Walter Hudson Explained

Walter Hudson
Birth Date:5 June 1944
Birth Place:Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Death Place:Hempstead, New York, U.S.
Known For:Former heaviest person alive

Walter Hudson (June 5, 1944 – December 24, 1991) was an American man and the holder of the Guinness World Record for the largest waist circumference, at 302order=flipNaNorder=flip around.[1] At his heaviest in September 1987, he weighed 1197lb, making him the heaviest person alive at the time, and the sixth heaviest person in medical history.

Biography

Early life

Hudson was born in 1944 in Brooklyn, New York City. His father left the family when he was a baby. He was a compulsive eater growing up, and he weighed by the time he was 6 years old. He would often leave home early on the way to school just to eat extra food, collect recyclables for change to buy snacks, and routinely eat late at night. He dropped out of school in the 7th grade after breaking his leg, eventually earning his high school diploma via a tutor. Around age 15, weighing, he became permanently homebound. Hudson and his family moved from Brooklyn to Hempstead, New York on Long Island when he was 25.[2]

Obesity

While living in Hempstead, Hudson shared a house with his mother, his brother George, his sister Barbara, and her children. He never went outside his home, both due to strong agoraphobia and the difficulty caused by his weight. He stayed in a queen-sized bed all day, only leaving to go to the bathroom, ate food prepared and served to him by his family members, and kept himself occupied by reading the Bible daily. His mother died in 1984. In September 1987, Hudson fell and became stuck in the doorway to his bedroom. His family members were unable to remove him, and the Hempstead Fire Department worked for four hours to cut the doorframe and extricate him. Afterwards, he decided to go on a diet with the assistance of comedian-turned-health activist Dick Gregory. When Gregory's professionals attempted to weigh Hudson, a team of weightlifters had to carry him onto the scale; he overloaded the scale's 1000lb limit, and his weight was estimated at 1200lb. The Guinness Book of World Records officially recorded his peak weight at 1197lb, with a waist circumference of 119inches, the largest ever recorded; this also made him the heaviest person alive since the death of Jon Brower Minnoch and the second-heaviest person of all time.

After a year of dieting under Gregory's supervision, Hudson weighed 520lb in September 1988, indicating a weight loss of nearly 680lb. He also left his home under his own power for the first time in 18 years. Gregory discontinued his assistance shortly after, citing Hudson's fear of leaving his home as a major impediment to further treatment; other reports suggest it was due to tension between Hudson's family and Gregory's team of live-in care professionals staying in their home. In 1989, a bronchial infection disrupted Hudson's diet and exercise routine, causing him to relapse and regain nearly 200lb.

Inspired by his difficulty finding clothes that fit him, Hudson started a mail order plus-sized clothing company named Walter Hudson Ventures in 1989 in partnership with a woman named Alexis Blass. It included a women's fashion line named "Invitation to the Dance," which Hudson described as aimed at women "from 200 to 1,000 pounds"; he also had plans to start a plus-sized men's clothing line. Hudson established a relationship with Sunday Cruz, one of his customers, and the two had become engaged by 1991.

Daily diet

Hudson described his typical daily diet as consisting of two boxes of sausages, of bacon, one dozen eggs, and a loaf of bread for breakfast; four Big Macs, four double cheeseburgers, and eight large portions of French fries for lunch; and three large ham steaks or two chickens, four baked potatoes, four sweet potatoes, four heads of broccoli, and most of a large cake for dinner. Each meal would be accompanied by 6USqt of soda and "the better part of a large cake" for dessert, plus snacks throughout the day.[3]

After enlisting Dick Gregory's help, Hudson was put on a strict 1,200-calorie vegetarian diet consisting of fruits, vegetables, Gregory's commercial powdered diet mix, orange juice, and 6USqt of water.

Death

Walter Hudson died of a heart attack at his home on December 24, 1991, at age 47. At the time of his death, he had regained much of the weight he had lost and weighed 1025lb. Emergency rescuers from the Hempstead Fire Department cut a 4by hole in the bedroom wall to remove his body from the premises.[4] [5]

Hudson's funeral was held on January 2, 1992, which was attended by hundreds, including his former nutritional advisor Dick Gregory. He was interred in Greenfield Cemetery in a custom-built coffin that was 54inches wide, weighed more than 800lb, and required eight pallbearers to carry.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Glenday, Craig . Guinness World Records 2010: Thousands of new records in the Book of the Decade! . 2010 . 978-0-553-59337-2 . Bantam . 94 . registration.
  2. Web site: Despite setback, former heaviest man vows to keep losing pounds . November 17, 2023 . Tampa Bay Times.
  3. News: Plummer . William . Mary Huzinec . October 26, 1987 . After 27 Years in His Bedroom, 1,200-Lb. Walter Hudson Decides to Take a Load Off . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110224022606/https://people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20097429,00.html . February 24, 2011 . January 5, 2012 . People . 60 . 28 . 17.
  4. News: Obituaries: Walter Hudson, 46; Called Heaviest Man . December 26, 1991 . The New York Times . January 5, 2012.
  5. World's Biggest Man, Water Hudson, Mourned at N.Y. Funeral Services . Jet . January 20, 1992 . 81 . 13 . 54–55 . January 5, 2012.