LongeviQuest is pleased to announce the age validation of Fuyo Baba of Japan at age 111. She was born in  Japan on 10 January 1879. After graduating from a girl’s school in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, she married into a merchant family in Ishinomaki. The couple went on to have nine children.

At the age of 100.
At the age of 100.

On 18 October 1987, at the age of 108, she became the oldest living person in Miyagi Prefecture. As of 1990, she had 29 grandchildren, 48 great-grandchildren, and eight great-great-grandchildren.

Fuyo Baba passed away in Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan, on 16 February 1990, at the age of 111 years. At the time of death, she was the second-oldest person ever recorded in Miyagi Prefecture, only after Tome Horigome (1857–1968). She was also the third-oldest living person in Japan, behind Waka Shirahama and Rin Aoyagi.

LongeviQuest congratulates Fuyo Baba’s family on her posthumous recognition.

For more information, please view Baba’s Directory Profile here.

LongeviQuest is pleased to announce the age validation of Fuyo Kishimoto of Japan at age 111. She was born in Hamasaka, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan on 20 December 1911. She was the only daughter of her parents. Fuyo Kishimoto was reported as the third-oldest living person in Kyoto Prefecture in September 2023.

In December 1940, Kishimoto remarried. Her husband was adopted as a son-in-law to inherit the Kishimoto family name. They had two daughters. According to her family, Fuyo Kishimoto was a hard worker who supported her family by doing manual labor alongside men in the mountains and at mine sites. Around 1956, Kishimoto became a live-in staff member at an inn in Toyooka, Hyogo Prefecture, where she worked for about 16 years.

In December 2015, her 104th birthday. (Source: Courtesy of the family)
In December 2015, her 104th birthday. (Source: Courtesy of the family)

When Kishimoto was in her 60s, she moved to Kyoto Prefecture to live with her daughter’s family. She got a job as a cook at a school lunch center and worked there until she was in her mid-80s. Kishimoto walked to and from work every day without ever missing a day. According to her family, she worked tirelessly from morning until night from the end of World War II until she was in her mid-80s. She was a devout Buddhist and spent three hours each day reading sutras.

In December 2022, her 111th birthday. (Source: Courtesy of the family)
In December 2022, her 111th birthday. (Source: Courtesy of the family)

When Kishimoto was 99, she broke her femur. The next year, at the age of 100, she broke her other femur. This forced her to move into a nursing home. As a centenarian, she sometimes enjoyed McDonald’s hamburgers and McShakes, which her family would bring to her. When she was 103, her health became so bad that she could barely eat. Her doctor gave her a poor prognosis, but to everyone’s surprise, she made a full recovery. At 111, she can eat regular meals on her own, enjoys sugary coffee and sweet crackers, and lives independently with very little help from the nursing staff. Her family says that she has a gentle personality and is always grateful to her family and those around her.

For more information, please view Dobin’s Directory Profile here.