![]() Īn unnamed person was beaten to death with a Bible during a healing ceremony gone wrong in Honolulu, Hawai'i. His friends asked if he was hurt and he said "not much", but the wound soon began to bleed heavily and he died within minutes. As Walker was holding the knife, a foul ball struck him in the hand and drove the knife into his chest next to his heart. One of the friends borrowed a knife from the other to sharpen his pencil as he was keeping score, and when he was finished passed the knife to Walker to pass to the other friend. The 20-year-old Walker was watching an amateur baseball game in Morristown, Ohio, with a friend on either side of him. Her extremely tight corset held the wound closed, so she did not realize what had happened (believing a passerby had struck her), and walked on for some time before collapsing. The wound pierced her pericardium and a lung. ![]() Įlisabeth was stabbed with a thin file by Italian anarchist Luigi Lucheni while strolling through Geneva with her lady-in-waiting Irma Sztáray. On autopsy, a knife blade and spring were found in his intestines, and between 30 and 40 fragments of metal, wood, and horn in his stomach. He finally swallowed 20 knives and a clasp knife case, but after a few days, he had only passed the case he died after four years in pain. ![]() He later swallowed 14 knives, and after some days with abdominal pain, he passed all of them. On one occasion, he swallowed four knives, and quickly passed three with no ill-health. Īfter seeing a circus knife-swallower, Cummings began actually swallowing knives. The piece of lead is currently in the collection of the National Museum of Scotland. which weighed exactly seven ounces, five drachms and eighteen grains". His autopsy revealed that "the diaphragmatic upper mouth of the stomach greatly inflamed and ulcerated, and the tuncia in the lower part of the stomach burnt and from the great cavity of it took out a great piece of lead. Henry Hall, a 94-year-old British lighthouse keeper, died several days after fighting a fire at Rudyerd's Tower, during which molten lead from the roof fell down his throat. The son of George II of Great Britain and father of George III died of a pulmonary embolism, but was commonly claimed to have been killed by being struck by a cricket ball. ![]()
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