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Barbara Duncan, superstar real estate agent, meets Robert Wadlow, the gentle giant

By
Real Estate Agent with RE/MAX Advantage

On a trip to St. Augustine Florida last week, which took me away from activerain for a few days, decisions had to be made on what to visit.  We decided to visit the Ripley's Believe it or Not Museum even though I had doubts about its interest to me.

Was I wrong!!Robert Wadlow

The trip through the museum was so much fun!  Here I'm staring up at the likeness of Robert Wadlow, the now celebrated "gentle giant."

He was 8' 11" and wore a size 37 shoe and was once billed as the world's tallest man. I think there may be taller ones since his time.

He grew too fast for his own safety, however, and died at the age of 22.  Google him for more about his life.

In the same room was this other fellow. He must be the widest man or something similar.  However, with obesity becoming more and more common, he may not be the world's heaviest man. 

Believe it or NOt

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I also loved this guy taking a picture of his wife. Ripley's museumThey have put every mole or discoloration possible on him.  When a person walks by, between him and his wife (girl friend?), the camera snaps.

If you're in a place with a Ripley's museum, visit it.  I don't think they'd all be the same but if they were all like this one, you'll have a great time.  The one in St. Augustine was possibly the first one and it may be the most entertaining one.

I recommend them!

Steven L. Smith
King of the House Home Inspection, Inc. - Bellingham, WA
Bellingham WA Home Inspector

Barbara,

I visited Florida nearly 20 years ago now and I thought that St Augustine was one of my favorite parts of the whole trip.

Nov 22, 2009 04:05 AM
Barbara S. Duncan
RE/MAX Advantage - Searcy, AR
GRI, e-PRO, Executive Broker, Searcy AR

I had always wanted to visit St. Augustine.  I loved the fort.  If you go back be sure to visit this museum.

Nov 22, 2009 04:31 AM
Alan Brown
Coldwell Banker Realty - Davenport, FL
34 Years of Real Estate Experience .

Ripely's museum is lots of fun, I visited the one in San Antonio last year.

Nov 22, 2009 08:20 AM
Anonymous
SHS 51

Robert Wadlow visited Searcy in the late 30's. He was promoting shoes for the store located across Arch Street from the Court House. Prior to his arrival in town, a contest began to guess the number of pennies that one of his shoes would hold. The shoe, filled with pennies, was in the store window. When Robert arrived he was led to a makeshift stage (a flat bed trailer) in front of the store where  he sat in a special chair. He was huge. I was about six years old at the time.

Bob C.

Nov 22, 2009 09:13 AM
#4
Barbara S. Duncan
RE/MAX Advantage - Searcy, AR
GRI, e-PRO, Executive Broker, Searcy AR

Alan, I never expected to have so much fun.  My daughter and I were well pleased with the museum.

Bob!   That is fascinating information!  He actually came to Searcy to promote shoes!  Since you've seen him and Searcy saw him, I need to delve deeper into his history.  If he died at 22, he had to do quite a bit of getting around.  Wonder if Searcy papers have pictures of him?  You have so many great memories!!

Nov 22, 2009 10:17 AM
Anonymous
Anita Fuller

I ditto Bob's comment:  I remember that Robert Wadlow came to Searcy although I didn't see him.  Seems like they had a replica of one of his shoes on display in the shoe store which was Family Shoe Store, as I recall.  That store also had an x-ray machine thingee that when you stepped up on it, with the shoes you were trying on, it would show your foot bones in relation to the shoe.   I think I've read that those things were outlawed soon after, saying they gave one too much radiation for safety...(or maybe it was too much radiation for the employees)...Whatever it was, it was soon removed from the store.

I would LOVE to go to a museum like that.

Anita Fuller

Nov 23, 2009 12:08 AM
#6
Don Thompson
Donthomp Associates - Sunnyvale, CA

Tuf Nut In My Pocket,

Gentle Giant On My Mind

By RAY W. TOLER

In the mid 1930s Heuer’s Shoe Store was located on the south side of Courthouse Square in Searcy.  At one time, they sold work clothing in addition to shoes.  I was pleased when they advertised a “free” pocketknife with the purchase of two pairs of Tuf Nut overalls.  I knew that I had never been allowed to buy more than one pair at a time but I wanted that swell knife and began a strategy for presenting a case to my mother, who bought all my clothes and shoes.  My main selling point was that my aunt Zoe Ellis, Dad’s sister, worked in the office of the overalls manufacturer, Tuf Nut, in Little Rock.  What really decided the issue was that the two pairs of overalls I had were bordering on being threadbare.  I was allowed to buy the two new pairs of Tuf Nuts with “free” pocketknife, which I still have (the knife, not the overalls).  This episode sparked a lifelong interest in pocketknives.  I even picked up several in the Philippines while serving in the Army during WWII.  My collection numbers more than 50 but one of my favorites is my Tuf Nut.  In nearly 70 years of knives I’ve cut myself only eight or 10 times!

            Heuer’s main interest was shoes, of course.  I suppose I did buy some shoes there but mainly I wore Keds tennis shoes bought at Robbins-Sanford Merchantile from George Rogers’ mother or aunt.  Keds had a sole that protruded beyond the upper so as to accommodate clamp-on roller skates.

          Heuer’s Shoe Store, working with International Shoe Company, brought the world’s tallest man, Robert Wadlow, to Searcy at least two times.  On his first trip in 1933 I talked with Robert at length and shook his hand.  I recall he had a soft, pleasant voice and a warm, firm handshake.  The second time I saw Robert, in 1938, he didn’t alight from the flatbed truck in which he was riding, nor did I get to shake his hand or talk with him.   Robert was born of normal-size parents in Alton, Illinois, in 1918.  An overactive pituitary gland caused his amazing growth.  His height of 8 feet, 11.1 inches is still recognized by Guinness as the tallest person in history. At age 18 Robert wore size 37 shoes, which cost $100 a pair – a lot of money back in the 1930s.  Two years later his shoes were provided free by the International Shoe Company.  When he turned 20 Robert traveled for the shoe company, visiting over 800 towns and 41 states.  His father had to modify the family car, removing the front passenger seat so Robert could stretch out his long legs.  The father and son team traveled more than 300,000 miles on their goodwill tour for the shoe company.  Donald Heuer of Batesville accompanied them on many trips through Arkansas.  The Alton, Illinois, Web site has many of Heuer’s recollections, including the following: 

“I met Robert the first time he came to Batesville to visit my dad’s shoe store in the mid-1930s.  Dad advertised with circulars delivered town to town by car with boys riding the car’s running boards, jumping off to put the circulars porch to porch.  The street was roped off from corner to corner for the people, who came by wagons and a few by cars.  Others walked or rode a horse or mule.  They treated him with respect even though a few thought he was not really that tall; perhaps he was on stilts? 

            “Almost all the highways between the small towns in Arkansas were joined by dusty washboard, loose-gravel roads.  For Robert and his dad to travel these roads as much as they did leads me to believe they enjoyed the people in Arkansas.

            “One hot summer day such a dusty road took them to the place the White River and Sylamore Creek meet just west of Mountain View.  There they met my dad’s brother and his family for an afternoon of swimming and to take rides in a Jon boat dad rented for the occasion.  Dad offered boat rides to everyone except Robert.  He was told that if he fell out of the boat there would be no way to get him back into the boat.  The rides continued with fun and visiting taking place until someone noticed that Robert was missing from the group.  They found him on the dusty road, trying to thumb a ride back to Batesville.  If he could not ride in the boat, he would go back to the hotel.   I’ve often wondered about the people that didn’t stop to pick him up.  He was told to come back, and he got his ride. 

            “My dad went with Robert and his dad to Hot Springs, which was at that time a ‘mini-Las Vegas.’  The group went to a nightclub to see a show.  It was required that people attending the shoe wear a coat or jacket.  Robert had neither as it was very hot.  My dad told them, ‘We have a young man with us that does not have a coat or jacket and he is a Big Boy.’  He was told, ‘No problem – we have loaners.’  Dad said, ‘He is a Big Boy.’ ‘No problem,’ they said, ‘we have big jackets and coats too.’  When they saw Robert they said, ‘He IS a Big Boy, isn’t he!’  Coatless, Robert was able to see the show.

            “When he stayed overnight in Batesville the hotel put three double beds side by side so Robert could sleep crossways.”  

As a youth, Robert had enjoyed good health but his large feet had troubled him for many years.  He had little sensation in his feet and did not feel any chafing until blisters formed.  While making an appearance in Manistee, Michigan, in July 1940, a fatal infection set in when such a blister formed.  On July 4, doctors had Robert confined to a hotel bed, unable to find suitable accommodations at the local hospital.  Days later, after emergency surgery and blood transfusions, the infection lingered and his temperature continued to rise.  At 1:30 a.m. on the 15th of July, the world’s largest man passed away in his sleep.  Robert’s body was brought back to his hometown of Alton for burial.  The casket required a dozen pallbearers and eight other men to carry.  Out of respect for Alton’s gentle giant, all city businesses closed for the funeral.  Over 40,000 people signed the guest register.  At the time of his death Robert weighed 490 pounds.  He was only 22 years old.

Nov 23, 2009 12:41 AM
Anonymous
Ludean Kidd

Barbara, I still have a couple of newspaper clippings about this man named Robert Earl Hughes who weighed 1,041 lbs. at 32 years old when he died.  The newspaper clipping is dated July 10, 1958 and is from the Abilene Reporter News in Abilene, TX.  Doctors said an attack of whooping cough when Robert Earl was 3 months old had upset his glandular balance.

Nov 23, 2009 12:41 AM
#8
Anonymous
SHS 51

Don comes through again. Thanks!

Bob C.

Nov 23, 2009 02:22 AM
#9
Barbara S. Duncan
RE/MAX Advantage - Searcy, AR
GRI, e-PRO, Executive Broker, Searcy AR

Anita, go if you get the opportunity.

Don!  You are fantastic.  All I really need to do is put up a subject and you can run with it!  Thanks.

Bob, he did come through again!

Nov 23, 2009 03:34 AM
Barbara S. Duncan
RE/MAX Advantage - Searcy, AR
GRI, e-PRO, Executive Broker, Searcy AR

Ludean has come through with this clipping of this heavy man.  It appears to be the same fellow.

Heaviest man

Thanks Ludean!!

Nov 23, 2009 03:39 AM
Barbara S. Duncan
RE/MAX Advantage - Searcy, AR
GRI, e-PRO, Executive Broker, Searcy AR

Ludean also sent this clipping.

Heaviest man

Nov 23, 2009 03:41 AM
Anonymous
Anita Fuller

Ludean:  Why in the world did you keep those newspaper clippings?   I'm glad you did, though.

Anita

Nov 23, 2009 06:09 AM
#13
Anonymous
Ludean Kidd

Anita, I really don't know why I kept them, except that I put them in a small cedar chest and here it is 2009.  At that time, I hadn't heard of or seen anyone that large, and it was hard for me to believe it. 

Nov 23, 2009 11:41 AM
#14
Steven L. Smith
King of the House Home Inspection, Inc. - Bellingham, WA
Bellingham WA Home Inspector

Dear Godmother,

I might be the smallest ever person I betcha.

Nutsy

Nov 24, 2009 03:45 PM
Barbara S. Duncan
RE/MAX Advantage - Searcy, AR
GRI, e-PRO, Executive Broker, Searcy AR

Nutsy, you are not small!  You are the largest squirrl/man in history!!!

Nov 24, 2009 11:20 PM
Don Thompson
Donthomp Associates - Sunnyvale, CA

You know I couldn't resist posting a pic of Nurse Anita and her Ford Fairlane.

Feb 13, 2019 06:55 PM
Don Thompson
Donthomp Associates - Sunnyvale, CA

See this youtube video of you and your daughter being morphed in the Ripley museum here.

12 years ago.

 

 

 

Nov 14, 2021 08:28 AM
Barbara S. Duncan
RE/MAX Advantage - Searcy, AR
GRI, e-PRO, Executive Broker, Searcy AR

Here's a great picture of Robert Wadlow.  Robert Wadlow

Nov 14, 2022 02:05 PM