Leap Day baby Jeannette Giliam celebrated her 104th birthday with family and friends last Thursday (29 February).


A Somerset West resident who recently celebrated her 104th birthday on Thursday 29 February has had only 26 opportunities to celebrate her official birthday as the other 78 were held either on 28 February or 1 March.

Jeannette Giliam, born on Leap Day (29 February) 1920, is adamant she wasn’t born on any other day and is now “26 years old”.Her big day was celebrated with her family in Somerset West, a day daughter Lesley Bradfield described as simply lovely.

A couple of days later DistrictMail & Helderberg Gazette caught up with Jeannette to talk about her remarkably long life, the details of which she vividly remembers, almost exactly as they happened.

She missed the flu pandemic by a couple of months, but lived through the Great Depression and she remembered her mom sending food to people who had no food in their homes.

“I was born (and matriculated) in Robertson. My parents retired to Hermanus and I started off my working career in Pretoria at the Revenue Office on 1 September 1939.”

A couple of days later World War II broke out, and South Africa officially entered it a few days later, on 6 September, on the side of Britain and its allies, which declared war on Nazi Germany.

“I remember the post office and some of the railway lines were blown up. It was pretty hectic, but we played hard too and danced a lot and took the good with the bad. We worked overtime without receiving any overtime pay.”

Three years later, at the end of 1942, Jeannette and her husband were married, and she said she always “marvels at people who get married so quickly” as she and her husband courted for a year before they got engaged (and they remained engaged for two years) before they married in Hermanus.

HONEYMOON TO REMEMBER

“For our honeymoon we booked into a hotel in Cape Town, my father knew one of the local military policemen who got us in there for a week. We were supposed to leave immediately after the wedding, but we left only at 22:00, when there was total blackout everywhere as submarines were spotted next to the coast, so no-one could have any lights on. The motor vehicles had stuff on their headlights that blocked the light out and allowed for a pinpoint of light to shine through.

“We caught a lift with my brother and his wife who was seven-months pregnant, and we had to make a plan to dim our headlights for we had none of those stuff they used to block the headlights with. So we took some brown-paper bags. The first one we tied around the headlight with a piece of string. We had a brown paper bag for the second one, but no string left, so we had to make a plan, and that is when my sister-in-law pulled a piece of elastic out of her panties, which was used to tied the bag around the other headlight.”

Jeannette also had to spend her wedding night with her sister-in-law, in the same room, for they had run out of petrol and had nowhere else to sleep. So she and her new husband took the one bed and her sister-in-law took the other while her brother slept in the car.

During the Second World War she worked for intelligence, and it was her job to go through letters sent home from the army men. “I had to see if these letters did not contain any sensitive information. We went through some very funny letters, but I can’t divulge any of that!”

Post-war life is tough

She described things as “being tough” after the war, but she had to be strong for she had two boys and a girl, Terence (80), Darryl (78) and Lesley (who was seven years younger), to look after.

The family moved from Pretoria to Durban, then to Port-Elizabeth, Salisbury (now known as Harare), then back to Johannesburg and then East London.

“My children moved from school to school. That was an education in itself. Interestingly, they learnt to speak Afrikaans in Salisbury.”

She also worked at Bothner’s music shop for a couple of years, demonstrating the pianos to clients because she was a gifted pianist who had received her performance licence by age 14, and as part of the job she had to know all the popular music of the day, in addition to the classics.

Jeannette currently has 23 great grandchildren, 12 of whom are overseas so she doesn’t get the opportunity to see them that often, but she said many people are moving overseas and families are breaking-up, something she said started happening after the Second World War’s end when people who married and remained within in their communities now migrated to the cities in the quest for jobs and that is where families started breaking up.

She said nowadays she can feel she is 104 years old; since her 100th birthday she has started to feel her age. Her son Darryl mentions that he would only be too happy to turn 100 one day, but then he wanted to be as healthy and mobile as his mother presently is.

Jeannette’s sage advice for people who want to reach her great age is “to eat what you want and drink what you want. I also have a drink every night, and if it gets very “gesellig” then I will have two drinks.”

According to Lesley her mom takes no medication, she never sees a doctor and she has never spent a single day in bed. She loves to take walks in the garden, enjoys crossword and jigsaw puzzles, and has her 14-year-old cat Lilo for company.

If anything, Jeannette’s story is a testament to the triumph of the human spirit and finding joy in every single aspect of life. Her youthful spirit and wisdom shine brightly.

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