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School sweethearts reunite, marry after 47 years

Internet helps connect couple who had split up in the ninth grade

Bootsie and Beverly Hall relax outside their home in Lake Murray, S.C.
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updated 7:55 a.m. ET Dec. 12, 2006

COLUMBIA, S.C. - Bootsie Hall doesn't remember when she broke up with her husband, Beverly.

He, however, remembers every detail.

"That was very traumatic," he said, "right there on the porch in the swing."

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It was the late 1950s, and the Halls were ninth-graders at Rocky Mount Senior High School in North Carolina.

Bootsie was starting to get calls for dates from other boys, and she was ready to move on. Then for 47 years after the break up, the Halls had nothing to do with each other. Their lives, though, followed remarkably similar paths.

And last year, they were brought back together at a class reunion.

"We were sweethearts in the seventh, eighth and ninth grades," Bootsie said from their Chapin home overlooking Lake Murray, where they moved recently after marrying in July. "He was my first love."

"Your first kiss," Beverly added. "And I'll be your last one, too."

Down the coast
When the Halls graduated from high school in 1960, they were three years past that fateful break up. Each went on to marry other people — and both marriages ended in divorce after more than a decade. They both also remarried spouses who later would lose battles with cancer, leaving them widowed — and each thinking dating, much less marriage, was out of the question.

Brett Flashnick / www.brettflashnick.com
Bootsie and Beverly during their high school days.

"If I hadn't met Bootsie, I would never have gotten involved with anybody else," Beverly said. "I didn't figure that would ever happen again." Bootsie had settled in Morehead City, N.C., and Beverly lived more than 260 miles down the Atlantic coast in Charleston, S.C.

In early 2005, a former classmate started a blog in an attempt to plan their 45th high school reunion. Somebody wrote that Beverly should bring his trumpet and play "Cherry Pink (and Apple Blossom White)" — the song he and his five-piece combo used to play at high school dances and events around town.

But he had long since given up the trumpet and quickly responded on the message board that he didn't play anymore. Bootsie, remembering all the nights Beverly played the song for her over the phone while she swooned in her bedroom, responded. "I wrote back and told him I was sorry to hear that," she said.

'Polite conversation'
They didn't write again for several months, while Beverly dealt with the death of his wife, Susie, in March 2005. When the reunion rolled around in the fall, Beverly wrote in the blog that he couldn't make it because of an out-of-town business meeting. Bootsie wrote back to say she had been looking forward to seeing him.

They continued with "polite conversation" — until Bootsie mentioned she was taking her grown daughter, Sharon, shopping in Myrtle Beach one weekend. Beverly asked if he could meet up with them for lunch.

When Bootsie stepped out of her vehicle outside the Carolina Opry, Beverly said, "I had to hold onto the car because my knees got weak.

"We were right back in ninth grade," Bootsie said.

"It was like magic," Beverly said. "I mean, it just clicked."


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