Susannah Mushatt was born to Callie and Mary Mushatt on July 6, 1899, in Lowndes County, Alabama. She was the third child and oldest daughter of eleven children. Her parents were African-American sharecroppers who farmed the same land as her grandparents. According to her family, she also had some Native American ancestry. As a young woman she worked in the fields, and later said she was determined to find different work. In 1922 she graduated from the Calhoun Boarding High School, and the graduation roster recognized her for studying "Negro Music in France". After graduation, she wanted to become a teacher and was accepted to Tuskegee Institute's Teacher's Program. Her parents could not afford tuition, so in 1923 she moved to New York during the early stages of the Harlem Renaissance. In 1928 she married Henry Jones but divorced him in 1933, saying in 2011 that she "didn't know what became of him", and had no children. She worked for wealthy families taking care of their children for $7 a week, and during this time she supported many of her relatives as they moved to New York. She also used some of her salary to establish The Calhoun Club, which was a college scholarship fund for African-American students at her high school. She was active in her neighborhood for almost 30 years, participating in the "tenant patrol team". In 1965, she retired and lived with her niece Lavilla Watson and helped care for Watson's baby son. At the time of her death she resided at the Vandalia Senior Center in East New York, Brooklyn, and had more than 100 nieces and nephews.
Health, diet and lifestyle
Jones became legally blind when she was 100 and was partially deaf; she could not say much and she used a wheelchair. Besides a multivitamin, she only took medication for high blood pressure. She refused cataract surgery or a recommended pacemaker and never had a mammogram or a colonoscopy. Three to four times a year, she met with a primary care physician. Jones never smoked or consumed alcohol. She slept about ten hours a night and napped throughout the day. For breakfast, she always ate four strips of bacon along with scrambled eggs and grits. She also ate bacon throughout the day.
Final years and death
Jones celebrated her last five birthdays at the Vandalia Senior Center in Brooklyn. On her 112th, she received tribute letters from both Mayor of New York CityMichael Bloomberg and Governor of New YorkAndrew Cuomo. After the celebration, she said, "I wish it could be like this all the time." On her 113th, she was escorted by Charles Barron. Jones celebrated her 114th birthday six days late. Her family, friends and Brooklyn District AttorneyCharles Hynes praised her accomplishments. On her 115th birthday, her niece, Lois Judge, told WABC-TV that Jones "gets tired easily these days, but it has been a good day today." Jones did not speak at the celebration. Her great-great niece, a baby named Susannah after her, was also present. Jones became the world's oldest living person and one of two remaining people verified to have been born in the 1800s upon the death of Jeralean Talley on June 17, 2015. On July 3, 2015, three days before her 116th birthday, she was presented with a certificate from Guinness World Records recognizing her as the oldest person alive. Jones died in her sleep on the evening of May 12, 2016, aged 116 years, 311 days. Following her death, Emma Morano became the world's oldest living person as well as the last living person who was born in the 1800s.