
A few years ago, we posted some contenders for the earliest-born person to be photographed. The problem with all of them is lack of credible documentation on their birth year, and the best documented of those contenders was born in the mid-1740s.
But then there is John Owen, who was born in 1735 in Connecticut and whose photograph was taken shortly before his death in 1843 (at the age of 107). What makes his claim about being born in 1735 any more reliable than others? Because he was a soldier in the French and Indian War, which lasted from 1754 to 1763. Military records show that Owen enlisted in 1758, and there are payroll records after that. Some sources list Owen's birth year as 1741, so his real age depends on whether he was 17 or 23 years old when he joined the army. Even if he was really born in 1741, he could still be the earliest-born person photographed.
However, Owen's new claim to fame is based on his death date, which is well documented as being February 24, 1843. Previously, Jonathan Benjamin was commonly accepted to be the last surviving veteran of the French and Indian War. But Benjamin died in 1841, while Owen survived two more years. John Owen also served in the American Revolution and lived quite a long and colorful life afterward. -via Boing Boing








