- My great granny watched the Titanic sail from Belfast as a toddler.
Nice try, insurance data broker.
99 years and ten months for my great grandma. She was in fairly good condition, lucid of mind, able to see, hear, and move although she did walk slowly with the aid of a cane.
One of my ancestors fought in the Revolutionary War and died at 107.
I have children entering their teenage years, and my great-grandfather is still alive.
Currently have a great-grandmother at 102. She still lives by herself, with people stopping by and checking on her most days of the week. Someone drives her to a quilting club every week, she doesn’t have the dexterity to sew anymore but lines up tiles for the others lol.
My grampa made it to 104. I think running his store helped.
My partner’s grandmother lived to 104.
Great-grandma reached 100 this year.
I’m counting on reaching longetivity escape velocity and never dying. I’m only half-kidding.
I think my grandad made it to 99 and my grandma to just a bit under that.
94 I think. Mid 80’s is typical for my family, but smoking or drinking was usually a factor.
Great grandpa 96. Grandma 94 (still alive) Mother’s aunt 93.
I don’t know
97