The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

School sweetheart­s reunite 77 years later

Both seniors’ families delighted the two have decided to date again.

- By Sydney Page

Bill Hassinger gave his high school sweetheart, Joanne Blakkan, a silver bracelet with green gems more than seven decades ago.

They parted ways after Blakkan left for college, but she kept it in her jewelry box.

“It was just too pretty to get rid of,” said Blakkan, now 92.

It also had sentimenta­l value. She couldn’t bring herself to part with a gift from her first love.

More than 75 years after she put the bracelet away, she’s now wearing it again. She and Hassinger, 90, are back together.

Their love story started in 1947, when they were both students at North Muskegon High School in west Michigan. She was in her junior year and he was a freshman. They met on the school bus one morning.

“She would always save a seat for me,” Hassinger recalled.

They started off as friends, but by the time Blakkan was a senior, “we went steady,” she said, noting that she never minded the age difference between them. “I thought he was cute.”

Hassinger was smitten, too. He felt lucky to be with an older woman. “She had a lot more seniority on me and I was learning, so I just followed her lead,” he said, adding that they once got sent to the principal’s office for kissing on the school bus. “They said that was inappropri­ate behavior.”

They both fell in love for the first time. Hassinger accompanie­d Blakkan to her senior prom, and gave her the bracelet that year. When she went off to college at Michigan State the following year, she visited on weekends.

Over time, though, “we kind of drifted apart,” Blakkan said.

After they broke up, Hassinger went on to marry another woman he dated in high school, and Blakkan married a man she started dating while she was in college. They each had three children.

A few months after he got married at 19, Hassinger was drafted into the U.S. Army, and spent nearly two years stationed in Salzburg, Austria. He then had a 32-year career with the Michigan State Police. He was married to his wife — who died in 2021 — for 68 years.

Meanwhile, Blakkan worked as an office manager for a surgeon and later an allergist in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Her husband died of a heart attack in 1989 when he was 57. Blakkan — who lives in Muskegon, Michigan — had no desire to date, she said.

“I had the opportunit­y to, and I just was not interested in it,” she said.

That changed in 2022, when Blakkan was tasked with planning her high school reunion.

“Somehow or other, Bill’s name came up,” said Blakkan, whose daughter, Linda, was helping her find contact informatio­n for her former classmates online. They looked up Hassinger and found that his wife had died the year before, and he was living in Manistee, about 80 miles from Muskegon.

Blakkan decided to take a chance and reach out to her long-ago love — whom she had not seen since they broke up.

With her daughter’s encouragem­ent, she wrote him a letter, telling him it would be nice to reconnect and reminisce.

“I immediatel­y called her, and I told her when I’m down in Muskegon, I’d stop and see her,” Hassinger said.

And he did. Not long after their phone call, they went for lunch at a local restaurant, and “it was just like old times,” Hassinger said. “We just cut to the chase.”

In a matter of hours, their teenage crushes came back.

“I was very fond of him in high school,” said Blakkan, who started wearing the green bracelet again. “The feelings came back very quickly.”

From there, they went on weekly dates, and before long they began spending stretches of time at each other’s homes.

They read, play cards, complete puzzles and crosswords. They also go on regular walks together.

“I think our feelings are stronger now than they were then,” Blakkan said.

Their families are delighted by their relationsh­ip, the couple said. Hassinger has five grandchild­ren and one great-grandchild, and Blakkan has four grandchild­ren and two great-grandchild­ren.

“Both sides of the family are thrilled, which makes it very nice,” Hassinger said.

The couple said they’re not sure yet whether they’ll get married or move in together. For now, they’re content with the way things are.

“The only thing for certain is that we’ll be together,” Hassinger said. “I wouldn’t have it any other way.”

On three separate occasions when they’ve gone out to eat, strangers have picked up the tab. The most recent instance was a month ago — courtesy of a younger couple. “They said ‘we think you’re such an adorable couple, and we want to be like you,’” Blakkan said.

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO ?? RIGHT: Blakkan and Hassinger in 1947 at their high school prom.
FAMILY PHOTO RIGHT: Blakkan and Hassinger in 1947 at their high school prom.
 ?? COURTESY OF LINDA BLAKKAN ?? LEFT: Bill Hassinger, 90, and Joanne Blakkan, 92, celebrate Valentine’s Day this year. The two are dating each other again after they broke up when Blakkan left for college.
COURTESY OF LINDA BLAKKAN LEFT: Bill Hassinger, 90, and Joanne Blakkan, 92, celebrate Valentine’s Day this year. The two are dating each other again after they broke up when Blakkan left for college.

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