

Today I got a reminder of how easy it is to unwittingly make stuff up in genealogy. Earlier this week I wrote an affectionate little post about my parents’ 65th wedding anniversary. This morning I got a call from my mother, who said, “You’re not going to like this.” And she straightened me right out.
First of all, I had the year wrong. Celia Oliver and Bill Hare (born Stephenson) were married in Wellesley, Massachusetts on June 16, 1954 (not 1955), which was four days after Mum’s college graduation and a year before my Dad’s. Secondly, my aunt and uncle were in fact married in 1955, a year, not a few weeks, after my parents. Thirdly, I left out the part where Mum and Daddy were secretly married in Baltimore a year before their official wedding in Massachusetts.
So what, you say? Well, facts matter. And this story is actually different when it’s correct. And, since I’ve never located a marriage certificate for either the Maryland or Massachusetts marriages, I should have double checked with Mum instead of going on my memory of what I thought she’d told me long ago. And yes, this is the downfall of many a sloppy genealogist!
It was the 1950s. My parents were still in school and they quietly got married in 1953 in Baltimore. They were 19 and 20 years old and they never told their parents. Not ever. According to Mum, “Bill was afraid that because I was a year older I’d take off, and if we got married I wouldn’t.” So they got a marriage license, and one afternoon they rounded up two friends–Vince, a fraternity brother of my Dad’s, and Callie, a classmate of Mum’s–and went to the home of a Justice of the Peace. When it was over, Vince and Callie drove off in one car and Celia and Bill drove off in the other.
Because Mum was a year older than my Dad, they decided to get married when she graduated. They could get an apartment together (it was the ’50s) while she worked through his senior year at Johns Hopkins.
This morning Mum explained that my aunt and uncle traveled from Boston to Baltimore to visit them, the newlyweds, during the year before their own wedding in June 1955, again confirming that my dates were mixed up. So it’s actually my aunt and uncle whose 65th anniversary is this month…
And this solves my burning question as to why Mum would wear a suit to my Dad’s graduation a few days before marrying him in the same suit. What bride would do that?! The answer is that she’d worn the suit at her wedding first, the year before. I’m relieved.
So happy 66th (and 67th) anniversary and double check your facts! xxoo
This post is a participant in the Genealogy Blog Party.
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Lots of lovely memories Kim. It’s easy to see the past through our own lens, isn’t it? Great that you have Mum to keep you straight! x
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Thanks, Gail. You’re so right!
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The photos are wonderful. Looks like a great time was had by all. My aunt and uncle also married in Wellesley, just 11 days before, on 5 June 1954.
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Thanks, Linda. What a wonderful coincidence!
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Really enjoyed your post. Congrats to your parents. How I wish I had asked questions when my parents and grandparents were around to answer!
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Thanks, Marion. There are a million questions I’d love answers to. I’m very lucky my mum can answer many, but there are always more!
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Love this post. It’s so true that we draw conclusions from photos and we’re more likely to research far flung ancestors than our parents. I also love the story of the sneaky wedding ceremony AND the fact that your mom reads you blog and calls you up to straighten out the details.
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Thanks, Laura! I love the sneaky wedding ceremony too, and appreciate being straightened out. Most of the time…
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