Zelda McCague (March 31, 1888 - August 6, 2001) was recognized as the oldest living Canadian and one of the oldest people in the world whose age has been verified. The long-time resident of Beeton, 40 kilometres north of Toronto, once attributed her longevity to eating small meals and abstaining from alcohol and cigarettes. Her grandson, Paul McCague, a Toronto lawyer, said it had a lot to do with leading a good life and good genes. Biography Zelda Viola Strongman was born one of six children born in a log cabin on the family farm, near Alliston, Ontario. She was entitled to draw a pension in 1958, at the then-pensionable age of 70.<ref name=star/> In 1907, she married local farmer William McCague. Together, they farmed for many years. William McCague died in 1940 at the age of 61. His wife, who was 52 at the time, never remarried.<ref name=star/> She had a hard time during the Depression as all farmers did ... ou can't say that she didn't have stress in her life because she certainly did, added her grandson. She lived through a lot. She remembered the first car. When she got her first car, they bought it out of a Sears catalogue. She lived through the First World War and was afraid of losing her husband.<ref name=star/> Although McCague was believed to be one of the oldest women alive, she was not in the Guinness Book of Records because she had no birth certificate. However her age has been conclusively proved by other documents. As McCague turned 113, however, the official record holder - according to Guinness - was Marie Brémont of France, who celebrated her 115th birthday in April.<ref name=star/> McCague outlived two of her four children, dying in her sleep of natural causes on August 6, 2001, aged 113 years 131 days.<ref name=star/>
|