The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Happy couple’s love story

Betty and Peppino Lapadula celebrate 60 years of marriage after love blossomed during a whirlwind Scots-Italian romance. Picture: Gareth Jennings.

- EMMA CRICHTON ecrichton@thecourier.co.uk

When Betty and Peppino met in 1959, the odds were stacked against them.

She was a 17-year-old from Dundee, he was a 26-year-old Italian working in Belgian mines.

Peppino Lapadula travelled to Scotland to visit his sister and picked up work on a Longforgan berry farm to pay his fare back to mainland Europe.

It was there he met Betty and fell in love, but after a two-week whirlwind romance, he returned to Belgium.

He spent five months writing letters in Italian, which Betty had translated, before appearing at her parents’ Lochee home on Hogmanay with an engagement ring in his hand.

The couple are celebratin­g their diamond anniversar­y today, 60 years later.

Betty, 78, said: “When Peppino appeared with a ring on Hogmanay, my mother said ‘Are you crazy? Do you know what is in front of you?’ But I really didn’t.

“It was hard going in the first months of marriage. We didn’t know if he was going to be allowed to stay. We had our first baby and the police came to ask questions, but when he was allowed to stay, we worked hard and built our whole lives here.”

Peppino, 87, also faced questions from his family but said he is grateful to Dundee for the opportunit­ies he has been given.

“If I wasn’t able to be here Betty would have come with me,” he said.

“They said if I was a good boy and worked I could stay and for me that was no problem.

“There was a lot of work but not much money – my first pay packet was £5. Everything I have here was done with my own hands.”

After marrying in St Mary’s RC Church, Lochee, on July 23 1960, the couple settled into work and family life, with Betty working for Beatties Bakery and Peppino in a jute mill.

They went on to have four daughters and five grandchild­ren and were heavily involved with Club Romano, a community of Italian immigrants.

Peppino even coached the club’s amateur football team.

The thought of retiring to Fasano, the south Italian town where Peppino grew up, crossed their minds, but they are glad they stayed in Dundee.

Betty said: “As long as we can keep going to Italy. It’s important that we go but we wanted to stay here and visit a lot so we can have the best of both worlds.

“Our family is our life so we want to be near.”

The Lapadulas celebrated their 50th anniversar­y with a big family party in Fasano, where locals were stunned by the sight of men in kilts.

They were due to return this summer before coronaviru­s. Instead they will enjoy an Italian Mass by Monsignor Aldo Angelosant­o at St Brides RC Church in Monifieth, before a family meal.

One daughter will be missing from the celebratio­ns as she moved to Fasano with her husband two years ago.

The couple’s secret to a long and happy marriage? Trust, tolerance and listening to each other.

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: Gareth Jennings. ?? Betty and Peppino Lapadula, married for 60 years today, met in Dundee and enjoyed a whirlwind romance.
Picture: Gareth Jennings. Betty and Peppino Lapadula, married for 60 years today, met in Dundee and enjoyed a whirlwind romance.
 ??  ?? Peppino and Betty Lapadula on their wedding day at St Mary’s RC Church, Lochee, on July 23 1960.
Peppino and Betty Lapadula on their wedding day at St Mary’s RC Church, Lochee, on July 23 1960.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom