Travelers' Century Club

The Travelers' Century Club, or TCC, is a club for people who have visited 100 or more of the world's countries and territories.

Travelers' Century Club
MottoWorld travel: The passport to peace through understanding
Founded1954
Location
Members
1,400+
Websitetravelerscenturyclub.org

The organization was founded in California in 1954 and now has more than 1,400 members throughout the world.[2] The club has twenty regional chapters in the U.S., two in Canada, and one each in the UK, Germany, and Spain.[3] It holds regular meetings and provides other tools for social networking.[4]

Membership eligibility and the list

The TCC maintains a list of countries and territories by which initial membership and milestone recognition is determined. The list includes not only sovereign states but also certain territories, exclaves and island groups. As of December 2019, the list contains 329 such countries and territories. The club literature notes that "although some are not actually countries in their own right, they have been included because they are removed from the parent country",[5] based on rules established in 1970.[6] The designation of what qualifies to be on the list is very roughly based on the amateur radio DXCC award criteria for working 100 "entities."

The club has no requirements as to how long the traveler must have stayed in a country to qualify. Anyone who has visited 100 or more of the places on the list is eligible to join.

Records

  • By 2018, twenty-four members had visited every place on the list. John Clouse, from Evansville, Indiana, was the first to travel to all of the organization's listed countries and was recognized by the 1995 Guinness World Records as "the world's most traveled man" taking the title from another TCC Club member Parke G. Thompson.[1][7][8]
  • The youngest to join the club was Lani Shea, whose parents Jeff and Novita from Novato, California, reported that she reached her 100th country at an age of two years and eight months. She also set a new Guinness World Record under the category of "Youngest person to travel to all seven continents", accomplished in December 2003 when she was two years and 307 days. The record is currently held by Vaidehi Thirrupathy.[9]
  • Indy Nelson from Hayward, California in 2017 became the youngest person, at 24, to visit all sovereign countries, having visited all 193 UN member states in 539 days.[10]

Controversies

In 2004, club member Charles Veley was featured in the UK's The Daily Telegraph[11] as the new holder of the Guinness world record for World's Most Travelled Man, but this was never reflected in the Guinness Book of World Records. Instead Guinness retired the category citing lack of an objective standard for the title.[12][13] Some world travelers dispute Veley's claim to be the new World's Most Traveled Man.[7][14]

Notable members

References

  1. "History of the Travelers' Century Club". Travelers' Century Club. Retrieved 26 October 2017.
  2. Stachiew, Mark (5 December 2012). "Checking off your bucket list may help you earn membership in the Travelers' Century Club". Postmedia News. Archived from the original on 6 August 2013.
  3. "TCC Chapters". Travelers' Century Club.
  4. "TCC Forum". Travelers' Century Club.
  5. "List of TCC Countries". Travelers' Century Club.
  6. "TCC Rules for Determining Country & Territory Status". Travelers' Century Club.
  7. Page, David (September 2009). "The Battle to be the World's Most Traveled Man". Men's Journal. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  8. "Youngest Person to Visit all Seven Continents". Guinness Records. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  9. Thomas, Gregory (1 August 2020). "Bay Area 'speed travelers' are in a fight to claim their Guinness world records". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  10. Fogle, Ben (8 March 2004). "The one million dollar travelling man". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 26 May 2010.
  11. Stein, Eliot (5 June 2013). "Charles Veley: The World's Most Traveled Man?". Washintonian. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  12. Guinness Book of World Records - all years up to and including 2007.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.