#OTD in 1884: BLOOD SHOWER IN CHATHAM: “On February 25, 1884, Mrs. Kit Lasater, “noted for truthfulness,” was walking near her home in the New Hope township of Chatham County when she heard what she thought was a hard rain fall. Glancing up she saw only clear sky but when she glanced down she saw what appeared to be the aftermath of a “shower of pure blood.”
None of the liquid had fallen on her but it had drenched the ground and surrounding trees for some 60 feet (some accounts say yards) in circumference from the spot where she stood. Upon hearing her story, neighbors rushed to see for themselves and, when later interviewed, confirmed the story as related by Mrs. Lasater.
Samples were collected and sent to Dr. F. P. Venable, a professor at UNC, for evaluation. By mid-April he addressed the topic to the Mitchell Scientific Society. In every test performed except one, the conclusion was the same. The samples appeared to be blood. Venable could offer no explanation beyond the results of the tests, suggesting that “the subject is quite a puzzle and offers a tempting field for the theorist blessed with a vivid imagination.”
www.dncr.nc.gov
A month later the reprint from The Pittsboro Record, posted as first the comment, appeared in Orange County Observer. Of course I’m intrigued by the information that is recounted there that I had never before read - most specifically the reference to
“the bars near her cabin” in the newspaper account. New Hope Township, where Mrs. Lasater (her first name goes unmentioned) lived is the part of Chatham most inundated by the creation of Jordan Lake in the 1970s and by my judgment one of the wilder parts, rivaled only by the flat woods on the far other end of the county.
The time was just post-Reconstruction, and the governor Thomas Jarvis was a Democrat, as was always the case in those days. An ex-Confederate, he was a Redeemer (Conservative, White Supremacists who worked to thwart post-Civil War Republican and African American power) and closely tied to Zebulon Vance. Indeed, he took over the office of governor when Vance went to the U.S. Senate and later filled his seat when he died in that office. In the interim he served as ambassador to Brazil.
Of course these are just musings about the tenor of the times - a particular time long past - the kind of thing my students and I try and work out as exercises in “doing history.” I’ll add that perusing the News of Chatham during that time reveals a tumultuous and mysterious place. A news report (included) from September 12, 1884 writes of a disinterred body found petrified and another from June 13, 1883 tells of a rain of frogs covering “40 or 59 acres of land” (also posted here).

Petrified Body

Frog Rain
And I thought it was The Devil’s Tramping Ground over in Bear Creek Township and down by Harpers Crossroads that was the only “Weird Chatham.” It seems #DeepChatham just gets deeper and deeper. Maybe the flooding over of New Hope was meant to be.