Two high school sweethearts reunited after decades apart and ended up getting married 57 years after their prom night.
Barbara Cotton and Curtis Brewer went to school together in Connecticut in 1961.
They were married on Jan. 5 in Milwaukee.
Brewer went to college and eventually settled down in Florida while Cotton remained in her hometown to take care of her five brothers after her mother died. She later moved to Milwaukee. They lost contact.
The couple said they got separated, as opposed to breaking up.
Then, in July 2018, they found each other on Classmates.com.
“She saw me on classmates.com. I answered her back, I answered her real quick,” Brewer said.
They soon began dating and then got married. “I said, ‘Barb, will you,’ that’s all I said, [and] she said ‘yes!’” Brewer said.
Now, the couple is planning an RV trip across America.
“Barb and Curtis would like nothing more than to begin their newly married life traveling across the country in an RV. You can help support them in this brand new chapter of their life together as husband and wife, a dream come true!” wrote Leah Strecher, the friend, on the GoFundMe page.
Couple Reunites Decades Later
An Ohio couple reunited after decades apart.Foster is black and Clark is white.
Then, they reunited at a park in Columbus in 2013. “It was that dream you just never thought would come true ... there she was,” Howard said.
They married in 2015.
The couple recalled feeling pressure to not stay together when they were younger.
“Society wasn’t going to let us be together and she be happy. ... She'd get tired of the stares; I just thought it was unfair to her,” Howard said of his decision. “Her happiness was the most important thing.”
Myra Clark said she believed Foster when he said he wanted her to be happy. Since then, interracial marriage has skyrocketed, from 3 percent of newlyweds in 1967 to 17 percent in 2015.
Howard said they got married to spend the rest of their lives together.
“We’re getting married not because we want to do anything, but just because we want to spend our lives together,” he said. “I walked away once; I was not going to walk away again.”