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  1. Mar 4, 2014 · False. About this rating. A video clip in circulation online since 2011, appears to be security camera footage recorded during a storm in which a pedestrian is struck by a bolt of lightning, lies...

    • 10 Jim Lamey Twice in His House
    • 9 Alexander Mandon Four Times in Six Months
    • 8 Bob Edwards Three Times, Twice on The Same Road
    • 7 Bill Cowern Twice
    • 6 Walter Summerford Three Times in Life, Once in Death
    • 5 Casey Wagner Twice in A Split Second
    • 4 Michael Cannon Three Times
    • 3 Beth Peterson Twice
    • 2 Roy Sullivan Seven Times
    • 1 Melvyn Roberts 11 Times

    While one of the safest steps to take during an electrical storm is to go inside, your chances of being struck by lightning have not been completely eliminated, as Jim Lamey might tell you. In 2009, Jim was showering inside his Pennsylvania home when a bolt of lightning, shaking his entire house, connected with his water pipes, consequently zapping...

    Alexander Mandon was serving in the Colombian army the first three times he was struck by lightning, but he was thereafter discharged. You might at first be tempted to think this was a sign from the heavens that Mandon should not be in the army, but apparently not, because after Mandon was discharged and sent home, he was struck yet again in 2013. ...

    What are the odds of being struck three times, with two instances being on the same road? Is there a numberthat high? Are there any statisticians out there? Well, this is exactly what happened to North Carolina man Bob Edwards in 2012. His third time came as we has leaving a restaurant and heading toward his truck. After being struck, Bob Edwards h...

    Dianna Cowern, also known as Physics Girl, interviewed her twice-struck father on her PBS-affiliated YouTube channel. Bill Cowern, a tree farmer, was first struck by lightning when he was 12 years old. He had been swimming in a lakewith his friends when he saw a bolt of lightning strike the other end of the lake, which was about 11 kilometers (7 mi...

    One of the more legendary cases on this list, Walter Summerford was first struck in 1918, while serving as a major in World War I, knocking him off his horse. After serving, the British major moved to Vancouver, where, during a fishing outing in 1924, lightning struck a nearby tree, connecting with Walter through the ground. In 1930, he was walking...

    Whoever said lightning doesn’t strike twice in the same place looks very bad in this story. In 2013, Casey Wagner, a Texas rodeo clown, was attending Rednecks with Paychecks, an annual eventin Saint Jo, Texas, where hundreds of people show up to race, off-road, and go mudding. (It’s basically Burning Man but for redneck stuff.) During the festiviti...

    Alabama native Michael Cannon has been struck by lightning three times, twice in his early twenties and once in his teens. When he was 16, he was putting up a fence with his fatherwhen lightning struck it about 0.8 kilometers (0.5 mi) away from him, worked its way down the fence, and hit Michael. He said he “literally saw the ball of lightning comi...

    Beth Peterson, who wrote a book about being struck by lightning called Life After Lightning, was hit the first time while working as an Army specialist stationed at Fort Benning in Georgia in July 1992. She was walking outside when a storm came in. She was hit by lightning, not through ancillary contact but head-on. Beth also claims that she died a...

    As the official Guinness World Record holder, Roy Sullivan is recognized as having been struck by lightning more than any other person.Roy’s odds of being struck were certainly raised by the fact that he was a park ranger in Shenandoah National Park in Virginia. He spent ample time outdoors and in the woods and was struck multiple times while on du...

    Melvyn Roberts of South Carolina made headlines in 2011 for being struck by lightning six times, and by 2015, he’d claimed to have been been struck five more times. The occasions included while Roberts was sitting on a porch and twice while riding on a lawnmower. His wife makes sure she is standing far away from him whenever there is a storm becaus...

  2. Aug 19, 2020 · Myth: Lightning never strikes in one place twice. Fact : Actually, lightning can, and often does, strike the same place repeatedly — especially if it’s a tall and isolated object. For example, the Empire State Building is hit about 25 times per year offsite link .

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  4. Apr 6, 2024 · The 93- by 97-kilometer study area of Barrancabermeja, closer to the tropics where lightning is more common, was much more active, with nearly 70 million recorded cloud-to-ground strikes. But in both regions, some spots were much more likely to be hit by lightning than others.

  5. Myth: Lightning never strikes the same place twice. Fact: Lightning often strikes the same place repeatedly, especially if it's a tall, pointy, isolated object. The Empire State Building is hit an average of 23 times a year. Myth: If it’s not raining or there aren’t clouds overhead, you’re safe from lightning.

  6. Jun 26, 2015 · 1 minute read. By Joanna Plucinska. June 26, 2015 4:44 AM EDT. Is it any wonder his nickname is “Lightning Rod”? Rod Wolfe of Chebanse, Ill., was standing outside his home on June 20 when a tree...

  7. Jan 23, 2015 · A big flash of blue light hit me, lifting me off the ground and throwing me about 30ft away on to the concrete floor. Electricity passed through me and it felt like I was on fire.

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