World's tallest
woman dies at 53
A woman who grew to
be 7 feet, 7 inches tall and was recognized as the world's
tallest female died early Wednesday, a friend said. She was
53.
Sandy Allen, who
used her height to inspire schoolchildren to accept those
who are different, died at a nursing home in her hometown of
Shelbyville, Ind., family friend Rita Rose said.
The cause of death
was not yet known. Allen had been hospitalized in recent
months as she suffered from a recurring blood infection,
along with diabetes, breathing troubles and kidney failure,
Rose said.
In London, Guinness
World Records spokesman Damian Field confirmed Wednesday
that Allen was still listed as the tallest woman. Some Web
sites cite a 7-foot-9 woman from China.
Coincidentally,
Allen lived in the same nursing home, Heritage House
Convalescent Center, as 115-year-old Edna Parker, whom
Guinness has recognized as the world's oldest person since
August 2007.
Tool to educate
people
Allen said a tumor
caused her pituitary gland to produce too much growth
hormone. She underwent an operation in 1977 to stop further
growth.
But she was proud
of her height, Rose said. "She embraced it. She used it as a
tool to educate people."
Allen appeared on
television shows and spoke to church and school groups to
bring youngsters her message that it was all right to be
different.
Allen weighed 6-1/2
pounds when she was born in June 1955. By the age of 10 she
had grown to be 6-foot-3, and by age 16 she was 7-1.
She wrote to
Guinness World Records in 1974, saying she would like to get
to know someone her own height.
"It is needless to
say my social life is practically nil and perhaps the
publicity from your book may brighten my life," she wrote.
Museum appearances
The recognition as
the world's tallest woman helped Allen accept her height and
become less shy, Rose said.
"It kind of brought
her out of her shell," Rose said. "She got to the point
where she could joke about it."
In the 1980s, she
appeared for several years at the Guinness Museum of World
Records in Niagara Falls, Ontario.
"I'll never forget
the old Japanese man who couldn't speak English, so he
decided to feel for himself if I was real," she recalled
with a chuckle when she moved back to Indiana in 1987.
"At Guinness there
were days when I felt like I was doing a freak show," she
said. "When that feeling came too often, I knew I had to
come back home."
Difficulty with
mobility had forced Allen to curtail her public speaking in
recent years, Rose said. She had suffered from diabetes and
other ailments and used a wheelchair to get around.
Rose is working to
set up a scholarship fund in Allen's name, with proceeds
going to Shelbyville High School.
"She loved talking
to kids because they would ask more honest questions," Rose
said. "Adults would kind of stand back and stare and not
know how to approach her. " (AP)