British woman Ethel Caterham becomes oldest person in the world at 115
A British woman has officially become the oldest person in the world at the age of 115, according to the Guinness World Records.
Ethel Caterham, who lives in a care home in Surrey, has taken the mantle at 115 years and 252 days, LongeviQuest confirmed.
It comes after the death on 30 April of the previous record holder, Inah Canabarro Lucas, who was a 116-year-old nun from Brazil.
Mrs Caterham sets multiple records - including being the last living person to be born in 1909.
She is also the youngest person to be named the oldest woman in the last 12 years.
Mrs Caterham is also among the oldest survivors of coronavirus, having contracted it at 110 in 2020.
She has outlived her husband Norman, who died in 1976, and both her children Gem and Anne, who died after the millennium.
Asked what her secret to a long life is, she told the Salisbury Journal: "Say yes to every opportunity because you never know what it will lead to. Have a positive mental attitude and have everything in moderation."
Read more from Sky News
Still in good health
Mrs Caterham remains in good health and enjoys sitting in the garden at her care home, which has been named Ethel's Garden in her honour.
She was born in Hampshire on 21 August 1909 - the second-youngest of eight children.
Her older sister Gladys also lived a long life, having died at 104 years and 78 days in 2002.
Mrs Caterham moved to India to work as a nanny when she was 18 and often reminisces about her time there.
When she returned she met her future husband, a British Army major, at a dinner party in 1931 - the pair marrying in Salisbury Cathedral two years later.
They went to live in Hong Kong and Gibraltar when he was posted abroad, with Mrs Caterham returning to her love of children and opening her own nursery during their time in Asia.
On the couple's return to the UK - they settled in Surrey where she gave birth to their daughters. Gem died in the early 2000s and Anne aged 82 in 2020.

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