Jozsef Szuchar

Jozsef Szuchar [Hungarian: Szuchár József; Slovakian: Jožef Suchár) (16 February 1857 – 11 August 1967) was a Czechoslovakian supercentenarian who is currently unverified. At the time of his death, he may have been the second oldest living man in the world after John Mosely Turner.

Biography
He was born on 16 February 1857 in the village of Lemes [today: Lemešany] into a Hungarian family. He worked as a stonemason in different cities of Europe. After that, he worked at a railroad company. He had 6 children, he outlived 3 of them.

In his later life he lived in the town of Prešov. At the age of 102, when the first satellites were made, he said that when he was young, people had never thought that humanity could reach that far. When he was 109, he complained about that he hadn't got the televison yet what he had asked for his 105th birthday.

Her daughter, who was 76 when her father became a supercentenarian, took care of him. He never had any serious health problems. At the age of 108, he fell down from the stairs but he recovered quickly.

He passed away on 11 August 1967, at the age of 110 years, 176 days. At that time, he had 3 living daughters, 6 grandchildren, and 13 great-grandchildren. After his death, 109-year-old Marie Bernatkova became the oldest living person in Czechoslovakia, who later on became the WOP.