
Trang was involved in five separate duels.
When I say he was involved in five duels, that doesn't mean he actually fought in five duels.
On four separate occasions, he agreed to take part in a duel, and in every case, his opponent
died naturally before the duel took place. In his fifth scheduled duel, his opponent didn't
die before the duel took place. This time, he died before the duel took place.
These are far from the only coincidental deaths. In the 1930s, the Hoover Dam, outside of Los
Vegas was one of the biggest construction projects in the world. However, it was a very dangerous
work site. Over the course of construction, 94 men would be killed. The first person who's credited with
having been killed in the construction of the Hoover Dam was one John Tierney. On December 20th,
1921, he was in a boat on the Colorado River conducting a survey to determine where the best spot would
be to build the dam. He fell out of the boat and disappeared. Exactly 14 years to the very
day, on December 20th, 1935, his son Patrick Tierney, fell to his death in one of the intake towers
on the Arizona side of the dam. Patrick was the last person to die in the construction of the dam.
The first and last persons to die were father and son who died on the exact same date.
One of the coincidences that defies belief, but has been verified to be true, has to do with the
death of two brothers on the island of Bermuda. Neville Eben was a 17-year-old who lived in the
island's capital of Hamilton. On July 30, 1974, Neville was driving a moped on middle road
when he was hit and killed by a taxi driver by the name of Willard Amanders. This is certainly a
tragedy, but traffic fatalities do happen. What made that event extraordinary was what happened
almost one year later on July 18, 1975. Neville's brother Eskern was driving the very same
moped that his brother was killed driving. He was driving the moped on the same middle road,
which admittedly is a long road, when he too was hit by a taxi and killed. The taxi was the
exact same one that had killed his brother and was driven by the same driver. And what makes a story
even weirder is that the passenger in the taxi was the same person in both accidents.
Some coincidences are just bizarre. For example, how many times have you been walking down the street
when a baby fell out of a window and hit you in the head? I would be safe in betting that not a single
person listening to this podcast anywhere in the world has ever had a baby fall out of a window
of a building and hit you in the head as you were passing by. But that has had a baby fall out of a window of a building.
But that happened in 1937 to a street sweeper for the city of Detroit named Joseph Figlock.
A small girl fell out of a fourth-story window and hit Mr. Figlock, injuring both him and the baby.
And as improbable as that seems, that isn't the bizarre part of the story.
One year later, when he was working in an alley, a two-year-old boy fell out of a fourth-story window
and again landed squarely on Joseph Figlock.
The incredibly improbable event happened to him not once but twice.
Another improbable occurrence took place with the married couple Alex and Donna Vautzenis.
Alex grew up in Montreal and Donna grew up in Miami.
Later in life, the two met, dated for several years and were engaged to be married in 2002.
Just a few weeks before their wedding, they were going through old family photos from Donna's family
when they came across a photo taken at Disney World in 1980.
The photo was a five-year-old Donna and her two brothers posing with a Disney character.
However, what caught everyone's attention was that in the background of the photo
was Alex's father pushing the three-year-old Alex in a stroller.
Two people from different countries, by pure chance, were in the same photo
who, 20 years later, would find each other and get married.
Shockingly enough, in my research for this episode, I found several other examples of this exact
same thing that happened in Japan and Brazil. And I want to close with my own personal strange
coincidence. In July 2015, I visited the Florida Keys where they hold an annual underwater
music festival. The festival is more of an awareness campaign for conservation efforts in the Florida Keys.
People will don scuba gear, go down about three meters or 20 feet, and pretend to play instruments
while music is being piped in from underwater speakers. I was there for the event that year, and I was in
the water scuba diving with everybody else. Now, one of the most famous people associated with
the Florida Keys is the swimmer Diana Nyad. She famously attempted to swim from Florida to Cuba
back in the 1970s and failed several times before completing the swim in 2013 at the age of 64.
While she's done many things in her life, she's probably best known for swimming in the waters
off the Florida Keys. While I was there in 2015, I came up to the surface after
being on the bottom for a bit, and I wasn't paying attention to what was immediately above me
when I surfaced. And when I did surface, I bumped into someone, and the person I bumped into
was Diana Nyad, swimming in the waters of the Florida Keys. She was the Grand Marshal for the event that
year, and I bumped into her as she was doing the very thing in the very place that made her
famous. Any given coincidence seems like an improbable event. However, coincidence is
generally are quite common. There are an enormous number of variables and over 8 billion people.
So eventually, something is going to happen, which is a low probability event.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers
are Peter Bennett and Cameron Kiefer. I wanted to give a big thanks to everyone who supports
a show on Patreon. Your support helps me put out a new show every day. And if you're interested
in Everything Everywhere Daily merchandise, Patreon is currently the only place where it's available.
And if you'd like to talk to other listeners of the show and get notified of future episodes and projects, please join my Facebook group or Discord server. Links to everything are in the show notes.
