Charlotte Klamroth

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Charlotte Klamroth
File:Charlotte Klamroth.jpg
Born Charlotte Dettmar
18 August 1903
Krottorf, Province of Saxony, German Empire
Died 16 May 2015(2015-05-16)
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Ludwigshafen, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Residence Ludwigshafen, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Nationality German
Known for Germany's oldest recognized living person
Children
  • Jürgen Klamroth (born c. 1938)[1]
  • 3 other children
Relatives
  • 12 grandchildren
  • 18 great-grandchildren
  • 4 great-great-grandchildren

Charlotte Klamroth (née Dettmar; 18 August 1903 – 16 May 2015) was a German supercentenarian who became the oldest living person in Germany after the death of Johanna Klink on 20 February 2015.[2] Klamroth died less than three months later.

Biography

Klamroth was born on 18 August 1903 in Krottorf, in the county of Börde, Province of Saxony. Her family leased the local manor in 1849 and farmed it until 1945, when they were dispossessed. Klamroth had three younger brothers. At age 18, her mother died and she took over responsibility for house-keeping and raising her siblings. Consequently, she was never able to attend upper school to become primary school teacher, as she wished.

She married into the well-known family Klamroth and moved to the cloister of Gröningen Priory. Both had four children. The Klamroths were partakers of the local sugar factory, that products were also exported to London. Until 1946, she was living in wealthy settings when all landowners were expelled from the Soviet occupation zone. Within two hours Klamroth and her family had to leave the house and yard. Her husband already died at the end of 1945 when Flight and expulsion of Germans started. Klamroth was also a relative in-law of Hans Georg Klamroth, who was involved in the July 20 Plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler. In 1955 Klamroth moved to Ludwigshafen where she lived until her death. In 1972 she moved to her son-in-law’s house.

She was always interested in politics and took also part on German federal election in 2013. Next to Elsa Peck (1902-2014) she was one of the oldest persons to having voted as media reported. On her 111th birthday Charlotte Klamroth claimed about being the oldest inhabitant of Rhineland-Palatinate: "I would like to give up on this fame, it has become arduous". Klamroth traced her longevity to a happy childhood and loving parents. Her relatives complement this by Klamroth's attitude to have been always moderate and contented. At the time of her 110th birthday, her daughter was already deceased. In February 2015, 3 of her 4 children were alive and she had 12 grandchildren, 18 great-grandchildren and 4 great-great-grandchildren.[3][4][5]

References

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