California Today: Meeting 116-year-old Edith Ceccarelli, the oldest person in America

A meeting with Edith Ceccarelli, the oldest known person in America.
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California Today

February 13, 2024

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By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Tuesday. Meet Edith Ceccarelli, 116, the oldest known person in America. Plus, California homes that $3.7 million will buy.

Edith Ceccarelli, wearing a white shawl and sitting in a walker. A woman stands next to her.
Evelyn Persico spending time with Edith Ceccarelli before her birthday celebration in Willits last weekend. Alexandra Hootnick for The New York Times

Edith Ceccarelli, done up in pearl earrings and a silk shawl, rested in an easy chair next to her birthday cake, adorned with the number 116.

What otherwise might have been a quiet birthday gathering on a Sunday morning was instead a grand celebration of the oldest known person in America. Before a parade of a hundred vehicles decorated with balloons and garlands began arriving outside the care home where Ceccarelli lives, I joined a group of reporters and photographers who sang to her and wished her a happy birthday.

Mayor Saprina Rodriguez of Willits, the small town in Mendocino County where Ceccarelli (formerly Recagno) has lived most of her life, read a proclamation: "1908 was the year that gave us the Ford Model T. Theodore Roosevelt became president. And Edith Recagno was born — three timeless American classics."

Read my article on Ceccarelli, including her advice for living such a long life.

Robert Young of the Gerontology Research Group, an organization based in Los Angeles that studies supercentenarians (people who reach 110), told me that Ceccarelli was the 29th person on record to turn 116. Her contemporaries, if they were still alive, would be Lyndon B. Johnson, Lucille Ball and Mother Teresa.

A yearbook page with three headshots and the words
Edith Ceccarelli graduated from the Willits Union High School in 1927. The Historical Society of Mendocino County has a copy of her class's yearbook with her photo at top right. Alexandra Hootnick for The New York Times

What advice does Young offer for living into your 110s? "No. 1: Be a woman." Of the 45 oldest people now alive worldwide, he pointed out, 43 are women.

How about things within a person's control? "Stay physically active," he said. "Walk fast. Be a self-directed individual."

Well into her 100s, Ceccarelli was vibrant and fit, regularly walking through town in a stylish outfit and dancing at the senior center. At age 101, she wore a fringed floppy hat and cruised down Main Street in Willits in the back of a Porsche convertible as honorary grand marshal of the town's Fourth of July parade.

Young said that extreme longevity generally comes from a combination of lucky genes — Ceccarelli's parents lived into their early 90s — and good habits, which also include staying social, having a daily routine and getting enough sleep. He met Ceccarelli last year when he drew her blood for a biobank that researchers hope will yield more insights into why some people live very long lives.

Many of the oldest people in the world live in Mediterranean-type climates like that of California; Young speculated that they may be easier on the body than places with harsher weather are.

Ceccarelli, who has lived in Northern California all her life, is believed to now be the second oldest person in the world; the oldest lives in Spain but was born in San Francisco in 1907.

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An archival photo of a street filled with people and horse-drawn carriages and lined with businesses, including signs that say
Willits, where Edith Ceccarelli spent most of her life, photographed in 1906, two years before she was born. Courtesy of the Mendocino County Museum

"I guess it's time for California to shine; it's your day in the sun," Young told me.

Ceccarelli now has advancing dementia, so she moves in and out of lucidity. But on the morning of the parade, she seemed happy to know we were all there to celebrate her. She tasted her carrot cake. She shared an embrace with Evelyn Persico, 84, her second cousin by marriage and one of her closest living relatives.

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"She's so beautiful — what happened to her wrinkles?" Persico, who said she had long thought of Ceccarelli as a mother figure, joked at the gathering. "I have more wrinkles than she does!"

I've realized that I love writing about long-lived Californians:

We hope you've enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times.

Senator Bill Cassidy speaking during a news conference on problems with the FAFSA rollout at the Capitol this month. Mariam Zuhaib/Associated Press

The rest of the news

  • A chaotic rollout of the U.S. Department of Education's newly designed FAFSA financial aid forms is proving stressful for tens of thousands of Californian students, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • More than half of all high school seniors in California's class of 2023 failed to complete the academic requirements to be eligible to attend a state university, KQED reports.
  • Midwives in California face many obstacles, and a shortage of community midwives may worsen maternity care in the state, according to a study released by the Osher Center for Integrative Health at the University of California, San Francisco.
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Southern California

  • A hiker who was missing for days was found dead Sunday morning in the upper San Antonio Creek Falls area of Mount Baldy, The Associated Press reports.

Northern California

WHAT YOU GET

WHAT WE'RE EATING

The garden courtyard at the Huntington Library in San Marino. Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times, via Getty Images

And before you go, some good news

Los Angeles is well supplied with famous works of art and notable architecture, and TimeOut recently drew up a list of 21 museums across the city that it considers essential viewing for residents and visitors. All are either free or offer free admission on some days.

Among them are the Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, whose pristine gardens are as much of a treat as the art collection, and the Hollyhock House, a Frank Lloyd Wright design from 1921 that is perched on a hill in Barnsdall Park in Los Feliz.

Read the full list here and plan your visit to L.A.'s bounty of museums.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword.

Maia Coleman and Briana Scalia contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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