New York, Jan 28 :
Dalton Dingus, a little boy from rural Kentucky whose dying wish to set a record
for receiving the most Christmas cards earned him support from around the world,
has died. He was nine.
Dalton, who succumbed to a lifelong battle with
cystic fibrosis, received more than 500,000 cards from all over the world, his
family said.
At a funeral service, many of those cards decorated the
Bethlehem to Cavalry Apostolic Church in Salyersvile, Ky., Kathy Smithers, a
resident who attended the ceremony, told ABCNews.com.
"There were lots
and lots of people there," said Smithers. "Members of the police department, and
the fire department, and the sheriff. It felt like the whole town was
here."
Dalton's illness, his positive attitude and his goal to set a
Guinness World Record first inspired his neighbors in Salyersvile and then the
world. A Facebook post asking friends to send cards to Dalton went viral, picked
up by a local newspaper and then media from as far away as Israel and Ireland,
South Dakota and South Korea.
In the days before Christmas, there were so
many letters pouring in that a local television reporter with his own truck
delivered the cards that could not fit in the mail carrier's van. Dalton's house
became so filled with letters that at first neighbors and then his family's
church would accept the mail and sort it.
The letters came from children
sometimes younger than him in languages he did not speak and from places he
never heard of.
The cards filled Dalton's home, spread out on the floor
where he played with Lego blocks and painted pictures.
Miss Kentucky
visited, bringing along some cards. So did a unit of Kentucky State Troopers and
the star of Animal Planet's "Call of the Wildman."
The town rallied
around Dalton, with volunteers working round the clock to sort and count the
cards.
"The cards give him something to look forward to. Something to get
excited about," Dalton's mother Jessica Dingus told ABCNews.com before his
death.
Guinness was in touch the Dingus family before Dalton died to
discuss applying for recognition.
The family had not made a formal
application, according to Guinness.
"At this time, there has been no
formal record application made with Guinness World Records for this particular
attempt, so we are unable to speculate on whether or not it would constitute a
new record," Guinness spokeswoman Jamie Panas told ABCNews.com
"If and
when an application is made on his behalf, our records management team could
then explore the topic of re-opening a designation for his feat," she
said.
Guinness does not currently monitor attempts for receiving
Christmas cards. However, its does have an old record on the books. As of 1992,
the last official time Guinness allowed for a Christmas card category, Canadian
Jarrod Booth had collected 205,120 cards.
Ends
SA/EN
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Boy who attempted Christmas card record dies
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