Lightning Strikes – The Death of Bertha Cook.
On Monday 4 February 1929, 25-year-old Bertha
Cook was doing her washing in her backyard, while her son Lloyd played nearby.
Her husband Fred, a returned soldier and fruit grower, was working in the front
yard. The sky was overcast but did not look threatening. As thunderstruck a
bolt of lightning struck Bertha in the head. Lloyd was struck by the shockwave
that followed, but through his daze, managed to get into the front yard of the
property and alert his father that something was wrong with Bertha.[1]
Fred came into the backyard to find Bertha’s
clothes ablaze. He put the fire out and
tried to revive his wife, but she was dead. He then ran for medical help. Lightning
had struck her on the shoulder, her shoulder and legs were ‘charred to
cinders,’ and her shoes were ‘torn from her feet like tissue paper.’[2]
Researched
and written by Allen Tiller © 2025
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