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Dina Manfredini won't be down for dinner

sublimegtx

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After inheriting the title of world’s oldest living person less than two weeks ago, Iowa woman Dina Manfredini died at age 115, according to her family.
The Italian immigrant, who experienced life in three different centuries, resided at a nursing home in Johnston, Iowa. She died early Monday morning, Manfredini’s granddaughter Lori Logli told the Associated Press. Logli did not share details about the cause of death.
Jiroemon Kimura, a Japanese man just 15 days younger than Manfredini, now holds her title as the world’s oldest person, Guinness World Records spokesman Robert Young confirmed.
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Manfredini was listed by Guinness as the oldest living person following the death of 116-year-old Besse Cooper of Georgia on Dec. 5. She was the only Italian person verified to have reached 115 years.
Born on April 4, 1897 in Italy, Manfredini left for Iowa in 1920 with her late husband, Riccardo. When her husband suffered an injury, she worked to support her family at a food processing factory and a Des Moines ordnance plant that manufactured ammunition during World War II. Even after raising four children, she continued to clean homes on the side until she was 90 years old.
“I’m old, old lady, but I work,” she told the Des Moines Register in 2004. “Work hard. I like work.”
That two of the most recent oldest living people were female should not come as a surprise — especially in America. Just two out of 10 Americans who live to 100 or longer are male, according to a U.S. Census Bureau report released last week.
 
wow 115 y/o RIP Dina
 
thats amazing, this woman saw EEEEVVVVVVVVRYTHINGGGGGGGGGGG from the wright brothers to .....wow....i cant finish. hard to believe! EVVVERYTHING ! being a history GEEK i have to say im somewhat jealous of her life. now thats someone whom i would have LOVED to sit down and converse with.....if i spoke Italian of course!
 
I had an aunt that lived to 104. Born in 1898, died in 2002. Loved talking to her as you said, like listening to a talking history book. She had a very sharp memory (a lot better than mine) but she always said the last few years that her body just wore out. I'll be happy if I see 80 and can still be functional.
 
I just saw that story on our local news not too long ago.They showed her at the nursing home when she was celebrating her 115th birthday. I'll bet she was a walking history book. Enjoy your eternal rest,you definatly earned it Dina.
 
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