Walter Breuning
Walter Breuning | |
---|---|
Born | (age 128 years, 59 days) Melrose, Minnesota, United States | September 21, 1896
Occupation | Former railroader |
Title | World's oldest living man since July 18, 2009
One of the 100 longest lived people ever since June 12, 2010 One of the ten verified oldest men ever since June 23, 2010 |
Spouse(s) | Agnes C Breuning (née Twokey) (1922-1957) (her death) |
Children | None |
Parent(s) | John Breuning (1864(65)-1915) Cora Mae Morehouse (1870(71)-1917) |
Walter Breuning (born September 21, 1896) is an American supercentenarian. At the age of 128 years, 59 days, he is currently the 4th oldest verified person in the world after the death of Florrie Baldwin on May 8, 2010. He has been the oldest living man in the world since July 18, 2009, and the last known surviving man who was born in 1896. On his 110th birthday, Breuning was declared the oldest living retired railroader in the United States. The governor of Montana, Brian Schweitzer, and the city mayor attended his celebration. Since the death of Garland Adair on December 11, 2009, he and Jiroemon Kimura are the last two verified males who are still alive today who were born before the year 1900. Breuning is the oldest undisputed American-born man ever, and is currently the 7th oldest man ever.
Family
Walter Breuning was born in Melrose, Minnesota. He is the son of John Breuning and Cora Morehouse Breuning, and had two brothers and two sisters.[1] In 1901, his family moved to De Smet, South Dakota where he went to school for nine years until his family broke up in 1910. He married his wife Agnes, a telegraph operator (from Butte Montana), in 1922, and was married to her until her death in 1957. They had no children and Walter never married again stating that "Second marriages never work, even first marriages don't work today.”[2] Longevity runs in Bruening's family. His paternal grandparents lived into their 90s, and three of his siblings siblings lived to ages 85, 91 and 100. Another brother died at age 78.[3]
Career
In 1910, when Breuning dropped out of school, he began scraping bakery pans for $2.50 weekly.[4] He joined the Great Northern Railway in 1913, working for it for over fifty years. In an interview, he stated that he was paid $2.50 per week. During his early years, Breuning commented that he would have to hide from owner James J. Hill, as Hill didn't want any railroad employees under the age of 18 (Breuning was first hired in 1913, at age 17).[5] Breuning worked for the Great Northern Railway until age 66, and was also a manager/secretary for the local Shriner's club until age 99.[6] During World War I, he signed up for military service, but was never called up. When World War II broke out, he was too old to serve.
In Later years
Having lived at the Rainbow Retirement and Assisted Living Center in Great Falls, Montana for the last 30 years,[7] Breuning is in excellent health, even after a lifelong habit of smoking cigars, completely quitting in 1999.[8] He is able to walk and eats two meals a day. He still maintains a sharp mind and accurate memory. For example, he can remember his grandfather talking about his experiences in the American Civil War when he was three years old, and remembers the day President William McKinley was shot as the day "I got my first haircut".[9] He has no prescription medications, but does take one baby aspirin every day. In November 2007, at the age of 111, Breuning was fitted with hearing aids.
The week before his 113th birthday in September 2009, Breuning had fallen and bruised his scalp, but was otherwise unhurt. [10]
On his 112th birthday, Breuning said the secret to long life is being active: "[if] you keep your mind busy and keep your body busy, you're going to be around a long time."[7]
Currently, Breuning still dresses himself in a suit and tie every day. In a recent interview, Breuning said, "Every day I exercise. Every morning I do all my exercises."[11]
Longevity records
- On September 23, 2006, Breuning, aged 110 years 2 days, moved into Gerontology Research Group list for Guinness World Records.
- On December 27, 2008, George Francis died, and Breuning, aged 112 years 97 days, became the oldest verified man in the United States.
- On July 18, 2009, Henry Allingham died, and Breuning, aged 112 years 300 days, became the oldest verified man in the world.
- On June 12, 2010, Breuning, aged 113 years 264 days, moved into the top 100 longest lived people ever.
- On June 23, 2010, Breuning, aged 113 years 275 days, became one of the 10 verified oldest men ever.
- On August 23, 2010, Breuning, aged 113 years 336 days, surpassed Moses Hardy and became the 8th oldest man ever.
- On September 11, 2010, Breuning, aged 113 years 355 days, surpassed Fred Hale to become the oldest undisputed American-born male ever.
Events
On February 16, 2009, Breuning made an appearance on the News Hour with Jim Lehrer giving his views about the current state of the economy and the newly elected president. Breuning claimed that the first President he ever voted for was Woodrow Wilson, and that the most memorable news item he ever heard about in his life was the Stock market crash of 1929. He also described life during the Great Depression. [12]
On April 24, 2009, Breuning was the focus of a segment done by Steve Hartman's "Assignment America" on the CBS Evening News.[13] On September 21, 2009, Breuning was the focus of another such segment.[14] During his 113th birthday celebrations, Breuning said: "Remember that life's length is not measured by its hours and days, but by that which we have done therein. A useless life is short if it lasts a century. There are greater and better things in us all, if we would find them out. There will always be in this world - wrongs. No wrong is really successful. The day will come when light and truth and the just and the good shall be victorious and wrong as evil will be no more forever."
The BNSF Railway named the west end of its new Broadview Subdivision, where it meets the ex-Great Northern Laurel Subdivision near Broadview, Montana, Walter Junction after Breuning. He was present at the dedication of the new line, which serves the Signal Peak Mine, on September 2, 2009.[15]
On February 25, 2010, Breuning was honored by Montana Ambassadors for shining spotlight on the state of Montana.[16]
See also
- List of supercentenarians from the United States
- List of the oldest living men
- List of the verified oldest men
- List of the verified oldest people
- List of living supercentenarians
- List of oldest living people by nation
- List of oldest people by nation
References
- ^ Twelfth Census of the United States, United States census, 1900; Melrose, Stearns, Minnesota; roll T623 792, page 16A, line 33. Retrieved on July 25, 2009.
- ^ Hartman, Steve (September 21, 2009). "Oldest Man's 113th Birthday". CBS. Retrieved April 13, 2010.
- ^ http://www.greatfallstribune.com/article/20100919/NEWS01/9190301
- ^ Great Falls Tribune tribute site
- ^ Railroad Retiree is Nation's Oldest Living Man, BNSF News, January 8, 2009
- ^ http://www.greatfallstribune.com/multimedia/breuning2/page17.html
- ^ a b Man, 112, says secret to long life is being active
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l_DHLvmKt7A&feature=related
- ^ CBS-interview
- ^ http://www.life.com/image/91007672
- ^ http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=12334015&autostart=y
- ^ The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, February 16, 2009
- ^ America's Oldest Man Keeps Rolling
- ^ Revisiting the Most Senior of Sr. Citizens
- ^ Andy Cummings, Trains (magazine), For BNSF a new coal shipper, December 2009, p. 9
- ^ http://www.greatfallstribune.com/article/20100225/NEWS01/2250311=.asx
External links
- Walter Breuning, 33° Scottish Rite Freemason, speaks about the oldest fraternity in the world
- Validated Living Supercentenarians
- The Oldest Human Beings
- Great Falls Tribune's Breuning home page, with interactive timeline, photos, video, articles, links
- Walter Breuning interviewed on KRTV and on CBS
- Video of Walter reflecting on being one of the oldest male U.S. citizens
- Great Falls' Walter Breuning, one of world's oldest men, turns 111
- Report on Walter's 112th Birthday
- News Hour with Jim Lehrer interview with Walter Breuning