Berta Huckaba talks Tuesday about her life. The Carson City woman celebrates her 100th birthday today. Being a leap day baby, Huckaba likes to think of herself as only 25.
Cathleen Allison/Nevada Appeal
Mattie Alberta Alford Huckaba has too many memories to keep in order. Sometimes they collide and she has trouble recalling events. But Berta, as her friends call her, knows exactly what’s happening today. She’s a Leap Day baby and she’s turning 100.
“Honey I never thought a thing about it,” said the tiny, silver-haired Carson City woman when asked if she ever believed she’d see her 100th birthday.
Born in 1908 in a tiny Mississippi town called Vaiden, Berta remembers she was 5 years old when her family got its first telephone.
“Oh, we thought we were so rich,” she said laughing.
At age 14 she married a strapping 19-year-old by the name of Vic Huckaba, whom she met in the church yard.
As soon as Vic saved enough money to buy a mule and a plow, the teenage couple set up housekeeping in a little house on a piece of land near the Mississippi River.
They built a bed frame and stuffed a mattress with straw. Berta’s mama gave the couple a stove.
“My mama was good to me,” Berta said.
She talked of her mother curling her hair and giggled at the memory.
“I’d get so mad at my mama for pulling my hair!”
Berta said Vic drank a little too much for her liking. When her granddaughter Deborah Snyder asked if she were trying to air the dirty laundry, Berta answered right back, “I believe if you tell one thing you tell it all.”
She and Vic had three boys, Harold, Gene and Larry. After a moment, Berta remembered that two of those boys were gone. Gene died in 1989. Harold, Deborah’s father, just two years ago, at age 75.
“It must be hard to outlive your children,” Deborah said softly as her grandmother cried.
After 45 years of marriage, Vic died of a heart attack.
“When grandpa died she just kept telling me all the time, ‘I’m ready to just go be with Vic,’” said Deborah. “Until about three years ago, it dawned on her that she was pretty close to being 100. Then she started talking about it all the time. So I think at that point she was determined to stick around.”
In her 50s, Berta took a job as a dietitian with a hospital. In her twilight, she moved in with her son Harold who doted on her.
“He always got me whatever I needed,” she said.
Deborah said they’ll celebrate today with the number 100 written on her grandmother’s birthday cake and 25 candles to represent the times Berta’s actually seen Feb. 29. Berta said she’d enjoy it if people in the community would send her a birthday card.
Her advice for the world was simple:
“Be kind. Build the world a better place.”
• Contact reporter F.T. Norton at
ftnorton@nevadaappeal.com or 881-1213.