Transylvania University (Meat Rain)
What’s this? It’s a nearly 150-year-old piece of the “meat rain.” Yum!
March 3, 1876, was a cold, clear day in Bath County, Kentucky. There wasn’t a cloud in the bright blue sky.
And yet, something was falling from above.
A woman named Mary Crouch looked up from her chores. For a second, she thought it might be snowing. But the stuff collecting on the ground around her wasn’t snow. It wasn’t hail or rain either.
It was meat.
Chunks of slimy animal flesh were dropping from the sky.
March 3, 1876, was a clear day in Bath County, Kentucky. There wasn’t a cloud in the sky. But something was falling from above.
A woman named Mary Crouch looked up. At first, she thought it might be snowing. But the stuff landing on the ground wasn’t snow. It wasn’t hail or rain either.
It was meat.
Chunks of animal flesh were dropping from the sky.
March 3, 1876, was a cold, clear day in Bath County, Kentucky. There wasn’t a cloud in the bright-blue sky.
And yet, something was falling from above.
A woman named Mary Crouch looked up from her chores and thought briefly that it might be snowing—but the stuff collecting on the ground around her wasn’t snow. It wasn’t hail or rain either.
It was meat.
Chunks of slimy animal flesh were dropping from the sky.