4 Friends, 99 and Counting
That's the title in the print edition of the Washington Post for Tuesday, March 15, 2016, on page B1, in the Metro section. I'm going through old newspapers.
Take a break from articles about *****.
Old but not cold: Four very longtime friends anticipate turning 100 this year
From left, Ruth Hammett, Gladys Butler, Bernice Underwood and Leona Barnes, who will all turn 100 this year, at the Zion Baptist Church. (Evelyn Hockstein/For The Washington Post)
By Tara Bahrampour
https://twitter.com/TaraBahrampour
March 14
Leona Barnes doesnt remember when, back around the close of World War I, she met Gladys Butler, Ruth Hammett and Bernice Underwood. Growing up in Southwest Washington, they were part of the landscape, in the same way that her house and her street and her church were.
As little girls, the four played jacks and jumped rope; later they shared gossip and danced the two-step and the Charleston. Two of them lived in the same house at one point, and three of them had babies the same year 1933. But they could not have predicted that someday they would be poised to celebrate their 100th birthdays together.
We all are grateful, and we thank the Lord for all of us to see 99, Barnes said as she sat this week in Zion Baptist Church in Northwest Washington with the other three, who are members there. Slapping her thigh for emphasis, she said, If we dont make 100, its up to Him but we made the 99.
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Making it to the triple digits together is one of many things the four friends never foresaw. When they were girls, the District had separate movie theaters for black and white patrons and separate schools for black and white students. As kids, they didnt think much about it. ... They accepted that a black girl couldnt try on clothes or hats at the department store; she had to take a gamble that the items she bought would fit or that she would find someone in the neighborhood willing to buy them off her. ... Chances were, in that patchwork of tenements and alleys in the shadow of the Capitol, someone would.
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Ruth Hammett, who will turn 100 this year, is seen in this photo dated 1945. (Evelyn Hockstein/For The Washington Post)