Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here.

A pair of sisters have died from two separate global pandemics, over a century apart, according to a report on Friday.

Selma Esther Ryan died Tuesday from the coronavirus at an assisted living facility in Austin, Texas, three days after celebrating her 96th birthday. Her death comes after her older sister, Esther – whom she never met – died at the age of 5 during the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic.

“On April 3, I got a call from the facility that five residents, including my mother, were running a temperature,” Ryan's daughter, Vicki, told Austin's KXAN-TV.

PROTESTS AND RALLIES ACROSS US CALL FOR END TO CORONAVIRUS STAY-AT-HOME ORDERS

“Over the next five days, I watched through the window as she got sicker and sicker. It was so hard to not be with her. Her 96th birthday was April 11. Our family gathered outside her window, but it was obvious that something terrible had happened.”

Vicki said the Travis County Medical Examiner’s Office confirmed Ryan had tested positive for the virus following her death, the station reported.

AMERICA RELEARNING THE LESSONS OF THE 1918 SPANISH FLU PANDEMIC

The Spanish flu is estimated to have infected 500 million people or one-third of the world’s population, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. At least 50 million people died worldwide from the virus with roughly 675,000 fatalities occurring in the United States.

The coronavirus, described as the worst pandemic since the Spanish flu, has infected more than 2.4 million people and killed at least 165,200 around the globe.

The U.S. has seen more than one-fourth of all COVID-19 infections, with at least 40,600 deaths from the virus, according to data from Johns Hopkins.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

While the elderly or those with preexisting health conditions are at a higher risk for severe illnesses from COVID-19, the mortality rate from the Spanish Flu was uniquely high in people aged 20 to 40 as well as those younger than 5 years old, the agency said.