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Which article title is better: (A) "Heights of presidents and presidential candidates of the United States" or (B) "Heights of United States presidents and presidential candidates"? --[[Special:Contributions/76.189.110.167|76.189.110.167]] ([[User talk:76.189.110.167|talk]]) 19:29, 22 August 2012 (UTC)
Which article title is better: (A) <b>"Heights of presidents and presidential candidates of the United States"</b> or (B) <b>"Heights of United States presidents and presidential candidates"</b>? --[[Special:Contributions/76.189.110.167|76.189.110.167]] ([[User talk:76.189.110.167|talk]]) 19:29, 22 August 2012 (UTC)

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Old discussion

No offense intended, but the information on this seems to be vastly incorrect. For one thing, I know for sure that John Quincy Adams was about 5'2. Can you show a source? Rhymeless 06:30, 24 Jun 2004 (UTC)

No offense taken as I am certainly not any kind of serious scholar, but a search on "shortest president" suggests that many believe Madison was the shortest at 5'4", so if you know something that is contrary to popular belief, please document it if only for my benefit.

It appears that you're entirely right. I could have sworn that I had a book that said otherwise, purchased as a souvenir at the white house when I went there (long gone now) but everywhere on the web seems refute this. Sorry to bother you. (quite embarrassed now) Rhymeless 06:56, 24 Jun 2004 (UTC)

Quite all right; I'm in no position to judge. :)

There are lots of errors on this page. GWB is 6'0" and there's no way Kerry is taller than 6'3". Others are suspicious. Teddygoff 06:55, 3 February 2006 (UTC)[]

He seems to have been removed from the list completely. Many people would argue that it doesn't really matter but there is no objective way you can say he is 6'0". He wears lifts and boots an awful lot and is in around 5'10. --194.125.112.57 16:31, 29 May 2007 (UTC)[]

Additionally, James Polk was no taller than 5'9", NOT the 6'12" listed (That's 7 feet for you in Rio Linda).

Further, Theodore Roosevelt was an even 5'10". Compare photos of him next to McKinley or Taft. At a minimum, refer to the listing for Theodore Roosevelt in The Peoples' Almanac by Wallachinsky and Medved from ca. 1976.

Many of the heights listed here are inaccurate.

John Kerry, is about 6 ft 4 ins. This article suggests he is 6 ft 6 and 3/4 inches tall (taller than Michael Jordan) which is blatantly false.

President George W Bush is not 5 ft 9 1/2 as this article says.G W is infact about 6 ft tall (His National Guard Records list him at 5'11).

Who ever updated the height index as of feb 4, 2006, thankyou for correcting them.

The list contradicted many of the heights found on the presidential height list page, and since that page seemed to jibe better with most other outside sources, I updated this page to match it, or at least the parts I noticed, anyway. -Alex68.110.114.40 05:50, 28 March 2006 (UTC)[]

Shouldn't the 1912 section include Taft? At 6'0" he was taller than Wilson, so in 1912 the tallest candidate actually didn't win. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.121.86.46 (talk) 02:38, 13 March 2008 (UTC)[]

It's just between the two candidates with the most votes, so the taller candidate did win in 1912, since the next best result was Roosevelt's. Wcp07 (talk) 06:18, 7 February 2009 (UTC)[]

Colors

Could we get some better colors, specifically some that have higher contrast? Also, remember that fully color-blind people can only see shades of grey (...or is it gray? I hate that word.), and that those colors are very similar in shade.

Would be thrilled to update, just don't know what colors I good. I dug around some color-checkers and ended up a great deal more baffled than when I started. Any ideas? jengod 02:04, 26 February 2006 (UTC)[]

McClellan

According to "McClellan's War: The Failure of Moderation in the Struggle for the Union" By Ethan Rafuse (review at http://www.historynet.com/acw/reviews/acwreview0306-1/), George B. McClellan stood "perhaps half a foot below 6 feet tall" ( probably the source of his nickname "Little Mac" ). Tentatively I'm listing his height therefore as 5'6; he certainly must have been much shorter than Lincoln.

Upcoming Election

Can we add a section for the upcoming election. I think Rudy Giuliani is about 5'9", Hillary Clinton about 5'7" and Barack Obama about 6'1", but these are just estimates. 86.139.60.204 23:23, 19 May 2007 (UTC)[]

Pointless

Is this possibly the most pointless article on Wikipedia? 4kinnel 15:40, 28 February 2007 (UTC)[]

Dunno, I kind of like it 12.177.23.62 (talk) 00:52, 17 February 2009 (UTC)[]
You did go through the trouble of finding it.--Loodog (talk) 01:18, 17 February 2009 (UTC)[]
look up "No u", i found this article by using the random function :3 --84.202.250.163 (talk) 10:31, 26 May 2011 (UTC)[]

Clean up metric conversion

I know this might not be important for people in the non-metric World, but someone needs to clean up the metric conversion. 6ft 4 is not 2 meters by any means. Actually 6ft 6 is about 2 meters (and even that is a little less than 2 meters).

anyway, it's an interesting article nevertheless.

Bill Clinton's height

I would fix it myself, but I don't want to mess anything up, so I'll ask that someone more familiar with the tables take care of it. Clinton's height is 6'2.5" or 1.83m. Source Another source. faithless (speak) 05:11, 12 October 2007 (UTC)[]

6'2.5" is in fact 1.89m. That means as well that Clinton was the taller of the candidates in the 92 election. Are there any other sources that verify Clinton's height? If he is 1.89m, then the 92 election in the table needs to be changed to a taller candidate win, which would confirm again the conclusion this article appears to be making on taller candidates.Wikischolar1983 (talk) 12:02, 20 February 2008 (UTC)[]
My mistake, 6'2.5" is 1.89m. But you need more sources? Surely the New York Times and Forbes are good enough? :) faithless (speak) 19:09, 20 February 2008 (UTC)[]
Though the Forbes article was only indicating that Bill Clinton was around 6'2". But never mind, a couple of the external sources at the end of this article also stated that he was 6'2.5", so I guess that's good enough:) I've put his new height in the table and updated the statistics on tall/short winners, which now reflect one more taller candidate win in presidential elections.Wikischolar1983 (talk) 06:58, 24 February 2008 (UTC)[]


McCain

is mccain really 5'6? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.137.204.166 (talk) 21:24, 15 June 2008 (UTC)[]

Yes, he is. 24.23.48.119 (talk) 01:54, 19 June 2008 (UTC)[]
Confirmed. 76.20.18.25 (talk) 22:57, 24 June 2008 (UTC)[]
Confirmed, but probably inaccurate. The medical records may just be an estimate. Look at the pictures of McCain next to Nixon and Giuliani and he looks taller. He is more likely 5'7" to 5'8". Check out these pictures:
http://www.powerlineblog.com/Nixon_greets_POW_McCain.jpg
http://media.commercialappeal.com/mca/content/img/photos/2008/01/31/1gop.jpeg
Christidy (talk) 12:24, 13 July 2008 (UTC)[]

According to this McCain's height is 175.3 cm or about 5'9" (on p 7) . That would make sense of photos like this, where he's nearly level with the 180 cm Bush (this YouTube clip also shows him nearly level with Bush [at 0'38]). Celebheights believes reports that his height is 168 cm or 5'6" are suspect. Wcp07 (talk) 12:45, 23 February 2009 (UTC)[]

Yes, medical records are the best source, even if we don't believe them, which I don't.--Loodog (talk) 17:24, 23 February 2009 (UTC)[]

Article was sabotaged on 7/2/2008

Someone changed the words "tall" and "taller" to the words "short" and "shorter" and vice-versa in several places in the article, even changing all of the quotes. I realize that an article about the heights of the presidents and candidates is not of earth-shattering importance, but it's annoying that someone did this. Can a url be blocked? I believe I've reversed all of the changes, but the same person has done lots of editing in other articles. ReaderReader5 (talk) 02:46, 5 July 2008 (UTC)[]

2008 election update

The references for Obama's height should be retained as there's still no consensus on his exact height. Also the metric conversions for both him and John McCain need to be fixed. Wcp07 (talk) 07:39, 5 November 2008 (UTC)[]

Vice-Presidents

Do we have any data for the heights of US Vice-Presidents? Wcp07 (talk) 12:23, 22 February 2009 (UTC)[]

William Jennings Bryan

This says that William Jennings Bryan's height was "about 5 feet 10 inches", not 6 feet as is currently listed. Do we have any other sources for Bryan's height? If not, I propose we change his height. That's going to affect the taller/shorter outcome for 1908 Wcp07 (talk) 04:37, 19 April 2009 (UTC)[]

Wrong information

Normally, if there is wrong information, the editor removes or corrects it. However, there is an entire section that is wrong.

Taller man wins? section is wrong. Rather than eliminate it, consider modifying it. I don't want to OR (original research) so someone help me. In short, the section could read:

Multiple sources have proposed that the tallest candidate of the major political party will win the election (then quote many of the bullets as sources).

Note that John Kerry was taller than George Bush and Gerald Ford was taller than Jimmy Carter.

What probably is the case is the taller/handsome man wins. This is because Jimmy Carter, despite his bad teeth, looked better than dinosaur Ford but not as good as Reagan. Kerry looks a bit funny compared to Bush, even if you dislike Bush. However, this paragraph is OR so it can't get into Wikipedia, thank heavens!User F203 (talk) 22:06, 31 July 2009 (UTC)[]

GEORGE WASHINGTON

Washington was at least 6'3", according to every source except Ron Chernow. "George Washington was measured for his clothing at 74 inches in height, or 6'2". Though he complained that his clothes were too small. After his death, he was measured at 6'3" and 1/2 inches tall in his stocking feet. The average height of a man in the 18th century was around 5'7.5", so he was indeed a tall man. George Washington was also of an athletic, powerful build. Also known to have very large hands and feet, blue eyes and reddish brown hair.

Ron Chernow, in his new book Washington: A life, claims Washington be be 6' even. He bases this assumption on orders Washington placed in which he asks for clothing for a man of 6 feet high. However, Washington never seemed satisfied with his clothing and constantly complained that the legs are too short. In addition, we know Thomas Jefferson to be 6' 2 and 1/2" tall and George Washington was known to be taller than Jefferson. As Benjamin Franklin said, (who himself was 6 feet tall) of Washington, 'He was always the tallest man in the room.'" http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_tall_is_George_Washington — Preceding unsigned comment added by FlameHorse (talkcontribs) 22:35, 23 December 2010 (UTC)[]

notabiltiy

this article is nothing but WP:TRIVIA what is enecyclopaedically notable about warranting an article such as this. And EL on the presidentas page would be plenty (anddoubtful there too).(Lihaas (talk) 13:20, 30 December 2010 (UTC)).[]

I think the article is more than just trivia. The belief that the taller presidential candidate has an advantage in elections is widespread, as evidenced by the numerous sources on this issue the article brings up. Whether height actually does play a role in presidential politics is a separate issue, but the fact that it is believed to play one is certainly notable. There are also issues of heightism involved here. Wcp07 (talk) 05:36, 2 January 2011 (UTC)[]
After reading the three archived deletion discussions (linked at the top of this talk page), it is safe to assume that many (if not most) Wikipedia editors consider this article both notable and verifiable. As such, I am removing both tags from the article mainspace. Crisco 1492 (talk) 14:33, 6 February 2011 (UTC)[]

Perception

This article does not address perhaps the most important aspect of its subject: voters' perceptions of height. That is to say, campaigns do not explicitly refer to their candidate's height either directly ("Our candidate is 6' 1" and we believe that this height will permit him to see over the obfuscation of his opponent, Sen. ....") or comparatively ("Our candidate is 4 inches taller than any other candidate in the race, and we believe that this will permit him to ....") or hyperbolically ("Now the tallest candidate ever!") or any other way. At least none that I've seen in the some fifty years that I've been tuned in to political campaigns. If height has any effect on voter choices, it has to come from voter perceptions of height differences. They could get these perhaps through the news, as in a recent NPR report on Tim Pawlenty, which described him as "tall and trim, with a good head of hair...." It had no specifics about height, though. The only clues voters have, then, are the view of candidates with other candidates or with other people whose heights they know, such as local or regional political figures or celebrities. With those perceptions comes some margin of error for estimating the height of a candidate. Can a voter, watching the action from afar at a political event or on television or in a news photo, make a discrimination of 1/2 inch in a candidate's height? Of an inch in a candidate's height? If you give a range of 1/2 inch for discrimination, the table of wins and losses has 19 taller winners rather than 26, 17 shorter winners rather than 19, and 13 of equal height (+/- 1/2 inch margin) rather than 4. If you give a range of 1 inch, the table has 16 taller winners, 16 shorter winners and 17 of equal height (+/- 1 inch margin). In other words, height as a discriminating factor in wins and losses disappears. Whoever wrote this article got caught up in the raw and absolute numbers, and didn't try to interpret them in the human context. MaxwellPerkins (talk) 07:46, 8 May 2011 (UTC)[]

Photos prove the list is wrong

Some photos prove de list is not correct. My points in particular:

  • Ronald Reagan is shorter than Gerald Ford: Image 1, Image 2. I watched recently a documentry on TV in which Ford stood next to Lyndon Johnson, Ford appeared only little shorter than Johnson.

Jerchel (talk) 17:41, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[]

Re Obama and Clinton, it's possible that Clinton's height has decreased with old age. Since the height of each President ideally should be their height at the time when they were in office, Clinton's height of 188 cm could well be accurate for 1992 but not so much for today.
Re Gerald Ford, it's possible he's taller than the 6'0"/183 cm he's listed as; I've seen him listed as 6'1"/185 cm in at least one other source. If we change his height, however, we should attribute his new height to a reliable source. Using photos can cause inaccurate height estimations, as the angle of the shot, the unevenness of the ground and the types of shoes that people are wearing can all affect how they measure up against one another. Wcp07 (talk) 09:00, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[]

Neutrality tag discussion -- where is it?

This article is tagged for potential NPOV, but this discussion page does not seem to have a discussion specifically regarding what is non-neutral. I propose the tag should either be removed, or the editor who applied the tag amplify the reasons here, in this subsection. Reasonable? JoGusto (talk) 10:07, 29 August 2011 (UTC)[]

Agreed. It's been a month since the tag was placed, and there has still been no discussion concerning any neutrality problems in the article. I will wait another week, and if still nothing has been raised, I will remove the tag. Wcp07 (talk) 08:56, 5 September 2011 (UTC)[]

Original Research

I am not sure if a statistical analysis of the correlation between heights and electoral success belongs on Wikipedia. While simple, it does seem to comprise original research. I tagged the relevant section. This point remains open to discussion. Vigormaster (talk) 16:10, 26 October 2011 (UTC)[]

What happened?

On the table showing the presidential elections by height, Theodore Roosevelt is just thrown into the table as an opposing canidate with his height info. Fix please? 71.180.171.44 (talk) 14:32, 5 December 2011 (UTC)[]

The 1912 presidential election was technically a three-way race, which eventually saw Roosevelt, a third party candidate from the Progressive Party, coming in second behind Wilson - and ahead of the incumbent, Taft. — Preceding unsigned comment added by MishaKeats (talkcontribs) 02:56, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]

The currrent article title is very odd

"Heights of presidents and presidential candidates of the United States" is one of the strangest article titles I've ever seen on Wikipedia. ;) The phrase "presidential candidates of the United States" within the title just doesn't make sense. IMO, the most logical title would be "Heights of United States presidents and presidential candidates". Can we change it? Thanks! --76.189.110.167 (talk) 18:40, 20 August 2012 (UTC) 19:33, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]

Bill Clinton's height - Again

I've always remembered Clinton as being taller than George H.W. Bush, and this Washington Post article appears to support my imperfect memory. As does this image (note that Clinton is easily 3 inches taller than the 5'11.5" George W. Bush).
I think Clinton is a strong 6'2.5" - perhaps even a weak 6'3". I'll wait for a week before making any edits.
Thanks. --Misha Atreides (talk) 03:31, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]

I think you're confused Misha. Regarding Clinton and George H.W. Bush, this article and the Washington Post story you linked to both say they are 6'2". The WP story does not say that Clinton is taller than H.W. And the photo you linked to verifies that they're the same height. And the photo also shows Clinton to be about almost 3 inches taller than George W. Bush, but not more. (George W. Bush is leaning a little bit to his right in the photo.) A few sources add or subtract a 1/2 inch from the height of Clinton and George W. Bush., but this article has them at 6'2" and 5'11.5", which is what most sources say. Anyway, regarding Clinton and George H.W. Bush, the WP article you linked to says, "In 1992 Clinton's aides said he was 6 feet 2 1/2 inches tall. That year he beat George Bush, who was 6-2.". Then it says, "None of this ever received the media attention it deserved, but in 1993, once Clinton was safely in office, his doctor reported he was only 6-2. In 1994, the report of his annual physical said he was 6-2 1/2. In 1995, he was back to 6-2." So the bottom line is that Clinton and H.W. are both 6'2". It sounds like the doctors went back and forth on Clinton's height, probably because he's actually 6'2.25", so sometimes they rounded down to 6'2" and sometimes they rounded up to 6'2.5" because they don't do quarter inches. My own doctor's office has been going back and forth on my height for many years; sometimes they include the 1/2 inch, sometimes they don't. Anyway, no edits need to be made to their heights. --76.189.110.167 (talk) 04:55, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]
I'm quite certain that I'm not confused even in the slightest, mate. The WP article on Clinton specifically mentioned, "in 1994, the report of his annual physical said he was 6-2 1/2." Further, in the photograph, George H.W. Bush was slightly shorter than Obama, who is 6'1" (granted age may have something to do with it). In addition, I would like to draw your attention to this report. In case you do not have access to Highbeam, please allow me to quote three pertinent passages concerning George W. Bush.
"The president's six-hour physical was performed at Bethesda Naval Hospital by 14 doctors before Bush flew to Texas for a month-long stay at his ranch."
"A six- page medical statement signed by the doctors said Bush "is in outstanding health and is fit for duty."
"Bush is 72 inches tall without his shoes and weighed 189.75 pounds, down from 194.5 pounds at his physical last year. His body fat is 14.5 percent, down from 19.94 percent last year. His blood pressure was 118 over 74, and his total cholesterol was 170, both within normal ranges."
Not only does this indicate that George W. Bush is in fact, a six footer, it also indirectly dismisses the notion that Clinton is 6'2". So I am now proposing two edits on the page - for George W. Bush and Clinton.
--Misha Atreides (talk) 05:24, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]

♦ Stranger, I find you opposition to the facts most unsettling. I've provided facts to all of my points (which fits my personal recollection, I might add), and you've countered them with your opinions. I thank you for these opinions, and I will take them under consideration while I continue to wait for feedbacks from other editors for another six days. Barring any new facts, I plan to make these edits.
I do not want to repeat myself, or dissect your opinions, so I will just address your final point. The reason I included the extra passages, which I thought was obvious, was to highlight the fact that 14 medical doctors conducted George W. Bush's physical, and signed his medical report, which also stated his height. I think that, in itself, settles the matter. Surely these medical professionals have no reason to collude with Bush's political agenda or public image? --
Misha Atreides (talk) 14:36, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]
♦ Stranger, I can't keep up with your edits. I'll check back in a few hours to see if you've brought up anything new to respond to.--
Misha Atreides (talk) 14:44, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]

  • What did George W. Bush's 2006 and 2007 physicals say his height was? Answer: 5'11.5". Those are the two current sources in the article. I am perplexed as to why you are ignoring these facts. Yes, you provided one source that says he's 6'0", but that was seven years before the other two sources which both say he's 5'11.5". Those are facts, not opinions.
  • And what I've stated are indeed facts based on the sources, not opinions. By saying that you do not want to address (dissect) my counterpoints indicates that you are not interested in having a meaningful discussion about the issues at hand. If that's the case, there's no point in continuing this. And the thing is, I have actually presented all the facts relating to height in the various sources. You, on the other hand, have only presented selected information from those sources and left out parts that do not support your position. Why did you quote about Clinton's height in the 1994 report, but not in the 1993 and 1995 reports? One would clearly have to wonder why you are doing that?
  • Again, the fact that 14 doctors, or even 100 doctors, signed his report is completely irrelevant. First, 14 doctors didn't measure him. (How many people measure you when you go for an exam? And how long does it take?) Second, you're again ignoring the fact that 14 or so doctors also did his exams in 2006 and 2007, yet those reports say he is 5'11.5".
  • The only opinion involved here is looking at that photo and judging who looks taller than whom. But you presented the photo, not me. And it shows Clinton and H.W. to be the same height, and George W. Bush approximately 3 inches shorter than them. In any case, it doesn't matter because I'm sure you understand that we do not use photos in this way to determine encylopedic content. Photos can be very misleading based on how or where someone stands.
  • If you had strong evidence to support your claims and overturn the current sources, I would be happy to agree with your edit proposals. But you do not. I'm sorry. You cannot make any of these edits without strong sources that outweigh the article's current sources, nor without consensus. --76.189.110.167 (talk) 14:52, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]
♦ Goodness. It is so hard to respond to you with your repeated edits. Anyway, are you serious here? 2001 to 2006 represents an additional five years of aging. It is a scientific fact (1, 2) that you lose your height as you age. The fact that I do not wish to engage/dissect your opinions are far from "not interested in having a meaningful discussion about the issues at hand." I just have no interest in trying to argue with your opinions, or your cherry picking of facts. You've demonstrated that opinion-making streak again with your amazing behind-the-scene analysis of how the medical examination of Bush took place, or the irrelevancy of how many doctors signed his medical report. Stick to the facts, and you will have me here all day. In addition (once again, seriously?), no one here wants to use the photo as a reference or to determine the height of these men. It was merely used for comparison/illustrative purpose; surely, surely, you realize that? Moreover, it is not the quantity of the references that matter - it's the verifiability
♦ On a final note, I've found yet another reference on Clinton's height. This time, it's from Pulitzer-winning journalist Bob Woodward, who spent one and a half years in the Clinton White House to research his book, The Agenda. Thisis from page 3 of the book.
"He moved quietly, looking relaxed, a large man, 6 feet 3, with a mop of thick, graying hair that took some of the edge off his boyish self-assurance."
Please take a step back, and relax. You've made your objections clear, and I know nothing I say will change your mind. But don't hijack the thread. If will discourage others from participating if it gets too long - unless of course, you have something new to add? --Misha Atreides (talk) 15:46, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]
Misha, I would ask that you please act in a civil manner. Saying things such as "relax," "You've demonstrated that opinion-making streak again" and "don't hijack the thread" are not civil. You are posting comments directly to me and I will therefore reply to them. I am simply presenting comments based on the sources you provided and the ones that are contained in this article. You cited only the 1994 Clinton height report, whereas I cited the 1993, 1994 and 1995 reports. You also posted the 1999 source showing George W. Bush's height, but did not mention the 2006 and 2007 reports which showed a different height. These actions show that you the one who is actually cherry-picking, not me. I have acknowledged everything that all the sources state. You continue to claim I am making "opinions," but again have chosen not to specifically identify which of my comments you are referring to. The only "opinion" is trying to judge heights in that photo you presented for editors to look at. You gave your opinion that "Clinton is easily 3 inches taller than the 5'11.5" George W. Bush", and I therefore gave my opinion, which disagreed. But as you now acknowledge, we cannot use photos to decide height content. So it's moot. All I have done is read the sources you provided, plus the article's sources, and simply state what they say. Do you believe that Woodward's one claim of Clinton's height is more reliable than Clinton's multiple doctor reports? By the way, the scientific fact of people losing height as they age in no way whatsoever proves that George W. Bush lost height from 2001 to 2006. Is that what you're claiming... that he lost a half-inch of height in those five years? If so, do you have sourced evidence that says he lost height during those five years? If not, it's totally irrelevant. We can only enter verifiable content based on reliable sources. The article's current sources do indeed support the heights given. If you want to encourage other opinions, you can start an RfC. If reliable sources and consensus supports your proposals, then the edits can certainly be made. But you cannot simply delete current, reliable sources that support the heights given in the article. --76.189.110.167 (talk) 16:58, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]
By the way, if you actually believe that GWB lost height during his presidency, are you also saying that all the other presidents lost height during their time in office? If so, then every president on the list should have more than one height listed. In any case, the 2006 and 2007 physicals state the same height (5'11.5"). It doesn't matter why he was that height; only that he actually was that height. We don't deal in speculation when we write content for this encylopedia. --76.189.110.167 (talk) 17:31, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]
Stranger, I find your comment amusing, considering your own earlier patronizing remarks. Be that as it may, I don't plan on responding to you again. I fear my initial assumption of good faith have been taken advantage of. I'm not on any deadline, and I feel six days is more than enough time to solicit the opinions of other editors. Feel free, however, to start an RfC if you so desire. Good day. --MishaKeats (talk) 17:49, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]
I only want what's best for the article and it has never been my intention to be patronizing. Again, you have made an accusation without specifically identifying which of my comments substantiate it. Btw, continually calling me "Stranger" and saying my comments are "amusing" are also things I believe others would consider patronizing. All my comments on this issue are based on the sources you provided, plus the article's sources. Since you are the one that started this discussion and wants to change sourced content, you should also be the one to start an RfC. Either way, you will need reliable sources and consensus before removing the current content. I'd be happy to support you if you can provide this, but you cannot do it unilaterally. --76.189.110.167 (talk) 18:07, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]


Let's stick solely to what sources say...
Sources currently used in the article:
  • Bill Clinton 6’2”, George H.W. Bush 6’2”, George W. Bush 5’11.5” - Kane, Joseph (1993). Facts about the Presidents: A Compilation of Biographical and Historical Information. New York: H. W. Wilson. pp. 344–45. ISBN 0-8242-0845-5.
  • Bill Clinton 6’2” - Sommers, Paul M. (January 2002). "Is Presidential Greatness Related to Height?". The College Mathematics Journal 33 (1): 14–16. doi:10.2307/1558973.
Sources provided by user Misha:
  • “Consider the 1996 presidential election. Approaching that campaign the Clinton White House, so forthright on other issues, began to waffle on the president's height. In 1992 Clinton's aides said he was 6 feet 2 1/2 inches tall. That year he beat George (H.W.) Bush, who was 6-2.” “None of this ever received the media attention it deserved, but in 1993, once Clinton was safely in office, his doctor reported he was only 6-2. In 1994, the report of his annual physical said he was 6-2 1/2. In 1995, he was back to 6-2.” “But Texas Gov. George W. Bush's huge lead in the polls and in fund-raising may get him the nomination before primary voters realize he is only 5-11. His true height may also be clouded somewhat in the public's mind by memories of his father. The elder Bush at 6-2 towered over his 1988 Democratic opponent” The Washington Post August 3, 1999
Newly-found sources:
  • “wikipedia's entry on this misstates Bill Clinton's height, which was measured during official medical exams at 6-foot-2-1/2, making him just a tad taller than George H.W. Bush.” Washington Post October 11, 2007
  • “George H.W. Bush 6ft2 – 188cm, Bill Clinton 6ft2 – 188cm, George W. Bush 5ft11.5 - 182cm” Heightsite.com
  • “President (George W.) Bush can count himself among the more imposing of the heads of government: He's 5'11", and a nice pair of cowboy boots would easily lift him over 6 feet.” ABC News July 5, 2008
--76.189.110.167 (talk) 21:03, 21 August 2012 (UTC)[]
Although there are a few outlier sources showing slightly different heights for these presidents, the clear majority of sources confirm the heights currently stated in the article. The article, with some of the news sources above, now includes six reliable sources to confirm Clinton's height (6'2") AND four cites to confirm George W. Bush's height (5'11.5"). Therefore, these long-standing pieces of content, which are fully and reliably sourced, should not be changed or removed. --76.189.110.167 (talk) 18:29, 22 August 2012 (UTC)[]

Which article title is better?

Which article title is better: (A) "Heights of presidents and presidential candidates of the United States" or (B) "Heights of United States presidents and presidential candidates"? --76.189.110.167 (talk) 19:29, 22 August 2012 (UTC)[]