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The Halls: Still in love after 70 years
Published: April 3, 2010 Royal Gazette by Ira Phillip
Seventy years happily married and still going strong!

That's the accolade due to Stanley Howard Charles Hall and his charming, petite wife Kathleen of Rose Hill, Southampton West. They are a staunchly Christian couple, whose lives have revolved around their closely knit home and church.
Charles at age 91 is a noted for his imperishable, winning smile as for his smarts as a mason, carpenter, fisherman and beekeeper. He's the last survivor or "lone sailor" as he put it, of a family of five brothers and three sisters born to Isaac and Emily Jane Hall, late of Whale Bay, Southampton. They and their offspring were popularly known as known as the "Ikey" Halls.
Stanley was working on the old Bermuda Railroad when he first "spied" his wife to be.
"It was a most romantic, love-at-first-sight situation," recalled Kathleen.
She was one of the 13 children born to Robert Trott and his wife the former Electra Richardson both of Bailey's Bay. They had a son who helped support the household by working on the Furness Withy liner Queen of Bermuda that plied weekly between the island and New York.
Kathleen was sent to Hamilton to receive her older brother's family money. While minding her own business waiting for him to come ashore, she stood on the sidewalk opposite Number One Shed, where Stanley happened to be talking to a Bailey's Bay fellow. The latter hailed her, prompting Stanley to follow through with an introduction.
Kathleen was 16 when she and Stanley exchanged vows at Holy Trinity Church, Bailey's Bay. They honeymooned at the home of his parents on Rose Hill until four months later when Stanley secured an old shack-like wooden building on Cottage Hill, Bailey's Bay on condition that he fixed it up, which he did splendidly.
Meanwhile Stanley began building his own home on property he acquired at Rose Hill. There is where they raised their five sons, passing on to them his skills in the trades, as a farmer and fisherman from the family boat he built.
Kathleen was the only "girl" in the family, until the sons came home with their own beautiful brides. Like their father, each built their own homes, with mother cooking the food for the ensuing rallies. Family and friends did everything from digging the tanks, doing the roofing and whatever.
Kathleen has never lost her fascination for "Bay" as she called it, and the happy life she had playing and swimming in the area of the Bailey's Bay Cricket Club. Every opportunity she got, she would leave the pristine Whale Bay beaches and drive the children and grandchildren to Bailey's Bay for a swim or picnic.
Their five sons and wives produced 14 children and 12 grandchildren. They all gathered at their Calvary Gospel Hall, Southampton auditorium for a feast on Sunday and to embrace Stanley and Kathleen. A highlight was the heartfelt tribute paid by grandson Shannon that moved some of his listeners to tears.
For many years Stanley was first an usher, then a Sunday School teacher and an Elder at Calvary. His wife likewise was active in the church, and among other things a Pink Lady at King Edward VII Memorial Hospital.
They spend much of their time relaxing at home, situated just off the Number Ten fairway of the Port Royal Golf Course
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Family Ties - The Swans
Published: March 27, 2010 Royal Gazette by Ira Phillip
More than 45 years have elapsed since a popular and attractive young Valley Lane, Somerset woman, Harriett Rosina Swan, left Bermuda to make her home in the US. She was very much in love with Larry Love, the American airman she had met and married when he was stationed at Kindley Air Force Base.
 
The couple are still happily married, having raised two daughters and being parents of two grandchildren in Seattle, Washington, which has been their home for the past 43 years. Though not the least bit homesick, and quite involved in the life of her Pacific northwest community, Rosina deserves a special salute for the deep-seated patriotic passion she has for the land of her birth and things Bermudian ... And the fact that she has not lost her distinctive mid-Atlantic Bermudian accent, unwittingly results in strangers she meets enquiring from whence she hails.
Rosina says she keeps her fingers on the pulse of Bermuda, through family and friends, and especially going online for years, reading The Royal Gazette, and particularly The Island Notebook from the time it was originally published in the Mid-Ocean News. It is interesting to note that she is an aunt of Kim Swan, MP, Leader of the Opposition United Bermuda Party.
It was the recent feature on the Somerset Brigade Band celebrating its 80th anniversary that prompted her to contact this writer. Her father, Eldon Swan, a leading building contractor by trade, was also a musician and one of the original members of the band. Incidentally, one of the present officers of the band is Reggie Tucker, whose wife Emily is Eldon's youngest daughter.
More particularly, Rosina, in calling me from Seattle Rosina wanted to draw attention to the fact that her father's birth date, a century ago was on March 6, 1910. Rosina was number eight of the seven girls and two sons Eldon Swan and his wife Ismay raised in their homestead a couple doors down from that of Arthur Knights, the Brigade Band's founding bandmaster.
While Eldon taught his sons Basil and Hubert (Kim Swan's father) to be skilled masons and builders like himself, daughter Rosina was sent first to work at The Royal Gazette or Bermuda Press and later The Island Press.. She said the skills she learnt there as a bookbinder, have served her well to this day.
In Seattle she has worked as a bank teller and head vault teller, gaining a reputation for having "the best lined-up currency" in her bank. More recently she says she has enjoyed her employment with Molly Brown Temps being a contractor at Pemco Insurance Company.
Back to Rosina's father Eldon. She said though he's gone, he'll never be forgotten. He was proud of is own heritage, being the great-grandson of the celebrated Charles Roach Ratteray.
Charles Roach Ratteray was a black man, born in 1799. He has left an indelible imprint in the pages of Bermuda's slave-period history, being a highly skilled builder of ocean-going boats, a successful entrepreneur. He was among other things, builder of the Wesley Methodist Church on Long Bay Road, Somerset, and donated the land on which Allen Temple AME Church, Somerset is built.
Roach was born in Nassau and brought to Bermuda by his mother when 18 months old. She had taken sick soon after she was said to have had the child for her slave master, a Scottish nobleman named Ratteray, who at the time was Acting Governor of the Bahamas. The mother died in Bermuda, leaving her child in the care of two white spinsters who resided in Scaur, Somerset. Together with two white godfathers who cared for him. They ensured he had a good start in life, having him apprenticed in the trade of home and shipbuilding.
Roach married at age 18. His first wife died after bearing 31 children, including a set of twins and triplets and nine daughters. Three months after his wife's death, he remarried a widow of five years, who bore him five children.
On March 6, 1910, Eldon Stuart Swan was born to Jacob Bean Swan and Harriet Rebecca Ratteray Swan. He was the youngest of six children in the family, and was 18 when his father died. The training he received as a mason was his trademark and his expertise in building family homes of quality and beauty can be seen throughout Bermuda today.
Eldon married the love of his life, Ismay Agatha from St. Kitts, in 1933 at St. James Church. Together, they raised their nine children with all of the Bermuda customs and traditions. Rosina states that one of the most memorable times in the Swan homestead was Christmas morning when fellow members of the Somerset Brigade Band descended there to play Christmas carols, and to enjoy some Yuletide fare.
It would appear that Rosina, holding to her living memories in far off Seattle, Washington is of a similar cut as her cousin, Oda Ratteray, who hosts the weekly VSB Radio show "Living Memories".
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Thank you for your kind contribution to help the family of the late Keith Young.
Good Day Colleagues,
The picture below is of Opposition Leader Kim Swan and the Party Chairman Jeff Sousa presenting airline tickets to the Roxy Young, widow of the late Keith Young the UBP candidate in the August by election, who died suddenly in September. His widow (Roxy) will be in the United States over the christmas holiday and the generous donation by Parliamentary, Executive and Party members have made it possible for the family to spend this Christmas together. Thanks to: United Bermuda Party Team

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