Carl Garrett
and Rose Hooper |
|
|
»
SCC Latest New Index »
What's New
Congratulations
Rose !
Rose Hooper, SCC's Public Information
Officer wed her high school sweetheart,
Carl Garrett on Sunday, October 1.
Rose and Carl's story was featured in
the Ruralite Cafe 09/28/06. It is being
reprinted here with permission from The
Sylva Herald.
The Sylva Herald: Ruralite
Cafe
By Lynn Hotaling
1962 high school
sweethearts plan wedding
Here at the Cafe, where we believe in
happy endings, we’re rather pleased
with this week’s story. It’s
about Rose – our very own Rose Hooper
who used to work at this newspaper –
and Carl Garrett, who was her boyfriend
in 1962, when both were students at Waynesville
Township High School.
According to Carl, it was love at 300
yards. He was playing football with other
neighborhood boys in the churchyard of
Allens Creek Baptist Church one August
day when Rose strolled into view.
"I just knew she was the one,”
Carl said last week. “She was so
beautiful.”
During a church youth group outing a
few days later, Carl maneuvered himself
into the seat next to Rose and summoned
up the courage to ask her out.
"I just knew she was going to reject
me, but she didn’t,” Carl
said.
By that time he had learned that Rose
would be staying with her grandmother
in Waynesville for the next year. Her
father – a career military man –
had been stationed in Japan, but her parents
didn’t want to uproot her since
she was in high school, Rose said.
After their first date, which was to
the Waynesville drive-in (neither remembers
what movie they saw), Carl and Rose were
inseparable that whole school year.
Carl describes one outing they took to
the Pisgah National Forest in a 1960 Mercury.
"That car had a huge windshield,”
he said. “We were driving over into
the sun and back into the sun, and both
of our faces were really sunburned the
next day.”
Life was good until school was out and
Rose’s parents decided that their
oldest daughter should join them in Japan
after all, despite her protests that Waynesville
(and Carl) suited her just fine.
"My mother said it would be a big
adventure – the chance of a lifetime,”
Rose said. “She said it would be
a test of our love.”
While Rose wasn’t quite sure all
that was accurate, she listened to her
folks and said “sayonara”
to Carl. The two promised to write, and
they did. At first they wrote to each
other every day but after a while they
tapered off, Rose said.
After two years in Japan, Rose came back
to the United States but flew straight
to the Air Force base in Ohio where her
dad was stationed next. Before she could
figure out how to get back to Western
North Carolina, Carl had joined the Army.
By the time Rose enrolled at Western Carolina
University, Carl was in Louisiana and
soon after that, California; all that
distance added up to the end of their
youthful romance.
When they ran into each other in 1975
at a WCU event, Rose and Carl were each
married to someone else, and both had
young children. Looking back on that chance
encounter, Rose and Carl both acknowledge
that they had been aware of smoldering
feelings but didn’t act on them,
because, with small children in both homes,
it wouldn’t have been the right
thing to do.
"I thought that was the end of it,”
Rose said.
And until another 25 or so years had
passed, it was. Then one day Carl stopped
in Sylva on his way back to Waynesville
from Cashiers and happened to pick up
a copy of The Sylva Herald.
When he saw Rose’s byline, he was
amazed to find she still worked at the
paper and surprised that she was going
by her maiden name, Hooper. What Carl
didn’t know was that while Rose
was working here in 2003, she was on her
second tour. She’d written for the
paper during the 1970s, but she left for
other opportunities, returning to the
newsroom around 1995.
Carl then engaged in a little online
research, visiting www.thesylvaherald.com,
to confirm that our reporter was, indeed,
his high school sweetheart.
Yet Carl still couldn’t bring himself
to call her. Instead, he followed Sylva
news through our online edition. When
he noticed an old picture that he thought
would be of interest to Blue Ridge Paper
co-worker Tony Hooper, who has family
from Jackson County, Carl printed it out
and encouraged Tony to call Rose and ask
about the picture – and, oh by the
way, while he was talking to her, maybe
he could get Carl an e-mail address.
"I was pretty excited to get an
e-mail from him,” Rose said. That
was in the summer of 2004. Just about
the time Rose and Carl were getting used
to the idea of seeing each other again
and making plans to meet, Hurricanes Frances
and Ivan slammed into Canton, closing
the paper plant and cutting off Carl’s
computer access.
"We were planning a trip to the
Outer Banks, but the storms and flooding
cut us off from each other,” Rose
said. “And then I changed jobs (Rose
left the newsroom to become a public information
officer at Southwestern Community College.)
and I had a different e-mail address.
This time their luck was better than
back in the ’60s, and despite communication
challenges, love prevailed. Rose and Carl
made in to the coast in 2005 and are once
again the center of each other’s
universes.
"I feel like I’ve come full
circle,” Carl said during an interview
for this column. “All you need to
get across is how much I love this lady.”
For Rose’s part, she’s equally
smitten and just as sure all’s now
right with the world.
"One moment I might feel every one
of my 59 years, but in the next I am 15
again,” she said. “We can
be in a crowd of people, and he can reach
out and touch my hand or just look at
me with that special smile where his dimples
twinkle and instantly I feel 15 all over
again. The moment he stepped back in my
life, he made me realize what I’d
been missing and made my life complete.”
And that happy ending? It’s
slated for this Sunday, when Rose and
Carl say “I do” 44 years after
a boy looked up from a football game to
see his true love.
Rose and Carl, then and now

The above
story was reprinted with permission from
The Sylva Herald
###
|