Puzzle of the Century
Is it the fresh air, the seafood, or genes? Why do so many hardy 100-year-olds live in yes, Nova Scotia?
- By Mary Duenwald
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2003, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 10)
Grace Levy, of Lunenburg, is a petite 95-year-old woman with blue eyes, shining white hair and impossibly smooth skin. She has two sisters, both of whom are still living at ages 82 and 89, and five brothers, four of whom drowned in separate fishing accidents. She left school at age 13 to do housework for other families in Lunenburg. The hardships seem not to have dampened her spirit—or health. “My Dad said you’ve gotta work,” she recalls. “He was a kind of a hard taskmaster. He didn’t mind using a piece of rope on our back if we did the least little thing. But Mom was so good and kind.”
Grace married a man from nearby Tancook. Although the two were not blood relatives, their ancestries so overlapped they had the same last name. “My name has always been Levy,” she says with a smile that flashes white teeth. “I had a brother named Harvey Levy and I married a Harvey Levy.”
The town of Yarmouth was settled by New Englanders, but areas just to the south and north were settled by the French, whose plight is dramatized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s epic poem Evangeline. It tells the story of lovers from Nova Scotia’s northern “forest primeval” who were separated during the brutal Acadian expulsion of 1755, when the English governor, fed up with the French peasants’ refusal to swear allegiance to Britain, banished them to the American colonies and Louisiana. Later, large numbers of Acadians returned to Nova Scotia and settled the coastline from Yarmouth north to Digby.
After their rough treatment by the English, the Acadians were not inclined to mix with the rest of the province. Today, many people in the Yarmouth area still speak French and display the blue, white and red Acadian flag. Local radio stations play Acadian dance music, a country-French sound not unlike Louisiana zydeco.
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