'Norris Dewar McWhirter',
CBE (
August 12,
1925 –
April 19,
2004) was a
writer,
political activist, co-founder of the
Freedom Association, and a
television presenter. He and his
identical twin brother,
Ross McWhirter, were known internationally for the ''
Guinness Book of Records'', a book they wrote and annually updated together between
1955 and
1975. After Ross's
assassination in
1975, Norris continued alone as editor.
Early life
McWhirter was the son of William McWhirter, editor of the ''
Sunday Pictorial'' newspaper, and Margaret Williamson ('Bunty'). He was born at 10 Branscombe Gardens, ("Giffnock" after Giffnock Church in
Glasgow where the McWhirters were married)
Winchmore Hill,
London, N21. His elder brother Kennedy was born in
1923. In
1929 as William was working on the founding of the
Northcliffe Newspapers chain of provincial newspapers, the family moved to Aberfoyle, in
Broad Walk Winchmore Hill. Like his brothers Norris was educated at
Marlborough College and
Oxford University (
Trinity College), where, at his choice, he completed his law degree in two years rather than the usual three.
Sports
Ross and Norris both became sports journalists in
1950. In
1951 they published ''Get to Your Marks'' and later in 1951 they founded an agency to provide facts and figures to
Fleet Street, setting out, in Norris's words: ''"to supply facts and figures to newspapers, yearbooks, encyclopedias, and advertisers."'' At the same time Norris became a founding member of the
Association of Track and Field Statisticians.
Norris came to particular public attention while working for the
BBC as a sports commentator. On
May 6,
1954, Norris McWhirter kept the time when
Roger Bannister ran the first
four minute mile. After the race, McWhirter began his announcement:
:''As a result of Event Four, the one mile, the winner was R.G. Bannister of
Exeter and
Merton Colleges, in a time which, subject to ratification, is a track record, an
English native record, a
United Kingdom record, a
European record, in a time of three minutes...''
....at which the rest of McWhirter's announcement was drowned out in the enthusiastic uproar.
One of the athletes covered was runner
Christopher Chataway, the employee at
Guinness who recommended them to
Sir Hugh Beaver. After an interview in which the Guinness directors enjoyed testing the twins' knowledge of records and unusual facts, the brothers agreed to start work on the book in
1954. In August
1954 the first slim green volume - 198 pages long - was at the bookstalls, and in four more months it was England's No. 1 nonfiction best-seller.
Norris was also part of the BBC commentary team for their Olympic Games coverage between 1960 and 1976.
Political activity
He was an active member of the
Conservative Party in the early
1960s and fought, unsuccessfully, to recapture
Orpington in the
1964 and
1966 UK general elections after its loss to the
Liberals in the
1962 by-election.
Together with his brother Ross, he founded the "National Association for Freedom", later "
The Freedom Association", in the
1970s. This organisation initiated legal challenges against the
trade union movement in the UK,
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) and the
European Economic Community (EEC) in Brussels, and continues its political activities to this day.
Ross McWhirter was a constant critic of
British policy in
Northern Ireland, and called for a "tougher" response by the
British army against
Irish republicans. Ross was murdered by the IRA after offering a reward for information leading to the apprehension of those carrying out a bombing campaign in London at the time.
Norris McWhirter was a member of the Secretariat of the anti-communist ''European Freedom Campaign'' group, established in London at an Inaugural Rally at
Westminster Central Hall on 10th December 1988. This group's co-ordinating committee consisted almost exclusively of representatives from countries behind the
Iron Curtain.
Record Breakers
Both brothers were regulars on the BBC show ''
Record Breakers''. They were noted for their
photographic memory, enabling them to provide detailed answers to any questions from the audience about entries in the
Guinness Book of Records.
After Ross's death, Norris continued to appear on the show, eventually making him one of the most recognisable people on children's television in the 1970s and
1980s. Norris McWhirter was made a CBE in
1980.
He left ''Record Breakers'' in
1994 after the death of
Roy Castle - although the show continued until 2001 with various other presenters.
Personal life and death
He retired from the ''Guinness Book of Records'' in
1985. Afterwards, he continued to write, editing a new reference book, his ''Book of Millennium Records'', in
1999.
In
1985 he launched an unsuccessful defamation case against the
Independent Broadcasting Authority for the TV programme ''
Spitting Image'' which had inserted a
subliminal image of McWhirter's face imposed on the body of a
naked woman.
In 1957 Norris McWhirter married Carole Eckert, who died in 1987; they had a son and a daughter. In 1990 he married, secondly, Tessa von Weichardt, née Pocock. Norris McWhirter died from a
heart attack following a tennis match, at his home in
Wiltshire, on
19 April 2004. He was aged 78.
Selected bibliography
'Sports and general encyclopædia'
★ ''Dunlop Illustrated Encyclopedia of Facts''
★ ''Get To Your Marks'' (1951, with Ross McWhirter)
★ ''Guinness Book of Records'' (1955-1975, with Ross McWhirter)
★ ''Guinness Book of Records'' (1976-1985)
★ ''Guinness Sports Record Book (1977-1978)''
★ ''Book of Millennium Records'' ISBN 1-85227-805-6
'Personal'
★ ''Ross: The Story of a Shared Life'' ISBN 0-902782-23-1
★ ''Winchmore Hill Lives'' S Delvin (1991) (Contributor) ISBN 0-7212-0896-7
'Political'
★ ''Treason at Maastricht'' (1994, with
Rodney Atkinson, contributions by
Daniel Hannan) - criticism of the
Treaty of Maastricht and the
Bilderberg Group
External links
★
Obituary Telegraph.co.uk
References