Los Angeles Times

Oldest person in U.S. dies at 114

- news.obits@latimes.com

Lessie Brown said it was God’s will she had lived so long when she celebrated her birthday last year.

Lessie Brown, a 114year-old Ohio woman who was believed to be the oldest person in the United States, died Tuesday, her grandson said.

Brown, who had been living with one of her daughters, died at home in Cleveland Heights, Ronald Wilson said.

Brown said in 2013 it was God’s will that she had lived so long. Others in her family attributed her long life to the fact that she ate a sweet potato nearly every day until she was well past 100.

“Oh, I don’t know. A lot of them say it’s because I ate a lot of sweet potatoes, but I don’t think that’s it. I don’t know, God’s will,” she told WJW-TV when she celebrated her 109th birthday.

Brown was born in 1904 in Georgia and grew up on a farm near Stockbridg­e, outside Atlanta. She was one of 12 children and moved to Cleveland with her family when she was 18.

She married about four years later and had three girls and two boys. Her husband, Robert Brown, died in 1991. She attended Emmanuel Baptist Church in Cleveland for more than 70 years.

Brown’s daughter Verline Wilson told Cleveland.com that her mother responded, “That’s good,” when she told her in May 2018 that she was the country’s oldest person after the May 9, 2018, death of 114-year-old Delphine Gibson of Huntingdon, Pa.

With Brown’s death, the oldest living American is now believed to be Alelia Murphy, 113, of New York state, according to the Gerontolog­y Research Group. The world’s oldest person is believed to be 116-year-old Kane Tanaka, a Japanese woman.

Brown turned 114 in September and celebrated the milestone with two of her daughters and grandchild­ren.

Brown’s funeral will be at Emmanuel Baptist, but arrangemen­ts have not been finalized, said Rhonda Pope, the church’s administra­tive assistant.

 ?? David Petkiewicz Associated Press ?? WELL PAST THE CENTURY MARK Lessie Brown, right, here with family members at her Ohio home, said it was God’s will she lived so long.
David Petkiewicz Associated Press WELL PAST THE CENTURY MARK Lessie Brown, right, here with family members at her Ohio home, said it was God’s will she lived so long.

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