This article is from the source 'independent' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/couple-reunited-with-a-wedding-ring-that-was-lost-40-years-ago-10501128.html
The article has changed 5 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Couple reunited with a wedding ring that was lost 40 years ago | Couple reunited with a wedding ring that was lost 40 years ago |
(34 minutes later) | |
It has been 40 years since Jim Flynn last saw his wedding ring. | It has been 40 years since Jim Flynn last saw his wedding ring. |
He and his wife of 56 years had a pair of rings specially designed when they got marred in 1960. The rings were engraved with initials and the date they tied the knot. | |
The ring was lost in 1976 when the pair were spending the summer on on Lake George in the Adirondacks. It was where they had spent their honeymoon and a place they eventually bought a property on the western shore. | |
Mr Flynn's wedding ring was lost 40 years ago | Mr Flynn's wedding ring was lost 40 years ago |
Fast forward forty years to August 2015 when Peggy Rodman, whose family has a property next to that of the Flynn’s spotted something on the floor of the lake. | |
“I’m always thinking I’m going to find something really neat and I always find golf balls, or nothing really exciting,” Ms Rodman told the Post Star newspaper. “I’ve found sunglasses, a swim mask, nothing exciting.” | “I’m always thinking I’m going to find something really neat and I always find golf balls, or nothing really exciting,” Ms Rodman told the Post Star newspaper. “I’ve found sunglasses, a swim mask, nothing exciting.” |
On that August day, Ms Rodman spotted something glimmering on the lake bottom. It looked like an overturned bottle cap. “I grabbed it. It wasn’t deep. I could still stand there,” she said. | |
It turned out to be a wide ring, bearing the date "2-6-60" engraved inside. Ms Rodman asked around and turned to a year-round resident from the lake, who learned it belonged to Jim Flynn, who now lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma. | |
Speaking from Oklahoma, Ms Flynn told The Independent both she and her husband, who still works as a doctor, were thrilled by the discovery. | |
“It was really special. It was something that meant a great deal to us,” she said. | “It was really special. It was something that meant a great deal to us,” she said. |