Having a twin who is an exact duplicate of you is unquestionably unique.
But a hundred years of sharing space with a twin? It only makes it a stranger!
Mary Bell Roach and May Bell Powell, sometimes known as The Wallace Twins, are sisters.
The twins were born in Kentucky on March 25, 1922, and they are still there now. They were able to enroll at Murray State for college. They occasionally utilized the similarity of their appearance to their advantage when studying.
On March 25, 1922, the twins were born in Kentucky, where they still live today. They were able to go to college at Murray State. They sometimes used the fact that they look exactly the same to help them in their studies.
The best buddies married classmates that they had grown up with after graduating from college. Afterward, in Simsony, where they were raised, Mary and May were hired to teach first grade. During the ensuing 42 years, the sisters shared a classroom with one another.
Because their husbands had to serve in the war, the sisters’ careers had to be put on hold in the 1940s.
The sisters stayed close to one another during the conflict. They instead relocated to Detroit and found employment there.
Women buy mobile homes on wheels for their husbands when they return from the war so that they can all traverse the country together. The weird women have visited all 50 states as well as 8 European nations. Also, they have taken six cruises together.
This couple, who are both 100 years old, are still vibrantly alive. Roach claims that despite the women’s dead wives, they are still quite powerful.
They take a 30-minute walk to the gym every day, and on Fridays, you may meet them at the hair salon.
Powell and Roach recently shared a room so they could assist one another if necessary in the middle of the night.
Roach says, “We’re always together and have never been apart.” “That’s all we know about how to love each other,” they said.