Britain's oldest twins, 104 and born in Stockport, reveal the secret to long life

By SWNS 8th Feb 2024

Britain's oldest twins have celebrated their 103rd birthday - and say a love of food and bedtime tipple is the secret to their long lives (Images via SWNS)
Britain's oldest twins have celebrated their 103rd birthday - and say a love of food and bedtime tipple is the secret to their long lives (Images via SWNS)

By Ashley Pemberton

Britain's oldest twins says a daily drop of brandy is the secret to their long lives.

Elma Harris and Thelma Barratt, 104, were born half an hour apart in Stockport in August 1919.

They were just 19 when World War Two broke out, and have seen 22 different prime ministers and the coronation of three monarchs.

Now living together at a care home in Lancashire, the sisters attributed their youthful outlook to their favourite tipples.

Elma, who enjoys a brandy and a lemonade at night, said: "If you feel young, you stay young."

At the age of 14 the sisters started working as packers and labellers at Smiths Crisps after asking if there were any jobs going on the way home from school.

They gave up work when they got married at 21, just three months apart.

The sisters attended Alexandra Park School (Image via SWNS)

Elma married Bill Hewitt, a joiner and Thelma married Joseph Barratt, a hatter, just as World War Two started.

Elma was called up to work at Fairey Aviation's factory, making parts for the RAF during the war.

Thelma's husband was captured in Italy and became a prisoner of war at the same camp as Group Captain Sir Douglas Bader, famed for losing his legs while attempting aerobatics.

In 1959, Thelma and Joe became the landlord and landlady of a pub in their hometown of Stockport, but left when their son Tony was a few months old.

Asked what was the best part of being twins, the sisters said it was always having each other for company.

Elma, a great-grandmother-of-six, said: "You didn't need pals. We always had each other."

However, the twins said they didn't always get along as well as they do now and were close to "scratching one another's eyes out sometimes" in their younger days.

Elma's first husband Bill died soon after the war, while Thelma's husband Joe worked as a hatter in Stockport.

Thelma told the BBC: "He worked for the hat trade and if he was caught without his hat, he got fined half a crown.

"Many a time when we were courting I would find myself whisked down an entry because he'd seen them in the distance."

The sisters said they always enjoyed a good night out, and would trawl around town looking for new dresses to wear.

Thelma added: "We look at each other and say, 'Who'd have thought we'd live to be this age?' We didn't, but we're still here."

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