15 Amazing Coincidences That Will Make You Yell "No Freaking Way"
Most individuals are split into two groups when a coincidence occurs: those who are prone to write off such occurrences as chance, and those who perceive significance or a wider pattern behind them. The cosmos is continuously working to sprinkle little moments of serendipity into our daily lives, despite how implausible it may seem to meet your doppelgänger or have the same birthday as your best friend.
The most amazing coincidences in history are listed here. So, continue reading and be ready to be shocked by these startling coincidences that will convince even the most skeptical people that fate exists.
Though we know very little about the disease, according to Scientific American, most of those diagnosed live for about five years past diagnosis. Yet Hawking survived for more than five additional decades, allowing him to share his crucial insights and gifts with the world—not to mention his legendary humor.
A set of twins from Ohio who were separated at birth grew up without any knowledge of each other's existence. They lives did however share a number of strange similarities. They were both named James on their adoptions, they both grew up to be police officers, and both of them married women named Linda. But that's not all. Each had a son, one named James Allan and the other one named James Alan, and each also had a dog named Toy. Both brothers later got divorced, and both ended up remarrying women named Betty! (source: people)
Did Edgar Allan Poe own a time machine? Some people think so. How else could he have known about an event almost half a century before it happened? In his book called The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, the author describes how four sailors who survived the sinking of their ship were forced to eat a rather unfortunate cabin boy named Richard Parker. Although Poe claimed that the story was based on real events, that wasn't actually true. 46 years later however, a boat really did sink, and the members of the crew who were rescued were forced to eat a cabin boy in order to survive. The cabin boy's name? You guessed it - Richard Parker. (source: nytimes, seesouthampton)
Did the famous writer Mark Twain predict his own death? Well if he didn't then it was a major coincidence. The writer was born in 1835, when Halley's Comet was passing the earth. It only passes once every 76 years or so, but Twain predicted that he would die on its next passing. "I came in with Halley's Comet in 1835," he said in 1909. "It is coming again next year, and I expect to go out with it." The writer died on the very day of its appearance in 1910. (americanliteraryblog, wikipedia)
Depending on how you look at it, Violet Jessup was either one seriously lucky lady, or she was one seriously bad omen. The stewardess and nurse was on the HMS Olympic when it struck the HMS Hawke, she was on board the HMHS Britannic when it sank after hitting a sea mine, and she was also traveling on the RMS Titanic when it sank after hitting an iceberg in the North Atlantic. No wonder she later become known as Miss Unsinkable! (source: historybuff)
When Anthony Hopkins was preparing for his role in The Girl from Petrovka, he wanted to find a version of the book (written by George Feifer) so he could study it before filming began. But wherever he looked, he couldn't find a copy until one day, while sitting on the subway, he found a copy on the carriage in which he was travelling. But that's not the end, because when Hopkins later met the author, Feifer told him that he also didn't have a copy of the book. Why? Because he'd lent his last one to a friend, who had then accidentally lost it on the subway! (source: npr, dm)
The most amazing coincidences in history are listed here. So, continue reading and be ready to be shocked by these startling coincidences that will convince even the most skeptical people that fate exists.
#1 Mark Twain's birth and death coincide with Halley's Comet
Source: Shutterstock
#2 Stephen Hawking shares his birth and death dates with Galileo and Einstein, respectively
Source: Shutterstock/The World in HDR
Though we know very little about the disease, according to Scientific American, most of those diagnosed live for about five years past diagnosis. Yet Hawking survived for more than five additional decades, allowing him to share his crucial insights and gifts with the world—not to mention his legendary humor.
#3 Political adversaries Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died within hours of each other—on July 4th
Source: Shutterstock
#4 A meteor hit the Commette family's home
Source: Shutterstock
#5 Anthony Hopkins happened upon a signed copy of the book he was searching for in a train station
Source: Shutterstock
#6 John Wilkes Booth's brother saved Abraham Lincoln's son from death
Source: Shutterstock/Everett Historical
#7 And that same son of Lincoln's witnessed three presidential assassinations
Source: Shutterstock/Everett Historical
#8 An engaged coupled discovered their parents almost married one another
Source: Shutterstock
#9 One woman survived the Titanic, Britannic, and Olympic shipwrecks
Source: Shutterstock
#10 The first and last battles of the Civil War were fought next to the same man's property—in different towns
Source: Shutterstock
#11 The Separated Twins With The Almost Identical Lives
Source: The Lima News
A set of twins from Ohio who were separated at birth grew up without any knowledge of each other's existence. They lives did however share a number of strange similarities. They were both named James on their adoptions, they both grew up to be police officers, and both of them married women named Linda. But that's not all. Each had a son, one named James Allan and the other one named James Alan, and each also had a dog named Toy. Both brothers later got divorced, and both ended up remarrying women named Betty! (source: people)
#12 Did Edgar Allan Poe Have A Time Machine?
Source: Edgar Allan Poe
Did Edgar Allan Poe own a time machine? Some people think so. How else could he have known about an event almost half a century before it happened? In his book called The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, the author describes how four sailors who survived the sinking of their ship were forced to eat a rather unfortunate cabin boy named Richard Parker. Although Poe claimed that the story was based on real events, that wasn't actually true. 46 years later however, a boat really did sink, and the members of the crew who were rescued were forced to eat a cabin boy in order to survive. The cabin boy's name? You guessed it - Richard Parker. (source: nytimes, seesouthampton)
#13
Source:
Did the famous writer Mark Twain predict his own death? Well if he didn't then it was a major coincidence. The writer was born in 1835, when Halley's Comet was passing the earth. It only passes once every 76 years or so, but Twain predicted that he would die on its next passing. "I came in with Halley's Comet in 1835," he said in 1909. "It is coming again next year, and I expect to go out with it." The writer died on the very day of its appearance in 1910. (americanliteraryblog, wikipedia)
#14 Miss Unsinkable
Source: wikipedia
Depending on how you look at it, Violet Jessup was either one seriously lucky lady, or she was one seriously bad omen. The stewardess and nurse was on the HMS Olympic when it struck the HMS Hawke, she was on board the HMHS Britannic when it sank after hitting a sea mine, and she was also traveling on the RMS Titanic when it sank after hitting an iceberg in the North Atlantic. No wonder she later become known as Miss Unsinkable! (source: historybuff)
#15 The Case Of Anthony Hopkins And A Rather Rare Book
Source: Universal Pictures
When Anthony Hopkins was preparing for his role in The Girl from Petrovka, he wanted to find a version of the book (written by George Feifer) so he could study it before filming began. But wherever he looked, he couldn't find a copy until one day, while sitting on the subway, he found a copy on the carriage in which he was travelling. But that's not the end, because when Hopkins later met the author, Feifer told him that he also didn't have a copy of the book. Why? Because he'd lent his last one to a friend, who had then accidentally lost it on the subway! (source: npr, dm)
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