Showing posts with label world records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world records. Show all posts

Friday, July 04, 2008

A Forebear's Formidable Fare

Five siblings in Australia are recreating their grandfather Charlie Heard's world-record taxicab ride. Charlie drove Ada Beal and two other ladies on a 7,000-mile, three-month journey from Geelong to Darwin and back in 1930.

Ron, Steve, Bob and Doug Heard and their sister Anne Cole have squashed themselves in to the 1929 Essex they are driving.

“After doing a bit of research and checking the world book of records it looks to be the longest continuous taxi fare in the world, we are re-enacting Australian history,” Steve said.

Leaving on the exact date, June 20, from the same Geelong address, the siblings will travel the 7003 miles or 11,500 kilometres covered by their grandfather. The Essex, which is almost identical to the one driven by their grandfather, has had its engine completely rebuilt.

“We are going exactly where he went and stopping off where he did,” Steve said. [Link]

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Never Too Old to Incise

If I'm going to pay someone to cut me open, I want him to have at least 70 years of experience.

Fyodor Uglov, who died on Monday aged 103, earned an entry in 1994 in the Guinness Book of Records as the world's oldest practising surgeon, and laid down his scalpel only at the age of 102. [Link, via Daily Dish]

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Bittys, Bettys and Betsys

About 400 women participated in The Gathering of Elizabeths this weekend. I gather my niece, whose name is spelled "Elisabeth," would not have been welcome.

The northern Illinois community of Elizabeth tried Saturday to set a world record for the largest Gathering of Elizabeths. Women with Elizabeth in any part of their name were allowed in; one participant has Elizabeth as a last name.

The event drew women from more than 20 U.S. states. Those participating had to show a copy of a birth certificate or driver's license.

"We did invite Queen Elizabeth II, but she politely declined," said Susan Gordy, who helped organize the event. [Link]
[Thanks, Nancy!]

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Buster's Claim Doesn't Pass Muster

If 101-year-old runner Pierre "Buster" Martin reaches the finish line tomorrow in London, he would be the oldest person ever to complete a marathon. Assuming he really is 101.

Guinness officials said Friday that they did not consider Martin eligible for the record because he had never provided proof that he is 101.

A review by The Times of the documents Martin offered as proof of his age reveals that none were obtained with anything more than his own assertion that he was born Sept. 1, 1906, in France. The certificate of naturalization he provided was issued by the Home Office on Friday, based on an application made Thursday, when The Times first made inquiries.

"At the very least, there's no birth certificate. There's a lot of smoke and mirrors," said Robert Young, an independent senior consultant for gerontology for Guinness World Records, though he was not speaking on behalf of the organization. Young said his sources had told him that Martin had two birth dates registered with the government: Sept. 1, 1906, and Sept. 1, 1913, which would make him 94. [Link]

Friday, February 15, 2008

A Long-Lived Levantine Lady

Mariam Amash may be a dark horse candidate for world's oldest person.

Amash, who recently applied for a new Israeli identity card, said she was born 120 years ago — a claim, if confirmed, that would make her the oldest person in the world. The Guinness Book of Records currently lists 114-year-old Edna Parker of Shelbyville, Ind., as holding that title.

Sabine Haddad, a spokeswoman for Israel's Interior Ministry, confirmed that Amash, from the Israeli Arab village of Jisr a-Zarka, is listed in the population registry as having been born in 1888. "We're just not sure it's correct," Haddad said. [Link]
[Thanks to John Van Essen for tipping me off to this story.]

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

The Names in Spain Are Anything but Plain

A town in Spain with a population of just 900 wants to be recognized by the Guinness Book of Records as the place with the largest number of inhabitants with uncommon first names—names such as Fredesvinda, Clodoaldo and Baraquisio.

A glance at the census or newspaper obituary pages of Huerta de Rey, located in the central Spanish autonomous community of Castile and Leon, is sufficient to find individuals with the aforementioned names as well as others such as Orencia, Sincletica, Tenebrina, Rudesindo, Onesiforo and Floripes. [Link]
The First International Gathering of Odd Names will be held in Huerta de Rey next year.

Friday, April 20, 2007

An Epitaph in Need of an Editor

Evergreen Cemetery in Owego, New York, is running out of room—and no wonder, given that it's home to an inscription "which at 135 words, is recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records for longest epitaph."

Here is a transcription of the lengthy epitaph penned by E. T. Gibson for his ancestors—taken from this too-small photograph:

Well, we got what was coming to us, and here in this burial plot we lie:—

We fourteen skeletons of Gibsons, Tinkhams, Drakes, Pixleys and Curtises, that once were clothed with flesh and lived and loved and laughed and danced and sang and suffered just like you till the God-created life-transmitting spark that had been passed down to us from its beginning died.

But we were not animals, or insects, or plants, which likewise have their life-transmitting sparks, but beings into whom at our birth had been breathed a soul-entity that came directly from God.

And to him our soul-entities have gone to be dealt with by Him as our treatment of others whom He created deserves.

What think you of these beliefs?
Erected in 1935 by E. T. G.

Friday, January 26, 2007

I Glad I'm Not on His List

Emma Faust Tillman, the world's newest oldest person, is unmoved by her accomplishment. But her great-nephew John B. Stewart has been keeping score on her behalf.

Stewart, a self-described family historian, ... had a copy of a page from the Guinness World Records that he has been saving since August.

Tillman was listed as the sixth oldest person in the world then, but Stewart has marked tiny X's in the margin as those above her passed away. [Link]
There's no sense waiting till the last minute, so I've started my own list of people older than me:
Emma Faust Tillman
Gerald Ford
Art Buchwald
Ringo Starr
Saddam Hussein
My kindergarten teacher
The short guy on Barney Miller

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

The World's Oldest Baby?

The Huge Entity reports that the world's "oldest baby" was 17 months, 11 days in the making.

The result of the longest recorded human gestation, Baby August was the oldest newborn ever. [Link]
The mother was Anissa August, M. D., according to this page.
One of the residents to deliver a healthy baby boy last year was Dr. August. Her pregnancy is also of note because it was the longest recorded human gestation on record. Dr. August was pregnant for a staggering 17 months 11 days.
Sadly, the other pages on the site reveal that this was a joke.

I did find a 1945 Time article about a reported 375 day pregnancy. Some mothers need to learn when to let go.

Friday, January 05, 2007

Flo Was a Late Bloomer

With the birth of Leah Davis on Christmas Day, 53-year-old Maureen Henderson reportedly became "one of Britain's youngest ever great-grandmothers."

Leah's birth has made Tracey Chamberlain a grandmother at 35, Maureen a great-gran at just 53 and matriarch Flo Geekie a great-great-grandmother at 92.
Although Maureen is young she is some way off becoming the world's youngest ever great-grandmother, with the record believed to be 44. [Link]

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Could This Be a Marriage Record?

I wrote back in February about Lazarus and Molly Rowe, who hold the Guinness record for longest-married couple, having put off divorcing for 86 years. But newspapers in 1910 reported another couple even more interminably wed.

Florence, Colo.—Ninety years wedded is the unique record of Francisco Espor, aged one hundred and ten, and his wife, Rafael, aged one hundred and seven. The couple were found by the census enumerator at the home of the great-granddaughter, Mrs. Julia Montoya, who brought them here from a pueblo in New Mexico a few years ago, where Francisco Espor was born.

Although their mental faculties are somewhat dulled and they are physically very feeble, this remarkable couple converse in their native tongue, and the husband, who witnessed the rebellion of the inhabitants of Mexico against Spanish rule when Mexico gained freedom, recounts many thrilling incidents of the war.

The couple was married at Santa Fe, N. M., in 1820, and located in Pueblo, Colo., when it was a village of log huts and the Indian trading post. Of the ten children of the couple but one is living, a son, 85 years old. There are thirty grandchildren, sixty great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren. The latter are the daughters of Mrs. Montoya. [Sheboygan (Wis.) Evening Press, June 13, 1910]
A few errors and inconsistencies are apparent. For one, it's unclear whether the couple lived in a pueblo in New Mexico or in Pueblo, Colorado, or both. The 1910 census shows them living in the second ward of Florence, Colo., but without a Mrs. Julia Montoya. The census also states that Mrs. Espor had only two children, neither of whom was then living. The wife's name was not "Rafael" but "Rafela." The "Espor" surname is also questionable, as only two or three other people seem ever to have borne it.

Until someone turns up some corroborating evidence, I think Lazarus and Molly can keep their trophy.

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

It's Hard Keeping Up With the Joneses

A Welsh television channel is organizing the largest single-surname gathering in history. They're inviting anyone with the surname Jones to come to Wales and help break the world record.

The channel is hoping to fill the 1,600-seat Wales Millennium Centre with an audience of Joneses, which would smash the previous record set in Sweden, where 583 Norbergs gathered to set the current target.

And the channel is making sure there is plenty of incentive for members of the huge Jones family to make the trip.

A variety show starring a host of famous Joneses - called Jones Jones Jones - will keep crowds amused on November 3 while official Guinness staff carry out what is hoped to be a huge count. [Link]
Another incentive: Rules state that "Maiden or hyphenated names do not count," so there's no chance you'll run into Star Jones Reynolds.

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Till Death Do Us Finally Part

Recent claims that John and Emilia (Antonelli) Rocchio—married 1922 in Providence, Rhode Island—are the longest-married couple in the world have genealogist Erlene Huntress Davis fuming. She and the Guinness Book of World Records agree that her ancestors Lazarus and Molly Rowe are the longest-married couple living or dead. (A couple in China who married at age 5 don't count, because that's just weird.)

Lazarus and Molly were married for 86 years, until Molly's death, June 20, 1829, in Limington, Maine, "in the 104th year of her age." Her husband hung on for another few months, according to his obituary in the Connecticut Courant of Sept. 29, 1829—itself remarkable for the number of exclamation points used:

At Limington, on the 14th inst. Mr. Lazarus Rowe, aged 104 years! Mr. Rowe was a native of Greenland, New Hampshire, and was one of the first settlers of Baldwin, in Maine, where he lived till within about two years since. His wife, Molly Rowe, who died last spring, was born the same year with her husband, viz. in 1725; they were married at the age of 18, and consequently lived together eighty-six years! It is presumed that the United States do not contain another man and wife, who have lived so long in the conjugal state. They reared a numerous family, and saw their descendants of the fifth generation! Their youngest son is now a pensioner of the revolutionary army!

Monday, January 16, 2006

Confucian Reigns

From China View:

25 Chinese records go into Guinness Book in 2005

www.chinaview.cn 2006-01-16 20:20:46

SHENYANG, Jan. 16 (Xinhuanet) -- Twenty-five Chinese records went into the Guinness Book of World Records in 2005, sources with China's submitting office said Monday.

[snip]

The Confucius family genealogy, one of the 25 records, is considered the longest of its kind in world records. Dating back 2,800 years, it clearly records the 86 generations of the Confucius family tree.

[snip]

[Read the whole story]

Friday, December 09, 2005

U.S. Loses 'World's Oldest Person' Record, Asks For Recount

From Reuters:

Ecuadorean woman, 116, is world's oldest person

Fri Dec 9, 2005 12:57 PM ET167

By Tim Castle

LONDON (Reuters) - A 116-year-old Ecuadorean woman was declared the oldest person in the world on Friday, lifting the title from a U.S. woman previously thought to be the oldest person alive, Guinness World Records said.

Maria Esther Capovilla was confirmed as the oldest living person after her family sent details of her birth and marriage certificates to Guinness World Records.

"We only told her yesterday she was the new Guinness world record holder," Kate White, brand manager at the records publisher told Reuters. "We hadn't heard of her before."

[snip]

Elizabeth Bolden, from Memphis, Tennessee, born August 15, 1890, had previously been regarded as the oldest living person.

[snip]

[Read the whole story]
[Thanks, Megan!]

Sunday, June 05, 2005

Dutch Woman Holds Record for Not Dying

From NewsAhead World News Forecast:

29 Jun 2005. Dutch widow, world’s oldest person, turns 115

HOOGEVEEN, THE NETHERLANDS. 29 Jun 2005. Hendrikje van Andel-Schipper turns 115 on Jun 29. It will be the retired needlework teacher’s second year as the world's oldest woman -- and person. The Guinness World Records awarded her the crown in 2004 at the death of the previous titleholder, 114-year-old Ramona Trinidad Iglesias Jordan of Puerto Rico.

[snip]

The lifetime of the Dutch woman, who is the biggest celebrity in the northern town of Hoogeveen, links three centuries. She is reported to have a passion for the Dutch soccer team, Ajax Amsterdam.

[snip]

[Read the whole story]
Is this something they should forecast a month in advance? Let's hope she keeps her passion in check until then.

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