Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Wednesday, December 11, 2024 77° Today's Paper


Top News

Oldest American, Adele Dunlap, dies at age 114

1/2
Swipe or click to see more

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Adele Dunlap, center, held a maraca on her 114th birthday, on Dec. 12, as she looked towards Kim Bocko, an activities assistant at the Country Arch Care Center in Pittstown, N.J.

2/2
Swipe or click to see more

ASSOCIATED PRESS

In this July 19 file photo, 113-year-old Adele Dunlap, left, talks with Susan Dempster, right, the activities director at the Country Arch Care Center in Pittstown, N.J. Dunlap, a 114-year-old New Jersey woman who was believed to be the oldest person in the U.S., died Sunday at a medical center near Flemington, N.J.

FLEMINGTON, N.J. >> A New Jersey woman who was the oldest American has died at age 114.

Adele Dunlap died Sunday at a hospital near Flemington, according to the Martin Funeral Home.

She became the country’s oldest person in July 2016 following the death of 113-year-old Goldie Michelson, of Worcester, Massachusetts.

A group that tracks long-living people says the oldest known person living in the U.S. now is 113-year-old Delphine Gibson, of Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania.

Dunlap didn’t have an explanation for her longevity, and neither did her children. Asked once how it felt to be the oldest American, Dunlap said, “I don’t feel any different.”

Dunlap was born Dec. 12, 1902, in Newark, though family and caregivers said she often gave a younger age when asked how old she was. The year she was born, Theodore Roosevelt was president, Cuba gained independence from Spain, the second Boer War ended, and the U.S. bought the rights to the Panama Canal from France.

Dunlap taught school before marrying and settling down to raise the couple’s three children. Her husband worked for an insurance company and died in 1963.

“It’s hard to say,” her son, Earl Dunlap, said when his mother became the oldest American. “She never went out jogging or anything like that. She’s not really thin, but she never weighed more than 140 pounds. She smoked, and when my father had his first heart attack, they both stopped. I think she ate anything she wanted.”

Earl Dunlap said his mother wasn’t a drinker but did occasionally enjoy a martini with her husband. Officials at the Country Arch Care Center in Pittstown, where Dunlap first arrived at age 99 ½, described her as a passive participant in daily activities and said she didn’t socialize much. But they said she looked forward to Girl Scouts’ coming to sing Christmas carols.

Leave a Reply