The
55-year history of Guinness World Records began with a single question, the
type of question that has been repeated millions of times at dinner parties,
pubs, kitchen tables, classrooms and work places across the globe.
During a
shooting party in County Wexford, Ireland, in 1951, Sir Hugh Beaver – then
Managing Director of the Guinness Brewery – asked a simple question: what was
Europe’s fastest game bird? Despite a heated argument and an exhaustive search
within the host’s reference library he could not find the answer.
Sir Hugh
realized that similar questions were going unanswered all around the world, and
that a definitive book containing superlative facts and answers would be of
great use to the general public. With the help of the London-based fact-finding
twins Norris and Ross McWhirter, he soon set about bringing this definitive
collection of superlative facts to reality. On 27 August 1955, the first
edition of “The Guinness Book of Records” was bound and, by Christmas that
year, became Britain’s number one bestseller.
Over the
intervening years, copies of The Guinness Book of Records – later renamed
Guinness World Records – have continued to fly off bookshop shelves. During
this time, it has become clear that, to our readers, a world record is more
than a simple fact: it’s a means of understanding your position in the world… a
yardstick for measuring how you and those around you fit in. Knowing the
extremes – the biggest, the smallest, the fastest, the most and the least –
offers a way of comprehending and digesting an increasingly complex world
overloaded with information.
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