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The Oldest
Married Couple in America
by
Melanie Bridge

From a basement
house with no indoor plumbing or electricity to an invitation only
reception with the President of the United States at the Utah State
Capitol, Marion and Erma Winn have experienced it all in their 77
years of marriage.
When the Olympic
Torch paused at the Utah State Capitol on Feb. 7, Utah Governor
Mike Leavitt asked if 100-year-old Marion and 95-year-old Erma would
light the cauldron. The Winns, who are the longest married couple
in the United States according to the Leo Burnett Advertising Agency
in Chicago, needed a little help from Leavitt and their sons to
lift the torch, but together they lit the flame that would burn
on the Capitol steps.
"I kept trying
and trying and I couldn't get my arms high enough," Marion Winn
said. "It was quite a thrill, I've never ever seen anything like
it."
That is quiet
a statement for a man who has practically seen it all, including
the President of the United States. When President Bush came to
Utah for his Olympic visit Leavitt invited the Winns and two of
their sons to meet the President, his wife and other dignitaries
including Colin Powell, Kofi Annan and Madeleine Albright.
"They (the President
and Mrs. Bush) were so gracious and kind," son Clare Winn said.
Mrs. Bush had
a letter for the couple and they took time to pose for pictures
and speak to them.
"I love it,"
Marion Winn said. "I'm like Bill Clinton, I love the attention."
Sitting in their
home in Salt Lake City the Winns are very calm and matter of fact
about their experience, but at the time they were very excited.
Son Orin Winn said that when he told his father that he would get
to meet the President, his father told him that it took his breath
away.
"Mom got excited
about the President and the torch too," Orin Winn said. "Whenever
we do this and meet the people she enjoys it."
On Feb. 14 the
Governor also honored the couple on national television at a press
conference where they were given a plaque for their 77 years of
marriage.
All of this
recent attention has been a nice change of pace for the Winns, Clare
Winn said. Some of the attention has included invitations to appear
on Jay Leno and the Today Show, but because of their age the couple
could not make the trip. They did, however, make the trip to Las
Vegas last week where they shot a commercial for Allstate Insurance.
The Leo Burnett
Advertising Agency hired a jet and flew them to Las Vegas, Orin
Winn said. The commercial will involve a locket with their wedding
picture inside, draped over their hands together.
Together is
a good word to describe the Winns secret to their longevity. Marion
Winn said that the reason they have been married for 77 years is
just "making up your mind that you're married and that you're supposed
to be together."
The Winns have
lived their whole lives together. When asked when he met his wife,
Marion Winn said, "The day she was blessed I guess."
They grew up
three miles apart and went to the same school; the same church and
Marion Winn even lived with her family and worked for her father
for a time.
"I've always
liked her, I knew she'd be a good wife and I was sure we'd get along,"
Marion Winn said of his decision to marry Erma Winn.
On December
24, 1924 when he was 23 and she was 18, the Winns began their journey
to get married. They traveled from Winder, Idaho, where they lived,
in 25 below zero weather in a horse and buggy, to Preston, Idaho.
From there they boarded the Bamburger Railroad for the journey to
Logan, Utah where they were married in the Logan Temple.
Of the journey
Marion Winn said, "we had to heat some rocks to keep us warm while
we went."
During their
married years on their Idaho farm, Marion Winn was known as the
neighborhood handyman who could fix anything, Clare Winn said. While
Erma Winn raised their children, worked on a production line and
canned food.
"My wife used
to can 1200 quarts of food every winter," Marion Winn said.
The Winns had
seven children, four boys and three girls. However they lost two
of their children in their early-married years. Their eldest son
died of appendicitis at age 7 and their eldest daughter was killed
at 18 months when she was run over by a truck on their farm, in
front of her mother's eyes.
Because of the
accident Erma had a nervous breakdown for about three years and
Clare Winn said she never would have made it if his father hadn't
been so attentive. Marion Winn has truly practiced his theory on
how to make a woman happy.
"I always figured
a woman needed lots of love," Marion Winn said.
The Winns still
have a lot of love for each other. Their children said that when
one of them is sick, the other is very concerned and stays by their
side. They still give each other kisses and it is very tender, Orin
Winn said.
For their ages,
the Winns are still very alert and interested in their world. Erma
Winn has problems with her hearing so she doesn't participate in
conversations as much as her husband, but she still walks around
her home. Marion, until last fall, would ride his three-wheeled
bicycle around his neighborhood, but now that is too much for him.
He gets short of breath easily and uses a wheelchair to help him
get around.
Marion Winn
said his secret to a long life is to live right and never do anything
to ruin your health.
"Hard work and
plenty of good food is what has helped me," Marion Winn said. "One
thing about a farm, you always have something to eat, but no money."
Because of their
ages and what they mean to their family, daughter-in-law Marlene
Winn said, "for the family it was quite emotional to see Grandpa
light the torch."
For the Winns
the excitement has been great, but it's their love for each other
that makes each day livable. "I can get along with her a lot better
than I can get along without her," Marion Winn said.
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