John Trunley
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John Trunley (October 14, 1898 in Peckham, England-1944) was known during his lifetime as The Fat Boy of Peckham. As a child he gained weight rapidly and by the age of seven months he weighed two stones. By the age of four he weighed 12 stones and was taken to be examined by the eminent doctor, Sir Frederick Treves. When he started school at six he had a 44 inch chest and 46 inch waist[1]. He achieved national prominence when Lord Northcliffe [2] ran a critical story about London County Council’s decision to extend an existing tramway a further 400 yards because Trunley could no longer walk to Reddins School. Shortly after this he began to tour England under the management of entrepreneurs such as Fred Karno[3]. After the First World War he negotiated a film contract playing small character parts. He married and had children, before dying during an air raid in 1944.
[edit] References
- ^ Trunley Family Web-Site
- ^ Tabloid BBC3 18th June 2007 20:00-21:00GMT
- ^ Beasley, J.D. Who Was Who in Peckham. London: Chener Books, 1980.

