Thomas Parr was an Englishman who was said to have lived for 152 years. He is often referred to as Old Parr or Old Tom Parr. A portrait of Parr hangs at Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery, with an inscription which reads "Thomas Parr died at the age of 152 years 9 months" "The old old very old man or Thomas Parr, son of John Parr of Winington in the Parish of Alberbury who was borne in the year 1483 in Rayne of King Edward IV being 152 years old in the year 1635." The portrait was once in the collection of the Leighton family of Loton Park, which is in Parr's home parish of Alberbury.
Biography
Early life
Records vary, but Parr was allegedly born around 1482 or 1483, although he may have been born as recently as c.1565, in the parish of Alberbury, Shropshire. He existed and even thrived on a diet of "subrancid cheese and milk in every form, coarse and hard bread and small drink, generally sour whey," as the physicianWilliam Harvey wrote. "On this sorry fare, but living in his home, free from care, did this poor man attain to such length of days." He married Jane Taylor at the claimed age of 80 and had two children, both of whom died in infancy.
Later life
Tom Parr purportedly had an affair when he was more than 100 years old, and fathered a child born out of wedlock, for which he had to do public penance in the church porch. After the death of his first wife at the alleged age of 110, he married Jane Lloyd, a widow, at the alleged age of 122. They lived together for twelve years, with Jane commenting that he never showed any signs of age or infirmity. As news of his reported age spread, 'Old Parr' became a national celebrity and was painted by Rubens and Van Dyck.
Death
In 1635, Thomas Howard, 21stEarl of Arundel, visited Parr and took him to London to meet King Charles I. By this time, Parr was reportedly blind and feeble. Charles asked what Parr had done that was greater than any other man, and the latter replied that he had performed penance at the age of 100. Parr was treated as a spectacle in London, but the food and environment caused him to die after a few weeks. The king arranged for him to be buried in Westminster Abbey on. The inscription of his gravestone reads:
Doubts of his age
, the physician who discovered the circulation of the blood, performed an autopsy on Parr's body. The results were published in the book De ortu et natura sanguinis by John Betts as an attachment. Harvey examined Parr's body and found all his internal organs to be in a perfect state. No apparent cause of death could be determined, and it was assumed that Parr had simply died of overexposure because he had been too well fed. A modern interpretation of the results of the autopsy suggests that Parr was probably less than 70 years of age. It is possible that Parr's records were confused with those of his grandfather. Parr did not claim to be able to remember specific events from the 15th century.
Cultural references
John Taylor wrote about Parr in his poem of 1635, The Old, Old, Very Old Man, or the Age and Long Life of Thomas Parr, drawing the moral that longevity comes from a simple country lifestyle.
Old Parr is mentioned in Dickens's Dombey and Son, chapter 41, and also in his The Old Curiosity Shop, Chapter The Last. A pony who lives an unusually long life is compared to Parr.
Mark Twain, in 1871, "proposed writing 'An Autobiography of Old Parr, the gentleman who lived to be 153 years old' but apparently never did so."
Bram Stoker makes a reference to Thomas Parr in Dracula, the character of Abraham Van Helsing citing Parr's great age as an example of "inexplicable" phenomena that are nevertheless real.
Old Parr is referred to in the opening page of James Joyce's novel Finnegans Wake.