Ashley May

USA TODAY

Susannah Mushatt Jones, the world’s oldest person, has died at age 116 in New York.

She died the night of May 12 at a senior housing facility in Brooklyn, her home for the past three decades, Robert Young, a senior consultant for the Los Angeles-based Gerontology Research Group told the Associated Press.

She had been ill for the past 10 days, Young said.

In July 2015, Jones became the record holder for the Guinness World Records title of oldest living female. She was given the record on her 116th birthday.

She's the only person left born in the 1800s

What was her secret to a long life? Sleep and, bacon, Jones said in 2015. She kept a steady diet of bacon, eggs and grits for breakfast. A sign in her kitchen reads: “Bacon makes everything better.”

Jones, one of 11 siblings, was born in 1899 near Montgomery, Alabama. After graduating high school in 1922, she worked in the family business picking crops. She later worked as a nanny in New Jersey and New York.

In New York, Jones started a scholarship for African American women to go to college. She was also involved in her public housing's building-tenant patrol until the ripe age of 106.

World's oldest woman, 116, eats bacon daily

She was known as “T” (short for auntie) to her 100 nieces and nephews. Jones did not leave behind any children. She was married for a few years.

Now, 116-year-old Emma Morano, of Verbania, Italy, is the unofficial world’s oldest person.