At the ripe age of 137, White Wolf a.k.a. Chief John Smith is considered the oldest Native American to have ever lived, 1785-1922

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image showing At the ripe age of 137, White Wolf a.k.a. Chief John Smith is considered the oldest Native American to have ever lived, 1785-1922

forreddituseonly on April 18th, 2017 at 15:55 UTC »

The exact age of John Smith at the time of his death has been a subject of controversy. Federal Commissioner of Indian Enrollment Ransom J. Powell argued that "it was disease and not age that made him look the way he did"[2] and remarked that according to records he was only 88 years old. Paul Buffalo who, when a small boy, had met John Smith, said he had repeatedly heard the old man state that he was "seven or eight", "eight or nine" and "ten years old" when the "stars fell".[2] The stars falling refers to the Leonid meteor shower of November 13, 1833, about which Carl Zapffe writes: "Birthdates of Indians of the 19th Century had generally been determined by the Government in relation to the awe-inspiring shower of meteorites that burned through the American skies just before dawn on 13 November 1833, scaring the daylights out of civilized and uncivilized [sic] peoples alike. Obviously it was the end of the world. . . .".[3] This puts the age of John Smith at just under 100 years old at the time of his death.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Smith_(Chippewa_Indian)

TooShiftyForYou on April 18th, 2017 at 16:11 UTC »

Yeah, I'm not sure this man is 137 but he's definitely old enough that I wouldn't argue it with him.

geekisphere on April 18th, 2017 at 18:26 UTC »

The Leonid meteor shower of 1833, depicted here, was a great way to date people who had no birth records, because it was seen all over the eastern US and was unforgettable to everybody who saw it.