In 1980, a Minnesota woman named Jean Hilliard was literally frozen stiff for several hours in subzero temperatures. No, it isn’t a hoax. Hilliard collapsed on a 22-below-zero night as she was trying to seek shelter after a car accident.
Six hours later, she was found “frozen solid” and was brought to a hospital.
According to the Montreal Gazette in one of the first reports published at the time, she breathed shallowly two or three times a minute and her heart beat faintly eight times a minute.”
Dr. George Sather said that “I thought she was dead, but then we picked up an extremely faint whimper. We knew there was a person existing then.”
Jean’s chances of surviving were quite slim, and her body temperature didn’t even register on a thermometer, meaning her body temperature was less than 80 degrees F.
Snopes, the hoax-debunking website, who rated the story of Hilliard as “true,” featured this image, which has now been associated with Hilliard’s account:
“There was no evidence of a pulse or blood pressure,” Sather’s brother, Dr. Edgar Sather, told the Gazette at the time.
“Her body was too frozen to find a vein to get a pulse.”
According to AP, it was too cold to give her an IV as “she was frozen too solid to penetrate the skin,” Edgar Sather said.
But she ended up making an unusual and miraculous recovery.
”At worst, I might lose a couple of toes,” she told AP at the time.
”I can’t explain why she’s alive,” said Dr. Sather, who helped treat the woman. ”She was frozen stiff, literally. It’s a miracle.”
About a month and a half later, Hilliard walked out of the hospital alive and healthy.
Sather added: ”The reaction didn’t appear until two or three hours after she started thawing out. The body was cold, completely solid, just like a piece of meat out of a deep freeze.”
Many of the stories about her recovery say that electric heating pads and oxygen tanks were responsible.
However, Hillard’s story isn’t unheard of.
A few weeks ago, The Washington Post published a story saying a Pennsylvania man, Justin Smith, almost froze to death. He was out in the cold for 12 hours after passing out, and his body temperature got to a frosty 68 degrees F.