Current:Home > Finance100-year-old Oklahoma woman celebrates "25th birthday" on Leap Day -USAMarket
100-year-old Oklahoma woman celebrates "25th birthday" on Leap Day
View
Date:2025-04-27 17:43:35
An Oklahoma woman is turning 100 on a Leap Day – so it's technically only her 25th birthday. Because Feb. 29 only comes every four years, Mary Lea Forsythe has only been able to celebrate on the actual day a handful of times over her long life.
She was honored by the Centenarians of Oklahoma ahead of her big day. The nonprofit organization honors people who are 100 years old or older.
Forsythe, of Sand Springs, OK, sang in the chorus in high school and "loves all things musical and plays the piano and mandolin," according to the organization. Her favorite song: "Sitting at the Feet of Jesus."
"Mary Lea reminds us to all Read the Bible," the organization said.
A birthday party was held for Forsythe by the Daughters of the American Revolution Osage Hills Chapter, where she was inducted as an Oklahoma centenarian. CBS News has reached out to the DAR and Centenarians of Oklahoma for more information and is awaiting a response.
The odds of being born on Leap Day
The odds of being born on Feb. 29 is about 1-in-1,461 and there are only about 5 million people in the world born on this day, according to History.com.
In 2020, a New York mother made headlines for giving birth on Leap Day – for the second time. Lindsay Demchak's first baby, Omri, was born on February 29, 2016. Her second baby, Scout, was born February 29, 2020. The last time parents welcomed back-to-back Leap Year babies was 1960, Nikki Battiste reported on "CBS Mornings."
Their parents said they plan on celebrating their birthdays on different days when it's not a Leap Year and will have a big celebration for both of them every four years.
On the Leap Day when Scout was born, four other babies were born at the same hospital -- including a pair of twins.
What is a Leap Year?
A year is 365 days, but technically it takes the Earth slightly longer to orbit around the sun.
The Earth takes 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes and 46 seconds – or 365.2422 days – to fully orbit the sun, according to NASA. Those extra hours are eliminated from the calendar most years. But every four years, an extra day is added to February so the calendar and seasons don't get out of sync. If this didn't happen, the extra hours would add up over time and seasons would start to skew.
"For example, say that July is a warm, summer month where you live. If we never had leap years, all those missing hours would add up into days, weeks and even months," according to NASA. "Eventually, in a few hundred years, July would actually take place in the cold winter months!"
When is the next Leap Year?
The addition of February 29, known as a Leap Day, to the 2024 calendar signifies we are in a Leap Year. There are Leap Days every four years.
The next Leap Days are: Tuesday, Feb. 29, 2028; Sunday, Feb. 29, 2032 and Friday, Feb. 29, 2036.
Aliza Chasan contributed to this report.
- In:
- Oklahoma
Caitlin O'Kane is a New York City journalist who works on the CBS News social media team as a senior manager of content and production. She writes about a variety of topics and produces "The Uplift," CBS News' streaming show that focuses on good news.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Taylor Swift adds North American cities to next year's Eras tour dates
- White supremacist banners appear in Louisiana’s capital city
- I want to own you, Giuliani says to former employee in audio transcripts filed in New York lawsuit
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Court throws out conviction after judge says Black man ‘looks like a criminal to me’
- Prosecutor wants to defend conviction of former Missouri detective who killed Black man
- 'Cash over country': Navy sailors arrested, accused of passing US military info to China
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Ex-Biden official's lawsuit against Fox echoes case that led to big settlement
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- A hospital in a rural North Carolina county with a declining population has closed its doors
- Police shoot and kill a man in Boise, Idaho who they say called for help, then charged at officers
- Play it again, Joe. Biden bets that repeating himself is smart politics
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Selling Sunset’s Amanza Smith Goes Instagram Official With New Boyfriend
- What jobs are most exposed to AI? Pew research reveals tasks more likely to be replaced.
- Of Course, Kim Kardashian's New Blonde Hair Transformation Came With a Barbie Moment
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Hearts, brains and bones: Stolen body parts scandal stretches from Harvard to Kentucky
After helping prevent extinctions for 50 years, the Endangered Species Act itself may be in peril
LA's plan to solve homelessness has moved thousands off the streets. But is it working?
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Bud Light sales slump following boycott over Anheuser-Busch promotion with Dylan Mulvaney
At Yemeni prosthetics clinic, the patients keep coming even though the war has slowed
In Niger, US seeks to hang on to its last, best counterterrorist outpost in West Africa