Lives of a Century

NINE AMERICANS, BORN BEFORE 1900, LOOK BACK ON A CENTURY THAT SPANNED THE DEPRESSION, WORLD WARS, AND THE ADVENT OF AIRPLANES AND AUTOMOBILES.

June 7, 2000

To a large degree, the centenarians in the following pages belong to the Sir Winston Churchill school of aging.

"We are happier in many ways when we are old than when we were young," Churchill said in his later years. "The young sow wild oats. The old grow sage."

The centenarians included here are handpicked "sage growers," beautifully wise as individuals.

They are also splendid representatives of a trend in the United States. The number of centenarians is increasing dramatically. Today, the US Census Bureau puts the figure at around 65,000, up from 36,000 in l990. In 20 years, the number could reach 200,000.

To mark this growing bounty, the Monitor's editors decided to create a collection of portraits of 100-year-olds in photos and words.

Those interviewed - who came from rural and urban backgrounds - shared a sense of humor, much interest in the here-and-now, a strong work ethic, and a refusal to dwell on past hurts or regrets.

By example, the "sage growers" in these pages lead the way into a new century.

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(c) Copyright 2000. The Christian Science Publishing Society