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Remember ME - You Me and Dementia
June 20, 2009
USA: Woman, 103, attributes longevity to genetics, clean living
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LAS VEGAS, Nevada / The Las Vegas Sun / Life / June 20, 2009
Lucille Salter of Henderson will celebrate her 104th birthday on June 27
Longtime Boulder City and Henderson resident
Lucille Salter poses for a photo on June 17, 2009.
She turns 104 on June 27. Richard Brian / Special to the Sun.
Click for more photos
By Jean Reid Norman
When Lucille Salter was 4, growing up on a farm in Iowa, a wound from a pitchfork that punctured her leg while playing wasn’t reason enough for a trip to town.
It was 1909, and they would have had to make the trip in a horse-drawn wagon, but it wasn’t necessary.
“My mother cured it with iodine,” said Salter. “It took care of it, too. In those days, you didn’t run to the doctor for things like that.”
That is only one of the ways Salter has seen the world change in more than a century of living. She celebrates her 104th birthday on June 27 at the Prestige Assisted Living Center in Henderson, where she has lived the past three years.
She is one of two centenarians at the center.
As a girl, she attended a one-room schoolhouse in Reliance, S.D., and was valedictorian of her two-student graduating class.
She moved to Boulder City in 1931 with her then-husband, who worked on the construction of Hoover Dam, and two daughters. She and the girls lived in Las Vegas until a home was built for them in Boulder City.
Her first marriage ended amicably, she said, and by the time she was a single mother, her parents and brothers lived in Boulder City as well.
She met her husband of 60 years, Ross Salter, in 1940.
She was a telephone operator and he was a ranger for the Bureau of Reclamation, required to call in to the phone company every hour. They met face-to-face at a St. Patrick’s Day dance and were married in 1946.
They moved to Henderson in 1955, one street over from Lorna Kesterson, former Henderson mayor and managing editor of the Henderson Home News.
They had been friends in Boulder City and remained neighbors until three years ago, when Salter moved into assisted living after her husband died at 99 years old. Kesterson continues to visit Salter frequently.
Salter agrees that some of her longevity can be attributed to genetics — her mother lived well into her 90s, and her older brother lived to be 100.
But she also credits married life for lengthening her years.
“Marriage helped me live long,” she said.
She has outlived both of her daughters, but she still has two granddaughters in Henderson.
She recommends eating well and refraining from smoking and drinking to live a long life.
“I didn’t really plan for it,” she said. “It planned me. I just keep living.” [rc]
© Las Vegas Sun, 2009
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