Britain’s
Tallest Giant
Although
he did not hail from the North West, the burial place of Frederick Kempster
(1989-1918) is at Blackburn in Lancashire.
He died there, according to the Lancashire Telegraph, whilst taking part
in a travelling show.
The
records suggest that the tallest known Britain – meaning that his measurements
have been confirmed – was a man from Yorkshire called William Bradley, who was
born in 1797. Apparently, the Guinness
Book of Records gives Bradley the title of the tallest British man in history
at 7ft, 9 inches.
Documentation
suggests, however, that Frederick Kempster beat that by .3 of an inch. What’s interesting for me is how, even within
the boundaries of modern times, proving accuracy in measurements is not as
straight-forward as one might anticipate.
What I mean is that Kempster’s verified dimensions are still a little in
doubt, even though he died less than 100 years ago, and his life and size were
not infrequently detailed in newspapers and in photographs.
Just
four years before his untimely death, The Daily Mail wrote about a visit
Kempster made to its premises: “The hood of a taxicab had to be raised before
he could enter, and when he reached The Daily Mail office he had to remove his
hat and stoop in the lift. He is 21
years of age. His height is 8 feet 2 1/2
inches, and he is known as ‘the Bayswater Giant’.This article is cited on Tallest Man website by the grandson of Frederick’s younger brother George. Despite the Mail’s view that Kempster reached over 8 feet tall, James Kempster concludes that his great uncle was, in fact, 7ft, 9.3 inches (237cm) tall.
Whether
or not he beat William Bradley by a third of an inch, it is certain Frederick
Kempster would have been a stupendous site.
He died of pneumonia, with ill effects to his health attributed to being
confined to prison in Germany just before the hostilities of World War 1
erupted.
Here’s
a lovely detail to conclude: one newspaper article suggested that his hand
could “span 16 notes with one hand on a piano keyboard”. I do not know whether he played the piano,
but if he did, I wonder how well he might have tackled Rachmaninoff’s challenging
piano concertos deploying his prodigiously large hands and fingers.