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・ George Johnson (athlete)
・ George Johnson (Australian politician)
・ George Johnson (baseball)
・ George Johnson (boxer)
・ George Johnson (British Army officer)
・ George Johnson (cricketer, born 1894)
・ George Johnson (cricketer, born 1907)
・ George Johnson (English politician)
・ George Johnson (football manager)
・ George Johnson (footballer, born 1871)
・ George Johnson (footballer, born 1907)
・ George Johnson (Manitoba politician)
・ George Johnson (physician)
・ George Johnson (priest)
・ George Johnson (sport shooter)
George Johnson (supercentenarian)
・ George Johnson (writer)
・ George Johnson Armstrong
・ George Johnson Clarke
・ George Johnson House
・ George Johnson House (Calamus, Iowa)
・ George Johnson House (Lexington, Missouri)
・ George Johnston
・ George Johnston (Australian footballer)
・ George Johnston (British Marines officer)
・ George Johnston (burgess)
・ George Johnston (engineer)
・ George Johnston (footballer)
・ George Johnston (general)
・ George Johnston (ice hockey)


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George Johnson (supercentenarian) : ウィキペディア英語版
George Johnson (supercentenarian)

George Henry Johnson (May 1, 1894 – August 30, 2006) was, at the time of his death, California's oldest man and one of the last few surviving veterans of the First World War in the United States.
==Life==

Born in Philadelphia, Johnson led a rich and eventful life – by his own accounts, he had rubbed shoulders at various times with Standard Oil tycoon John D. Rockefeller and Henry Ford, and also claimed that his grandfather was U.S. President Andrew Johnson. His father, James Edward Johnson, the manager of the Baltimore and Ohio Railway station in Philadelphia, was alleged to be the illegitimate love-child of the former President. Though unconfirmed by independent journalists or academic researchers, some people address the facts of his father James' unusual position of authority for an African American, as well as the claim that James was present at the Gettysburg Address in 1863, as evidence that George Johnson was truly the grandson of the 17th President, which meant that he was of mixed Caucasian and African American ancestry.
He was drafted into the United States Army in 1917, and served in the Fourteenth Company, 154th Battalion. Johnson did not see combat during the war, but served at Fort Greene, North Carolina and Fort Dix, New Jersey.
After his discharge in 1919, Johnson got married to his high school sweetheart Ida Dulany, and moved to California, first living in Fresno, where they farmed grapes for the Sunmaid cooperative. In 1927, Johnson and his wife opened a restaurant, ''George's Southern Kitchen'', in Berkeley, although it failed after less than a year. He moved to San Francisco in April 1930, before they moved to Richmond, California in 1938. They never had any children (possibly due to an injury George had suffered as a teenager), and he lived in the three-story house in the (then) Richmond Annex he built until he died. The home, which has expansive views and the Bay is the largest in the area and was built with surplus lumber salvaged from around the Bay Area, including the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition.

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