Morrie Markoff, Jewish supercentenarian and oldest man in US, dies at 110

Morrie Markoff was born in New York City on Jan. 11, 1914, one of four children of Max and Rose Markoff, Jewish immigrants from Russia. He survived the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic.

Morrie Markoff in 2023. (photo credit: Courtesy The Brain Donor Project)
Morrie Markoff in 2023.
(photo credit: Courtesy The Brain Donor Project)

(JTA) —Morrie Markoff, who was born to Jewish parents in an East Harlem tenement in 1914 and lived to become what was believed to be the oldest man in the United States, died June 3 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 110.

Markoff’s remarkable lifespan was matched by his remarkable lucidity: After he turned 100, Markoff became an avid blogger and author and saw his scrap metal sculpture exhibited at a Los Angeles gallery. His memoir, “Keep Breathing: Recollections from a 103-year-old,” was published in 2017.

The Brain Donor Project, a nonprofit organization that supports the National Institutes of Health NeuroBioBank, said that, once donated, Markoff’s is likely to be the oldest brain registered and collected without pathological cognitive decline.

The life of Morrie Markoff

“He published a book and blog, but now he’s going into the annals of scientific research,” his daugher, Judith Hansen, 81, said in a statement shared by The Brain Donor Project. “This is just right up his alley. He loved science. He, with his eighth-grade education, used to read Scientific American — and discuss it with friends. He did love science.”

Markoff was born in New York City on Jan. 11, 1914, one of four children of Max and Rose Markoff, Jewish immigrants from Russia. He survived the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic, which claimed the life of a brother. He attended school through the eighth grade before training as a machinist.

People are seen being treated for the Spanish Flu. (credit: COURTESY OF THE OTIS HISTORICAL ARCHIVES)
People are seen being treated for the Spanish Flu. (credit: COURTESY OF THE OTIS HISTORICAL ARCHIVES)

“I am Jewish and my parents were religious (but not fanatically so),” he wrote in a blog post in 2021. “On ‘High holidays’ they sent me to the local synagogue. On Friday night, my mother said Jewish prayers. I went to the neighborhood Hebrew school until the age of 13. When I was 13, I had a Bar Mitzvah — I became an adult.”

In the late 1930s, Markoff moved to Los Angeles where he worked for a vacuum cleaner company, as a machinist for a defense contractor making artillery shells and as a partner in a series of small-appliance businesses.

He and Betty Goldmintz were married on Nov. 4, 1938, and remained together for 81 years, until her death in 2019.

In that same 2021 blog post, Markoff contemplated his long life. “I have had many close calls, escapes from death. Never did I ever expect to reach the age I am, and to still have my marbles,” he wrote. “Just good luck. Some people have it, some don’t. Some believe our lives are preordained (meant to be). Perhaps. Who is to say.”

The post took its title from “bashert,” a Yiddish word meaning “fate.”


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As of April, Guinness World Records listed John Alfred Tinniswood, 111, of England, as the world’s oldest man, and María Branyas Morera, 117, a California native who lives in Spain, as the oldest woman. In February, Pearl Berg, thought to be the oldest Jewish person in the world and the third-oldest American at the time, died in Los Angeles. She was 114.

Markoff’s survivors include his daughter and a son, Steven; five grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.