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|birthplace=Shelby County, Indiana, USA
 
|birthplace=Shelby County, Indiana, USA
 
|deathyr=2008
 
|deathyr=2008
|deathplace=Indiana, USA
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|deathplace=Shelbyville, Indiana, USA
|sort = Parker, Edna}}
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|sort = Parker, Edna
'''Edna Scott Parker'''<ref>[http://www.in.gov/newsroom.htm?detailContent=125_6131.htm&backEnabled=true Governor meets with country's two oldest, both Hoosiers]</ref> (April 20, [[1893]] &ndash; November 26, 2008) was an [[United States|American]] [[supercentenarian]] and, until her death, was recognized as the [[oldest people|oldest person in the world]] following the death of [[Yone Minagawa]] of Japan on August 13, 2007.<ref name="Minagawa">[http://www.japannewsreview.com/society/kyushu/kyushu/20070814page_id=1438 World's oldest person, Yone Minagawa, dies at 114] - [[Japan News Review]].</ref> She assumed the title at age 114 years, 115 days. Parker became [[Indiana]]'s oldest living person on April 7, 2005 (age 111 years, 352 days) (following the death of then almost-112-year-old Minnie Kearby, who was just six days older at the time) and [[list of oldest people by U.S. state|the state's all-time recordholder]] on January 19, 2007 (age 113 years, 274 days), surpassing [[Mary Parr]]. She became the oldest living American on February 14, 2007 (age 113 years, 300 days), following the death of then fellow 113-year-old [[Corinne Dixon Taylor]] of [[Washington, D.C.]]<ref name="GRG">[http://www.grg.org/Adams/E.HTM Validated Living Supercentenarians]</ref> At the time of her death, Parker was listed as one of the 15 [[list of the verified oldest people|longest lived people ever]].
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}}'''Edna Ruth Parker'''<ref>[http://www.in.gov/newsroom.htm?detailContent=125_6131.htm&backEnabled=true Governor meets with country's two oldest, both Hoosiers]</ref> (née '''Scott'''; 20 April 1893 – 26 November 2008) was a validated American [[supercentenarian]] and, until her death, was recognized as the oldest living person in the world following the death of [[Yone Minagawa]] of Japan on 13 August 2007.<ref name="Minagawa">[http://www.japannewsreview.com/society/kyushu/kyushu/20070814page_id=1438 World's oldest person, Yone Minagawa, dies at 114] - Japan News Review.</ref> She assumed the title at age 114 years, 115 days. Parker became Indiana's oldest living person on 7 April 2005 at age 111 years, 352 days (following the death of then almost-112-year-old [[Minnie Kearby]], who was just six days older at the time) and the state's all-time recordholder on 19 January 2007 (aged 113 years, 274 days), surpassing [[Mary Parr]]. She became the oldest living American on 14 February 2007 (aged 113 years, 300 days), following the death of fellow 113-year-old [[Corinne Dixon Taylor]] of Washington, D.C.<ref name="GRG">[http://www.grg.org/Adams/E.HTM Validated Living Supercentenarians]</ref> At the time of her death, Parker was listed as one of the 15 [[Oldest Validated supercentenarians All-Time|longest-lived people ever]].
   
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
Parker was born on a farm in Shelby County, Indiana, near Bengal in Hendricks township and raised eating a typical farm diet of meat and starch. She attended Franklin High School, then took classes at [[Franklin College]] to obtain a teaching certificate. Parker taught at a two-room schoolhouse in [[Smithland, Indiana|Smithland]] for two years, until she married her next door neighbor, Earl Parker, on April 12, 1913.<ref>Source Citation: Title: Shelby County, Indiana, Index To Marriage Record 1856 - 1920 Inclusive Vol, W. P. A. Original Record Located: County Clerk's O; Book: 21;Page: 243</ref> Earl died on February 23, 1939. They had two sons, Clifford and Earl Jr.<ref>1920 US Census; Place: Needham, Johnson, Indiana; Roll: T625_442; Page: 4B; Enumeration District: 138; Image: 133.</ref>, both of whom she outlived.<ref name="Indy">{{cite news|title=Indiana Woman Now World's Oldest Person|date=2007-08-14|url=http://www.theindychannel.com/family/13886143/detail.html}}</ref> As of April 2008, she had five grandchildren, fourteen great-grandchildren and thirteen great-great-grandchildren. Her two sisters also are deceased; Georgia lived to be 99, while her sister Opal was 88 when she died.
+
Parker was born on a farm in Shelby County, Indiana, near Bengal in Hendricks township and raised eating a typical farm diet of meat and starch. She attended Franklin High School, then took classes at Franklin College to obtain a teaching certificate. Parker taught at a two-room schoolhouse in Smithland, Indiana, for 2 years, until she married her next door neighbor, Earl Parker, on 12 April 1913.<ref>Shelby County, Indiana, Index To Marriage Record 1856 - 1920 Inclusive Vol, W. P. A. Original Record Located: County Clerk's O; Book: 21;Page: 243</ref> Earl died on February 23, 1939. They had two sons, Clifford and Earl Jr.<ref>1920 US Census; Place: Needham, Johnson, Indiana; Roll: T625_442; Page: 4B; Enumeration District: 138; Image: 133.</ref>, both of whom she outlived.<ref name="Indy">[http://www.theindychannel.com/family/13886143/detail.html Indiana Woman Now World's Oldest Person] TheIndyChannel 14 August 2007</ref> As of April 2008, she had five grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren and 13 great-great-grandchildren. Her two sisters also are deceased; Georgia lived to be 99, while her sister Opal was 88 when she died.
   
 
===Later years===
 
===Later years===
Parker lived alone on a farm on Blueridge Road after her husband had died when she was 45. She remained there until age 100, when, still in very strong health, she moved in with one of her sons. One winter night, she was left alone while her son and his wife went to a basketball game. When they returned, she was in the back yard, unconscious, in the snow, and visible in the poor light only because she was wearing her favorite red sweater. Her family feared her death, but medics arrived and she made a full recovery except for only mild injuries. Afterwards it was decided that she needed to move to a nursing home.<ref name ="Shelbynews">[http://www.shelbynews.com/main.asp?SectionID=1&SubSectionID=93&ArticleID=55039&TM=54564.66 Denied:1up! Software]</ref>
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Parker lived alone on a farm on Blueridge Road after her husband had died when she was 45. She remained there until age 100, when, still in very strong health, she moved in with one of her sons. One winter night, she was left alone while her son and his wife went to a basketball game. When they returned, she was in the back yard, unconscious, in the snow, and visible in the poor light only because she was wearing her favorite red sweater. Her family feared her death, but medics arrived and she made a full recovery except for only mild injuries. Afterwards it was decided that she needed to move to a nursing home.
   
 
===Final years===
 
===Final years===
Until her death, Parker lived at Heritage House Convalescent Center, a retirement community in [[Shelbyville, Indiana]]. In April 2007, at the age of 114, she met with the second-oldest Indiana inhabitant and then fifth-oldest living person in the world, [[Bertha Fry]]. Fry, who lived in [[Muncie, Indiana|Muncie]], was 113 at the time, which set the highest combined age for a meeting of two supercentenarians, at 227 years and 142 days. Parker lived in the same home as [[Sandy Allen]], the tallest living woman verified by ''[[Guinness World Records]]'', until Allen's death on August 13, 2008.<ref>[http://www.shelbynews.com/main.asp?Search=1&ArticleID=47473&SectionID=1&SubSectionID=&S=1 Governor pays weekend visit to honor Edna's 114th birthday]</ref> Parker enjoyed reading and reciting poetry, especially the works of [[James Whitcomb Riley]], and according to family liked to quote his poetry to visitors.<ref name ="Shelbynews"/> She read the newspaper every day, enjoyed cards from well-wishers, and often sent autographs to people asking for them. In 2007, she received a letter from President [[George W. Bush]] on her 114th birthday, who thanked her for "sharing her wisdom and experiences" with younger generations.<ref name ="Shelbynews"/> Also at that time, she was given the key to the city of Shelbyville from the Mayor, and was visited by the state Governor and Senator.
+
Until her death, Parker lived at Heritage House Convalescent Center, a retirement community in Shelbyville, Indiana. In April 2007, at the age of 114, she met with the second-oldest Indiana inhabitant and then-fifth-oldest living person in the world, [[Bertha Fry]]. Fry, who lived in Muncie, Indiana, was 113 at the time, which set the highest combined age for a meeting of two supercentenarians, at 227 years and 142 days. Parker lived in the same home as Sandy Allen, the tallest living woman verified by Guinness World Records, until Allen's death on 13 August 2008. Parker enjoyed reading and reciting poetry, especially the works of James Whitcomb Riley, and according to family liked to quote his poetry to visitors. She read the newspaper every day, enjoyed cards from well-wishers, and often sent autographs to people asking for them. In 2007, she received a letter from President George W. Bush on her 114th birthday, who thanked her for "sharing her wisdom and experiences" with younger generations. Also at that time, she was given the key to the city of Shelbyville from the Mayor, and was visited by the state Governor and Senator.
   
The Heritage House Convalescent Center planned two separate birthday parties to celebrate her 115th birthday. At each one they released one hundred fifteen multicolored balloons, because she enjoyed watching balloons float into the sky. The public celebration was on April 18, 2008, while the private family one was on April 20, 2008, her actual birthday. She was one of only twenty-one [[List of the verified oldest people|people validated]] to have reached 115 years of age.
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The Heritage House Convalescent Center planned two separate birthday parties to celebrate her 115th birthday. At each one, they released 115 multicolored balloons, because she enjoyed watching balloons float into the sky. The public celebration was on 18 April 2008, while the private family one was on 20 April 2008, her actual birthday. She was one of only 21 [[Oldest Validated supercentenarians All-Time|people validated]] to have reached 115 years of age at the time.
   
On May 20, 2008, one of four peregrine falcon chicks nesting atop of a downtown Indianapolis high rise was named after Edna. A live nest cam of this bird and family is available on the Indy Star Falcon Blog.<ref name="falconcam">{{cite news|title=Peregrine Falcon Named in Honor of Edna Parker|date=2007-08-14|url=http://blogs.indystar.com/falconblog/}}</ref> A [[video clip]] of the naming announcement during banding day is available on [[YouTube]].<ref name="bandingday">{{cite news|title=Banding Day on YouTube|date=2007-08-14|url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHKt83SzCHA}}</ref>
+
On 20 May 2008, one of four peregrine falcon chicks nesting atop of a downtown Indianapolis high rise was named after Edna. A live nest cam of this bird and family is available on the Indy Star Falcon Blog.<ref name="falconcam">[http://blogs.indystar.com/falconblog Peregrine Falcon Named in Honor of Edna Parker] Falcons Blog</ref> A video clip of the naming announcement during banding day is available on YouTube.
   
Parker died at a nursing home in Indiana, on November 26, 2008, at age 115 years, 220 days.<ref>[http://news.aol.com/article/worlds-oldest-person-dies-at-115/262048]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7753764.stm]</ref>
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Parker died at a nursing home in Indiana, on 26 November 2008, at age 115 years, 220 days<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7753764.stm World's oldest person dies at 115] BBC News. 28 November 2008</ref>
   
She was buried in Shelbyville's Miller Cemetery. {{Fact|date= November 2008}}.
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She was buried in Shelbyville's Miller Cemetery.
  +
  +
==Gallery==
  +
<gallery>
  +
Edna Parker and Sandy Allen.jpg|Edna Parker, the oldest living person in the world and Sandy Allen, the tallest living woman in the world.
  +
Edna Parker and Bertha Fry.jpg|Edna Parker (seated right) at 114 and [[Bertha Fry]] at 113 (seated left) being honored by [[Guinness World Records]].
  +
Edna Parker’s 115th.webp|Edna Parker on her 115th birthday in 2008.
  +
Edna Parker Oct2008.jpeg|Edna Parker on 8 October 2008, at the age of 115.
  +
</gallery>
   
 
==References==
 
==References==
  +
*[http://www.grg.org/SC/SCindex.html Gerontology Research Group]
{{reflist}}
 
   
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Verified supercentenarians]]
 
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{{titleholders-oldest-living}}
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{{Titleholders-oldest-living-woman}}
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{{Titleholders-oldest-living-American}}
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[[pt-br:Edna Parker]]
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[[Category:WOPs]]
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[[Category:Indiana births]]
  +
[[Category:Indiana deaths]]
  +
[[Category:US State and Territorial Longevity Recordholders]]
  +
[[Category:United States births]]
  +
[[Category:United States deaths]]
  +
[[Category:Deceased people]]

Revision as of 00:19, 25 February 2022

Edna Parker
Edna Parker
Birth: 20 April 1893
Shelby County, Indiana, USA
Death: 26 November 2008
Shelbyville, Indiana, USA
Age: 115 years, 220 days
Country: United StatesUSA
Validated

Edna Ruth Parker[1] (née Scott; 20 April 1893 – 26 November 2008) was a validated American supercentenarian and, until her death, was recognized as the oldest living person in the world following the death of Yone Minagawa of Japan on 13 August 2007.[2] She assumed the title at age 114 years, 115 days. Parker became Indiana's oldest living person on 7 April 2005 at age 111 years, 352 days (following the death of then almost-112-year-old Minnie Kearby, who was just six days older at the time) and the state's all-time recordholder on 19 January 2007 (aged 113 years, 274 days), surpassing Mary Parr. She became the oldest living American on 14 February 2007 (aged 113 years, 300 days), following the death of fellow 113-year-old Corinne Dixon Taylor of Washington, D.C.[3] At the time of her death, Parker was listed as one of the 15 longest-lived people ever.

Biography

Parker was born on a farm in Shelby County, Indiana, near Bengal in Hendricks township and raised eating a typical farm diet of meat and starch. She attended Franklin High School, then took classes at Franklin College to obtain a teaching certificate. Parker taught at a two-room schoolhouse in Smithland, Indiana, for 2 years, until she married her next door neighbor, Earl Parker, on 12 April 1913.[4] Earl died on February 23, 1939. They had two sons, Clifford and Earl Jr.[5], both of whom she outlived.[6] As of April 2008, she had five grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren and 13 great-great-grandchildren. Her two sisters also are deceased; Georgia lived to be 99, while her sister Opal was 88 when she died.

Later years

Parker lived alone on a farm on Blueridge Road after her husband had died when she was 45. She remained there until age 100, when, still in very strong health, she moved in with one of her sons. One winter night, she was left alone while her son and his wife went to a basketball game. When they returned, she was in the back yard, unconscious, in the snow, and visible in the poor light only because she was wearing her favorite red sweater. Her family feared her death, but medics arrived and she made a full recovery except for only mild injuries. Afterwards it was decided that she needed to move to a nursing home.

Final years

Until her death, Parker lived at Heritage House Convalescent Center, a retirement community in Shelbyville, Indiana. In April 2007, at the age of 114, she met with the second-oldest Indiana inhabitant and then-fifth-oldest living person in the world, Bertha Fry. Fry, who lived in Muncie, Indiana, was 113 at the time, which set the highest combined age for a meeting of two supercentenarians, at 227 years and 142 days. Parker lived in the same home as Sandy Allen, the tallest living woman verified by Guinness World Records, until Allen's death on 13 August 2008. Parker enjoyed reading and reciting poetry, especially the works of James Whitcomb Riley, and according to family liked to quote his poetry to visitors. She read the newspaper every day, enjoyed cards from well-wishers, and often sent autographs to people asking for them. In 2007, she received a letter from President George W. Bush on her 114th birthday, who thanked her for "sharing her wisdom and experiences" with younger generations. Also at that time, she was given the key to the city of Shelbyville from the Mayor, and was visited by the state Governor and Senator.

The Heritage House Convalescent Center planned two separate birthday parties to celebrate her 115th birthday. At each one, they released 115 multicolored balloons, because she enjoyed watching balloons float into the sky. The public celebration was on 18 April 2008, while the private family one was on 20 April 2008, her actual birthday. She was one of only 21 people validated to have reached 115 years of age at the time.

On 20 May 2008, one of four peregrine falcon chicks nesting atop of a downtown Indianapolis high rise was named after Edna. A live nest cam of this bird and family is available on the Indy Star Falcon Blog.[7] A video clip of the naming announcement during banding day is available on YouTube.

Parker died at a nursing home in Indiana, on 26 November 2008, at age 115 years, 220 days[8]

She was buried in Shelbyville's Miller Cemetery.

Gallery

References

  1. Governor meets with country's two oldest, both Hoosiers
  2. World's oldest person, Yone Minagawa, dies at 114 - Japan News Review.
  3. Validated Living Supercentenarians
  4. Shelby County, Indiana, Index To Marriage Record 1856 - 1920 Inclusive Vol, W. P. A. Original Record Located: County Clerk's O; Book: 21;Page: 243
  5. 1920 US Census; Place: Needham, Johnson, Indiana; Roll: T625_442; Page: 4B; Enumeration District: 138; Image: 133.
  6. Indiana Woman Now World's Oldest Person TheIndyChannel 14 August 2007
  7. Peregrine Falcon Named in Honor of Edna Parker Falcons Blog
  8. World's oldest person dies at 115 BBC News. 28 November 2008


World's Oldest Living Person Titleholders (VE)

Betsy BakerJennie HowellMarie CarstensonNancy RyanChristina Karnebeek-Backs • Marie Olsen • Mary Kelly • Elizabeth Kensley • William Fullingim • Hannah Smith • John Mosley Turner • Johanna Booysen • Marie Bernatkova • Ada Roe • Josefa Salas Mateo • Alice Stevenson • Elizabeth Watkins • Mito Umeta • Niwa Kawamoto • Sophia DeMuth • Marie-Virginie Duhem • Fannie Thomas • Augustine Tessier • Nellie Spencer • Emma WilsonAugusta Holtz • Mary McKinney • Anna Eliza Williams • Florence Knapp • Jeanne Calment • Marie-Louise Meilleur • Sarah Knauss • Eva Morris • Marie Bremont • Maud Farris-Luse • Grace Clawson • Adelina Domingues • Mae Harrington • Yukichi Chuganji • Mitoyo Kawate • Ramona Trinidad Iglesias-Jordan • Maria Capovilla • Elizabeth Bolden • Emiliano Mercado del Toro • Emma Tillman • Yone Minagawa • Edna Parker • Maria de Jesus • Gertrude Baines • Kama Chinen • Eugenie Blanchard • Maria Gomes Valentim • Besse Cooper • Dina Manfredini • Jiroemon Kimura • Misao Okawa • Gertrude Weaver • Jeralean Talley • Susannah Mushatt Jones • Emma Morano • Violet BrownNabi Tajima • Chiyo MiyakoKane TanakaLucile RandonMaria Branyas Morera


World's Oldest Living Woman Titleholders (VE)

Betsy BakerJennie HowellMarie CarstensonNancy RyanChristina Karnebeek-Backs • Marie Olsen • Mary Kelly • Elizabeth Kensley • Auguste Pahl • Hannah Smith • Yoshigiku Ito • Johanna Booysen • Marie Bernatkova • Ada Roe • Josefa Salas Mateo • Alice Stevenson • Elizabeth Watkins • Mito Umeta • Niwa Kawamoto • Sophia DeMuth • Marie-Virginie Duhem • Fannie Thomas • Augustine Tessier • Nellie Spencer • Emma Wilson • Augusta Holtz • Mary McKinney • Anna Eliza Williams • Florence Knapp • Jeanne Calment • Marie-Louise Meilleur • Sarah Knauss • Eva Morris • Marie Bremont • Maud Farris-Luse • Grace Clawson • Adelina Domingues • Mae Harrington • Mitoyo Kawate • Ramona Trinidad Iglesias-Jordan • Maria Capovilla • Elizabeth Bolden • Julie Winnefred Bertrand • Emma Tillman • Yone Minagawa • Edna Parker • Maria de Jesus • Gertrude Baines • Kama Chinen • Eugenie Blanchard • Maria Gomes Valentim • Besse Cooper • Dina Manfredini • Koto Okubo • Misao Okawa • Gertrude Weaver • Jeralean Talley • Susannah Mushatt Jones • Emma Morano • Violet Brown • Nabi Tajima • Chiyo MiyakoKane TanakaLucile RandonMaria Branyas Morera


United States' Oldest Living Person Titleholders (VE)

Clarida RoyMary BittlebrunSophia DeMuthFannie ThomasNellie Spencer • Emma WilsonAugusta Holtz • Mary McKinney • Florence Knapp • Orpha NusbaumDelphia WelfordMargaret SkeeteWilhelmina Kott • Georgia Ella JordanSarah Knauss • Myrtle Dorsey • Maud Farris-LuseGrace Clawson • Adelina Domingues • Mae Harrington • Mary Christian • Elena Slough • Charlotte Benkner • Emma Verona Johnston • Elizabeth Bolden • Emma TillmanCorinne Dixon Taylor • Edna Parker • Gertrude Baines • Mary Josephine Ray • Neva Morris • Eunice Sanborn • Besse Cooper • Dina Manfredini • Gertrude Weaver • Jeralean Talley • Susannah Mushatt Jones • Goldie Michelson • Adele DunlapDelphine GibsonOphelia BurksLessie BrownAlelia MurphyHester FordThelma SutcliffeBessie HendricksEdie CeccarelliElizabeth Francis