Walter Alexander points to 'strange object' |
What ever happened to the Alexander Mystery Stone?
It’s hard not to ask yourself this question when you read
about the events that happened in Conecuh County over 60 years ago. The mystery
surrounding this unusual object was so strange that it was front-page news in
The Evergreen Courant for two weeks during the summer of 1955.
According to a story in the June 16, 1955 edition of The
Courant, Walter Alexander, 75, and Miss Elitha Smith found a “strange object”
in a corn field near Alexander’s Grist Mill, which was about 10 miles northeast
of Evergreen. Alexander was one of the operators at the gristmill, and Smith
had lived with the Alexander family for nearly 40 years up to that point. The
object they found weighed 42 pounds, was 18 inches long, 12 inches wide and
four inches thick at one point.
They found the unusual object on April 15, 1955 in a field
that had been plowed a couple of days before. A “big rain” came after the field
was plowed, and Smith first spotted the object while looking over the field a
day or so later. The object was almost completely buried, and only a few inches
of it showed above the surface. There were no other rocks or objects of that size
in the field, Smith said.
Small pebbles and sand appeared to be imbedded in the
object, similar to the sand and pebbles found in the field. Smith and Alexander
both believed that the object hadn’t been there for very long. The field had
been in use for many years up to that point, and no one had ever seen anything
like it in the field before, they said.
Smith didn’t report the object for nearly two months because
she and Alexander “thought it was a big rock picked up in a storm or tornado
and dropped in the field,” Smith said. That all changed though in early June
when some Auburn students arrived at the gristmill to examine the strange
object. They theorized that the object could have been a meteorite because “it
had the appearance of being burned.” Others who saw the object said it was just
a low-grade piece of iron ore, similar to other rocks of that type found
elsewhere in the county.
With the help of The Courant, Smith and Alexander sent a
specimen of the object to State Geologist Walter B. Jones in Tuscaloosa in
hopes that he’d be able to analyze the object and give them some answers. They
didn’t have to wait long because in the following week’s paper, in another
front-page story, it was reported that The Courant had received a reply from
Hugh D. Pallister, who was a Senior Geologist of the Geological Survey of
Alabama, at the University of Alabama.
“I am sorry to report that the specimen which you sent us is
not a meteorite,” Pallister said. “I know that the people will be disappointed.
The sample consists of quartz pebbles cemented together with iron stained
silica.
“We also tested the sample on our laboratory Geiger counter
and found no evidence of radioactivity. I thought you might be especially
interested in that, as we usually test all samples which come through our
hands.”
In the end, we’re left wondering as to what ever happened to
the Alexander Mystery Stone? Is someone today using it as a doorstop? Is it
sitting on a shelf somewhere? I’d be interested to know, so if you happen to
know of this object’s whereabouts, shoot me an e-mail. Any information would be appreciated.
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