‘I didn’t think anyone could live that long,’ said Freda
Corwin
By Barry W. Dugan, Managing Editor
Freda Corwin is just as surprised as anyone to be turning 105
years old this week.
“I didn’t think that anyone could live that long,” she
said during an hour-long interview at Windsor House, a board and
care home where she has lived for the past three months.
“I was just one of the lucky ones.”
Corwin is alert, astute and demonstrates a remarkable memory for
someone who passed the century mark five years ago. She celebrated
her 105th birthday Tuesday with her housemates and Windsor House
staff, including a cake and a candle that read �.”
“She is amazing,” said Pat Schoonover, the manager of
the facility on Jensen Lane. “She just enjoys life.”
Corwin was born in Westphalen, Germany on April 11, 1901. Her
father, who was a farmer in Germany, emigrated by himself to the
United States when she was an infant and sent for his family a few
years later. They settled in Springfield, Ill., where he was a
brick layer and raised a family of 10 children. “He built
us a 10-room brick house,” recalls Corwin, who added that the house
was still standing during a visit in 1970.
“I have seen a lot of changes,” she said. “The
most interesting was when we saw a missile go up at Cape Canaveral
… it trembled where we were on the other side of the lake… we got
up at 3 o’clock in the morning to see it.”
Corwin attended German Lutheran school in Springfield and then
graduated from Brown’s Business College. She married her first
husband, a factory worker, in 1920. “Women didn’t work at
that time,” she said matter-of-factly. “Women just didn’t
do that in those days.”
She remarried in 1950 after the death of her first husband and
later moved to Sebastopol to live with her daughter, June Sokolis,
and granddaughter, Sharon Young. Corwin has
great-great-grandchildren and great-great-great-grandchildren.
She is one of two remaining children in her family. Her little
sister, Emily, is 95 and just recently visited her in Windsor.
If there is a secret to her longevity, Corwin doesn’t know what
it is. “I don’t know,” she said when asked why she has
lived this long. “I wonder, too, why I’m still here.”
She never smoked, only drank moderately (“a high ball
during a party”) and didn’t have any special exercise routine.
“I liked to cook,” Corwin said. “I’d bake pies
and cakes, and my family came over to my house to eat. There was
always somebody there. I always had a house full of people.”
Apparently, she has always been good company. “She is
very sweet and easy to get along with,” Schoonover said.
Corwin’s two brothers fought in WWI. Her mother and father
visited Germany just before WWII broke out and returned with a bad
feeling about Hitler and the Nazis. “They thought it was
terrible, he was terrible,” she said. “They didn’t dare to
mention Hitler’s name … he will have to pay for all that some
day.”
She still watches the news and mentions the Iraq War and the
fact that “we don’t have any business there.”
Asked who the country’s current president is, Corwin quickly
answers, “Bush,” and then adds, “We don’t need
him.”
The latest fashion trends don’t escape Corwin’s notice, either.
“Styles have sure changed,” she said. “These
young girls with their tattoos and their piercings …even on the
tongue… it’s terrible. They should be glad they have a tongue.”
“You notice everything,” Schoonover said.
“I try to remember,” Corwin said.
And apparently, she is not overburdened with regrets.
When asked if there is anything she might do differently if she
had it all to do over again, she said “I think I’d do it
about the same. I never regretted anything.”
During a lull in the conversation, Corwin gazes out a window to
a rainy day and a pink camellia bush in full bloom.
“Look at the flowers,” she said, to no one in
particular.