Here's a love story
for the ages — or the movies. Iowa couple Norma and Gordon Yeager were
both in their 90s and had been married 72 years
when they were hospitalized following a car accident. The nurses and
doctor kept the two together in the intensive care unit, and they lay
there, barely responsive but holding hands. Gordon passed away, and,
exactly one hour later, Norma followed him, still holding his hand.
"They just loved being together," says their son Dennis.
"He always said, 'I can't go until she does because I gotta stay here
for her.' And she would say the same thing." Here, a brief guide to
their incredible story:
Who was this extraordinary couple?
Ninety-year-old
Norma and 94-year-old Gordon Yeager met while Norma was still in high
school and Gordon was working at the Chevrolet Garage in State Center,
Iowa. They were married on May 26, 1939, the day Norma graduated. They
had four children together, one daughter and three sons. Tragically,
their two middle children were killed in car accidents. "They believed
in marriage," says their son, Dennis. "They chose each other and once
they had committed, that was it."
How did they die?
In
October of 2011, as the couple was driving into town, Gordon mistakenly
pulled out in front of another car. The Yeagers were rushed to the
hospital following the collision and given a shared room in intensive
care. Though they were "not really responsive," they held hands as they
lay there, side-by-side. At 3:38 p.m, Gordon passed away, but, then, his
family noticed his heart monitor was still beeping. "It was really
strange," Dennis says. Then a nurse looked and saw that the couple's
hands were still clasped. "Her heart was beating through him and [the
monitor was] picking it up," Dennis says. At 4:48 p.m., one hour after
her husband, Norma passed away as well. "Neither one of them would've
wanted to be without each other," says their daughter, Donna Sheets. "We were very blessed, honestly, that they went this way."
How will they be buried?
At their funeral, Norma and Gordon shared a casket and held hands. Once cremated, their ashes were mixed together. They are survived
by their two children, Norma's sister, Virginia Keil, Gordon's brother,
Roger, 14 grandchildren, 29 great-grandchildren, and one great-great
grandchild. "We don't hear love stories like Norma and Gordon's
anymore," says Lindsay Mannering at The Stir.
"We hear about lying, cheating, and divorce. Hopefully there are
couples all over the world who share a similar story because I'd like to
live in a world where this is the norm and not the exception."
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