Oldest Woman In America Who Has 200 Grandchildren Celebrates 116th Birthday In Style


Hester Ford, The oldest living American celebrated her 116th birthday in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Ford rang in another year older from her home in the Queen City, and despite the coronavirus pandemic, her grandkids made sure she had the celebration she deserves.

Mary Hill and Clayton Harris, two of Ford’s grandkids, planned a giant drive-thru celebration for their granny this weekend.

“We are doing a re-do of 115 and celebrating 116 coming into,” Hill said. “So we are excited about the cars coming back in and just acknowledging her and letting them know that we love her.”

Ford has been living in the same home in Charlotte for more than 58 years. Saturday afternoon, family and friends drove by that home, honking and waving.

“We are just glad to be apart of the fabric of Dalebrook and of Charlotte, North Carolina,” Hill said.

Her family said she’s lived in the same home for more than 50 years because [Charlotte] is home.

“Her church is 5 minutes away, she loves her church,” Hill said.

Unfortunately, the coronavirus pandemic has forced Ford to stay inside her home and miss church, which had always been her favorite place to go.

“She usually calls once a month the first Sunday of the month, but with the virus. She hasn’t been able to go,” Hill said. So they always send CDs and the deacons come and give her communion.”


Hester Ford: America's oldest woman celebrates 116 years on earth

Hill said her grandmother has received so much love and support from, not only her blood family but also her church family.

“Just the love, the outpouring of love is so important,” Harris said. “Yes, you know, we thank God for that. Just being able to embrace that love.”

Ford was born on August 15, 1904, in Lancaster, South Carolina when Theodore Roosevelt was elected to his second term as President of the United States. She worked on a farm where she not only planted and picked cotton but plowed the field and cut wood.

Ford was married and the couple had 12 children; eight girls and four boys.

She moved to Charlotte in 1953 where she worked for more than 20 years as a nanny for two families in Myers Park.

She has 12 children, 48 grandchildren, 108 great-grandchildren, and approximately 120 great-great-grandchildren.

Ford’s grandchildren said their granny understands what’s happening in the world right now. In fact, this not new to her. Ford was alive during the 1918 Flu pandemic.





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