Sarah Knauss

Sarah Knauss

Sarah Knauss at age 119 in 1999
Born Sarah DeRemer Clark
September 24, 1880(1880-09-24)
Hollywood, Pennsylvania, United States
Died December 30, 1999(1999-12-30)
(aged &10000000000000119000000119 years, &1000000000000009700000097 days)
Allentown, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Title America's oldest person
Spouse Abraham Lincoln Knauss
(1878–1965)
Children Kathryn Knauss Sullivan
(1903–2005)
Parents Walter Clark (1849–1934)
Amelia Kreyscher (1857–1926)

Sarah DeRemer Knauss (née Clark; September 24, 1880 – December 30, 1999) was an American supercentenarian considered the world's oldest living person by Guinness World Records from April 16, 1998, the date of the death of 117-year-old Canadian Marie-Louise Meilleur, until her own death. At age 117, she also set the record for the world's oldest "new" title-holder (which corresponds to the highest "valley" on a graph of the oldest living persons over time). Knauss is the second-oldest fully documented person ever, behind Jeanne Calment. She was the last verified living person to have been born before 1885, and the most recent person to reach age 117.[1][2][3][4]

Contents

Biography

Knauss lived her entire life in Pennsylvania. She was born to Walter and Amelia Clark in the small short-lived United States coal-mining town of Hollywood and died in Allentown. In 1901, she married Abraham Lincoln Knauss (December 19, 1878 – March 1, 1965). She was an excellent seamstress and among making table cloths and her own clothes, she, already as a teenager made her own wedding dress. She learned to sew when she was 4 years old. Sarah who was 28 when Henry Ford introduced the Model T in 1908, lived through seven U.S. wars, 23 U.S. Presidents, the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912, aged 31, and Charles Lindbergh's solo flight across the Atlantic, aged 46.

Knauss was an insurance office manager; upon her marriage, she became a homemaker. Her only child, Kathryn Knauss Sullivan (November 17, 1903 – January 21, 2005), who was 96 at the time of Sarah's death and lived to be 101 herself, once explained Knauss' three-digit age by saying: "She's a very tranquil person and nothing fazes her. That's why she's living this long."

In 1995 aged 115, when asked if she enjoyed her long life, Sarah answered matter-of-factly: "I enjoy it because I have my health and I can do things." Her passions were said to be watching golf on television; doing needlepoint; and nibbling on milk chocolate turtles, cashews, and potato chips. "Sarah was an elegant lady and worthy of all the honor and adulation she had received," said Joseph Hess, an Administrator of the Phoebe-Devitt Homes Foundation facility where Knauss lived.

Recognition

At age 116, she was recognized as being the new United States national longevity recordholder, then thought to have been held by Carrie C. White (reportedly 1874–1991). It is now believed that the record should have been held by Lucy Hannah (1875–1993), who died aged 117 years and 248 days in 1993. In any case, Sarah extended the United States longevity record to age 119. Knauss was the second fully validated person in history to reach age 118 and 119 (first being Calment in 1993 and 1994, respectively).

Of her death, state senator Charlie Dent, who had attended her 115th birthday in 1995, said "Mrs. Knauss was an extraordinary woman who pushed the outer limits of longevity. This is a sad occasion, but she certainly had an eventful life." [5]

More than 11 years after her death, her record as the longest lived person in United States has yet to be surpassed; in fact, since Knauss no other person has even reached the age of 117.

Longevity records

See also

References

External links

Preceded by
Marie-Louise Meilleur
Oldest recognized living person
April 16, 1998 – December 30, 1999
Succeeded by
Eva Morris