A few months ago, Anna Stoehr decided she was finished with big birthday parties.
"People make too much out of this age business," she said in an interview last May. "I'm done with parties."
Right. She decided recently, maybe just one more, to celebrate her 112th.
"Well, I guess people kind of expect it," she said last week. "And it is nice to see people."
On Sunday, the day before her birthday, Stoehr was the star attraction at a party with more than 200 friends and family members at the American Legion club a few miles from her farmhouse at the edge of Potsdam, Minn., 15 miles north of Rochester.
The oldest Minnesotan, she also is believed to be the oldest documented person in the world living alone.
A widow since 1998, Stoehr is the 14th-oldest living American and 30th-oldest documented person in the world -- up from 40th five months ago -- according to the Gerontology Research Group (www.grg.org), which keeps track.
"Mom's still doing pretty well -- not real steady on her feet, but her mind is still sharp," said daughter Lois Neighbors of Emmetsburg, Iowa.