Simon Hattenstone on the life of Gordon Stewart, an extreme hoarder | Society | The Guardian
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')ore stories crop up in the papers about lonely people dying alone, surrounded by their own rubbish. In the same month Stewart dies, we learn about Tony Baxter, 85, from Pinner, who emptied his neighbours' rubbish into his home each week; Joan Cunnane, 77, who was crushed in her Stockport home under 16 years' worth of unopened goods she had bought; and 89-year-old Harold Carr, who hoarded mountains of memorabilia, including a 1937 Bugatti Type 57S Atalante, one of only 17 ever made, which sold for £3.2m at Bonhams' RetroMobile auction in Paris last month. Recently, research carried out by Hammonds Furniture concluded that Britain was a nation of hoarders - the average person accumulates more than a tonne of unwanted stuff, and a quarter of the population said they had been forced to stop using a room because it was so full of stored possessions.
Of course, Gordon Stewart wasn't alone. His hobby/obsession/condition is common enough to have a number of names: compulsive hoarding syndrome, disposophobia, Diogenes syndrome, Collyer brothers syndrome. The disposophobia website states that "disposophobics are generally very smart people who can't, don't or won't make fast value judgments about their 'stuff', so their solution is to keep everything". The Collyer brothers, Homer and Langley, are the most famous disposophobics in history - films have been made about them and books written. They were born in the 1880s, the sons of an eminent Manhattan gynaecologist. After university, they started to hoard and withdrew from the world. The more I find out about them, the more eerie I find the comparisons with Stewart: like him, they collected books and newspapers, and went on from there. Like him, they couldn't, or wouldn't, let anyone in, stacked stuff from floor to ceiling and burrowed their way through tunnels. Like him, they had long hair and are thought to have died of malnutrition.





I did draw the line with the rooms full off empty boxes.






