I do wonder sometimes if people can actually hold on until they reach a milestone, provided of course they aren’t in a critical situation. I’ve wondered if maybe Strom Thurmond had sort of given up since he didn’t have the daily goal of getting to work anymore.
Well, Q.E.D., it depends on which signing we’re talking about. Scarlett67 didn’t say “signing ceremony”. July 4 was the day that the Continental Congress approved the text of the Declaration of Independence. And John Hancock, the President of the Continental Congress, did sign the Declaration on the 4th of July, as did Charles Thomson, the Secretary of the Congress.
As for the graph requested by the OP, I have no such direct info. I have heard and seen accounts of studies detailing the human body’s ability to survive untill a certain milestone has been reached. I assume that once the milestone has been passed, either the next milestone is impossibly far away, or the end goal has been reached. This has to be a neurological thing.
I have no cites. If you care that much, they’re out there. I believe this is the same “mind over matter” phenomenon that some see with people in trauma that are “fighters”.
These are just examples and theories, I don’t want any neurosurgeons jumping me in a back alley.
I would be interested in seeing the financial status of people over 100. Are they mostly well off?[can afford good health care] Or are they people who take care of themselves physically so they live. Remember the Dannon Yogurt commercial with the old Russians (or they may have been Georgians or some other people that are no longer part of the USSR)
Whatever happened on July 4th, it was celebrated as Independence Day as early as 1778 and possibly 1777. By 1826, it was surely the date etched in everybody’s minds, even those that had been there.
Yeesh, Marley, the Adams/Jefferson is quite well-known, and can be looked up in any reference on the two men. Like, say, David McCullough’s biography of John Adams, pages 645-646. He in turn cites the diary of Rev. George Whitney (who was there) for the death of Adams, and a memoir of Jefferson’s grandson for Jefferson’s death.
In addition to my question about celebrities approaching 100, I guess I should have added, it would be interesting to note celebrities that have already passed it.
I did a little research, and came up with these, but hope someone can find some more:
Art Linkletter: 91
Ladybird Johnson: 91
Ronald Reagan: 92
Al Lewis (Grandpa Munster): 93
Eddie Albert (GreenAcres): 95
John Mills: 95
Penny Singleton (Blondie! Jane Jetson!): 95
Fay Wray (King Kong): 96
Madame Chang Kai-Shek: 101 (winner!)
Being from Kansas, the other political figure (besides Strom Thurmond) that I usually think of in this situation is Alf Landon. He died not long after his 100th birthday, which was a really big deal around here. I was also thinking Bess Truman (wife of Harry) did the same thing but a quick google shows she only made it to about 97.