Maude Farris-Luse
American supercentenarian

Maude Farris-Luse

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
American supercentenarian
A.K.A.
Maud Farris-Luse, Maude Farris
Gender:
Female
Birth:
21 January 1887(Morley)
Death:
18 March 2002(Coldwater)
Star sign:
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Introduction Birth and marriage Family Later years Centenarian and supercentenarian years
The details
Biography

Introduction

Maude Farris-Luse (January 21, 1887 – March 18, 2002), later known as Maud Luse, was an American supercentenarian. According to the Guinness Book of World Records, she was the oldest person in the world from June 2001 until her death nine months later, at age 115 years, 56 days. She outlived two husbands and six of her seven children.

Birth and marriage

Maude Farris was born in Morley, Michigan on January 21, 1887. She married Jason Farris, a farmer and laborer, in 1903. She was 16, he was 23. They lived in Angola, Indiana initially, later moving to Coldwater, Michigan in 1923.

Family

Maude had seven children, four sons and three daughters. She worked as a factory clerk, a hotel maid, a baker and a restaurant cook, retiring in her 70s. Her husband, Jason Farris, died at age 72 in 1951. Her second marriage to Walter Luse lasted only three years, ending with his death.

She had only 1 living child Lucille who died the next year, Maude also had 26 grandchildren, 85 great-grandchildren and 65 great-great-grandchildren.

She lived in Coldwater, Michigan, which is just North of the Northeast corner of Indiana, where she moved as a child in 1891, and from there moved to Coldwater sometime in the 1920s. She had a sister who lived to be 99 (two other siblings apparently died young). Her mother died at 87 but their Father was murdered at age 62 (and was the child of parents who both died young).

Later years

She had lived in the nursing home since falling at home in 1991 when she was 104 and breaking her hip. In later years, Maude became known for her big garden, for making pot holders by the dozen, and for her extreme generosity. When police caught some kids who broke into her house and stole money, Maude refused to press charges. "She said 'they probably needed it more than she did,'" said Donald Ferris, a 64-year-old grandson. Maude never smoked or drank. She would drop anything to fish. Great-granddaughter Cindy Coliver of Jackson remembered being taken aback to see Maude scaling bluegills in her living room. Home remedies were another eccentricity. Maud often was yellow from mustard rubs. The woman never spent a day in a hospital until age 95. In her later years she was known as Maud Luse, having changed it legally.

Centenarian and supercentenarian years

In 1997, at the age of 110, Luse wrote a letter to Jeanne Calment, the oldest person whose age has ever been validated. Calment died that same year, at age 122. With the death of Marie Brémont on June 6, 2001, Guinness editors declared Luse the world's oldest person on June 23, 2001. In the absence of any birth certificate, they authenticated her age using U.S. Census Bureau records and her 1903 marriage license. On March 28, 2002, Luse died of pneumonia at 115, having outlived six of her seven children. Helen Ferris, wife of Donald Ferris, Sr., remembers one regret Maud expressed about living so long. "Nobody calls her 'Maud' any more," Helen said. "Everyone calls her Mrs. Ferris or Grandma. She outlived everyone who called her Maud. So she lost that. It was a melancholy thought, if you dwell on it. So I hope no one is offended that I have taken the liberty of referring to potentially the-world's-oldest-person by her first name. Well done, Maud."